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    a good ratio

    New Zillow report forecasts how affordable Houston is for homeowners

    John Egan
    Aug 23, 2021 | 9:28 am
    5657 Bayou Glen Houston home for sale
    Houston homebuyers still can enjoy a decent debt-to-income ratio.
    Photo by TK Images

    With real estate prices soaring, homes in Texas flying off the market at a record pace, and rising inflation nationally, new Houston homeowners could be forgiven for worrying that most of their paycheck will go to their mortgage.

    Fortunately, a new report from real estate platform Zillow paints a rather rosy picture for Bayou City buyers.

    The typical homebuyer in Houston should anticipate spending 18.8 percent of their income on mortgage payments in December, according to Zillow's recent analysis. Notably that’s only up from 17.2 percent in June.

    This report comes as Houston has seen a major increase on home values over the decade, as CultureMap previously reported. By the numbers, median home values here rose 68 percent from 2011 ($154,500) to 2020 ($260,000). Some 58,223 homes were sold in Houston in 2011, with 99,339 sold in 2020 — a whopping 71 percent increase. The average price per square foot in 2011was $83; in 2020, the price jumped to $133.

    Home prices here, despite numbers suggesting the contrary, actually scorched in July. Houston’s housing market is up 13.9 percent when compared to July 2019, which was considered an average month of home sales with volume totaling 8,921, the Houston Association of Realtors notes.

    Other Lone Star cities with a positive mortgage-affordability include Dallas-Fort Worth and San Antonio, per Zillow:

    • The typical homebuyer in Dallas-Fort Worth should anticipate spending 22.1 percent of their income on mortgage payments in December, up from 19.8 percent in June.
    • The typical homebuyer in San Antonio should anticipate spending 21.8 percent of their income on mortgage payments in December, up from 19.5 percent in June.

    “Strong demand and rising prices for homes are overwhelming the ability of low mortgage rates to keep monthly payments down,” Nicole Bachaud, economic data analyst at Zillow, says in a news release. “As prices continue to outpace income gains, affordability constraints will start to slow home-price growth.”

    That's not the case, however, in Texas' capital.

    Austin residents fretting about the region becoming more California-ized now have extra evidence to back up that concern.

    Zillow predicts home affordability in the Austin area will keep falling to the point that it’ll be the country’s least affordable metro for homebuyers outside California.

    As of June, Austin enjoyed home affordability greater than only eight major U.S. metros. But by December, Zillow expects Austin to drop below Seattle, Miami, and New York City for home affordability. If that happens, the five metro areas with worse affordability than Austin would all be in California: San Francisco, San Jose, San Diego, Los Angeles, and Riverside-San Bernardino.

    “Austin in particular has seen monthly payments for new mortgages rising faster than income growth, a trend that has pushed the Sun Belt standout six spots down the affordability ranks over the past year,” Zillow says.

    According to Zillow, the typical homebuyer in the Austin area should have expected to put 19.7 percent of their income toward mortgage payments in June 2020. A year later, that figure had climbed to 25.3 percent. Even if mortgage rates stay the same, Austin homebuyers should brace themselves to be forking over 30.1 percent of their income for mortgage payments in December, Zillow says.

    By comparison, the same mortgage-payment numbers are projected to climb from 39.3 percent to 43.1 percent between June and December in San Francisco, and from 36.8 percent to 40.9 percent between June and December in San Jose.

    Zillow notes that typical home values and sale prices in Austin remain less than half of those in San Francisco and San Jose. Nonetheless, that doesn’t discount the housing affordability crisis gripping the Austin area. In June, the median sale price of a home in the Austin area soared to $482,364, up 43 percent from the same period in 2020, according to the Austin Board of Realtors.

    “One way for places like Austin and California to ensure that current residents aren’t being priced out as housing burdens rise and remain high is to relax zoning restrictions and create paths that make building new inventory easier,” Zillow says. “Increasing the supply of more affordable housing units — including high-density housing such as townhomes and condos — can also help to ease some of the price pressures for many who find current values unreachable.”

    trendstexascondosreportszillowlists
    news/real-estate

    housing news

    Houston ranks among top 10 U.S. cities for mobile home living

    Amber Heckler
    Dec 24, 2025 | 11:30 am
    Interior of a manufactured home
    Photo by Brian Wangenheim on Unsplash
    Manufactured homes have come a long way from the "trailers" of the past, according to StorageCafe.

    As Houston residents navigate the city's fluctuating real estate market, manufactured homes – also known as mobile homes – are gaining traction among potential buyers seeking an affordable path to homeownership.

    A recent housing study found Houston ranks among the top 10 U.S. cities with the largest mobile home inventory. Texas, as a whole, has the second-highest share of manufactured housing in the nation.

    StorageCafe's housing insights report analyzed the supply of manufactured housing inventory, average sales prices of new manufactured homes, and compared pricing trends against the median value of all housing units (regardless of construction date) across all 50 states and 100 U.S. cities.

    The report's author hails manufactured housing as "a cornerstone of affordability" in the country, with just under 8 million mobile homes representing about 5.4 percent of the U.S. housing supply.

    There are 776,232 manufactured homes in Texas, the report found, which is 6.2 percent of the state's entire housing stock. Houston is home to the 8th highest number of mobile homes in the nation, at 10,953 units.

    Here's how the rest of the top 10 shakes out:

    • No. 1 – Mesa, Arizona (29,335 units)
    • No. 2 – Phoenix, Arizona (20,564 units)
    • No. 3 – Jacksonville, Florida (15,393 units)
    • No. 4 – Largo, Florida (14,131 units)
    • No. 5 – Tuscon, Arizona (14,128 units)
    • No. 6 – San Jose, California (11,668 units)
    • No. 7 – San Antonio, Texas (11,208 units)
    • No. 8 – Houston, Texas (10,953 units)
    • No. 9 – Los Angeles, California (10,622 units)
    • No. 10 – Sunrise Manor, Nevada (9,952 units)

    Why manufactured home living is gaining popularity
    Affordability is of the main reasons Texas residents are turning to manufactured home living. The average sale price for a mobile home in Texas was $112,500 in 2024, or less than half of the median sale price for all Texas homes ($313,200).

    The report specifies that the cost for a manufactured home does not include the cost of land in the same way that a conventional home does. Depending on zoning and local laws, residents who own a mobile home either lease the lot their home sits on, or they have to purchase a lot outright.

    "Most manufactured homes sit either in parks (land rent, higher exposure to rent hikes or park closures) or subdivisions (you own the land)," the report said. "In some communities, resident-owned cooperatives (co-ops) allow homeowners to collectively purchase the land beneath their homes. This setup provides stability and protection against rising lot rents, which can otherwise affect those living in privately owned parks."

    Nevertheless, StorageCafe maintains that the generally lower cost of a manufactured home still makes it a viable path to homeownership. Affordability is especially crucial for younger adults like Gen Zers and Millennials who also don't want to "compromise on quality or independence."

    "Today’s younger buyers value flexibility, efficiency, and minimal maintenance, and many are drawn to simpler lifestyles that align with financial freedom and mobility," the report said. "With the rise of remote work, more Millennials and Gen Zers are exploring the idea of living affordably in smaller, well-designed spaces, often in communities with shared amenities or scenic settings that were once thought to appeal only to retirees."

    Manufactured homes have also experienced a "glow up" in recent years, the report added. Most manufactured homes have open floor plans, "stylish interiors," and come equipped with modern amenities like smart-home technology and energy efficient features.

    "As a result, they’re no longer viewed as a fallback option, but rather as a savvy, forward-thinking path to homeownership for cost-conscious Americans of all ages," the report said.

    Mobile home living elsewhere in Texas
    Other than San Antonio in Houston in the top 10, there were 12 more Texas cities that ranked among the top 100. El Paso came in at No. 16 with 7,089 mobile homes in the city, and Laredo ranked two spots behind with 6,785 units.

    Here's how other Texas cities fared in the report:

    • No. 20 – Dallas (6,195 units)
    • No. 21 – Austin (6,184 units)
    • No. 22 – Fort Worth (6,069 units)
    • No. 29 – Corpus Christi (4,823 units)
    • No. 34 – Pharr (4,409 units)
    • No. 48 – Arlington (3,818 units)
    • No. 60 – Mission (3,207 units)
    • No. 65 – Bryan (3,063 units)
    • No. 67 – Edinburg (3,407 units)
    • No. 98 – Denton (2,441 units)
    housing markethousing reportstoragecafetexasmanufactured housinghouston
    news/real-estate
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