With mortgage interest rates rising substantially over the past two years, low- and moderate-income (LMI) borrowers—those who earn less than 80 percent of the area median income—have found it more difficult to buy a home. For homebuyers who have purchased a home with a mortgage, their payments have ballooned relative to what they would have been in a lower-interest-rate environment.
In response to rising interest rates and higher home prices, we find that the typical new homebuyer who attained their mortgage in 2022 is cost burdened, spending more than 30 percent of their monthly income on housing, and more than 70 percent of new LMI borrowers are cost burdened. Further, the typical new borrower of color is more likely than the typical new white borrower to be cost burdened.
Despite these burdens for new homeowners, higher interest rates reflect a strong economy and low unemployment, which have helped reduce serious delinquency rates to all-time lows. But if unemployment were to rise, cost-burdened homeowners with less housing equity are more likely to miss a mortgage payment. Black and Latine workers, who typically have lower incomes and historically experience higher unemployment rates compared with their white counterparts, face an even greater risk. Without action now to address the barriers to refinancing that LMI borrowers and borrowers of color face, many of these new homeowners could continue to face crushing cost burdens when interest rates inevitably decline.
New LMI homebuyers with mortgages have seen the largest cost burden increases
We used Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) data to compare the experiences and characteristics of homebuyers between 2018 and 2022. To calculate the cost burden, for each loan, we started with the borrower’s monthly mortgage payment—using the loan amount, interest rate, and loan characteristics at closing—before adding 2.6 percent of the home’s value for real estate taxes, homeowners’ insurance, and utilities (the median estimate of homeowners from the 2021 American Housing Survey).
From 2018 to 2020, the median cost burden for homebuyers slightly decreased and median monthly payments remained around $1,770, as lower interest rates more than offset higher home prices. In 2021, rising home prices outweighed the stable interest rates, which led to higher housing cost burdens for new mortgaged homebuyers. In 2022, the housing cost burden increased again, courtesy of home price and interest rate increases, which has left the median borrower cost burdened.
How Cost Burdens Have Changed over the Past Five Years
2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | |
Burden | 26.2% | 25.7% | 25.5% | 27.1% | 30.2% |
Monthly payment | $1,765 | $1,773 | $1,770 | $1,984 | $2,517 |
Income | $81,000 | $83,000 | $84,000 | $88,000 | $100,000 |
Interest rate | 4.75% | 4.125% | 3.125% | 3.00% | 4.99% |
Property value | $255,000 | $265,000 | $295,000 | $335,000 | $375,000 |
In 2022, 44.7 percent of new purchase borrowers spent between 30 and 50 percent of their income on housing costs, with 59.2 percent of LMI borrowers doing so. Further, 5.8 percent of borrowers overall spend more than 50 percent of their income on housing costs, with that share doubling for LMI borrowers.