Homeownership
Homeownership remains a desired path to wealth-building and residential stability for millions of households. Our research examines changing patterns of homeownership at the national and metro levels, as well as the demographic drivers of those patterns. We also look at how government programs and policies shape homebuyer markets and the housing finance system.
Lower Interest Rates Fail to Offset Effects of High Home Prices
Home Prices Surge to Five Times Median Income, Nearing Historic Highs
Explore more in Homeownership
A Shared Future: Inclusion Through Homeownership
Supporting Homeowners in a High-Cost, High-Opportunity City
A Shared Future: Expanding Access to Homeownership as a Means of Fostering Residential Integration and Inclusion
Do State Income Taxes Affect Home Values?
How Housing Counseling Creates More Neighborhood Choice for Buyers
A Shared Future: Minority Banks, Homeownership, and Prospects for New York City’s Multi-Racial Immigrant Neighborhoods
The Effect of Debt on Default and Consumption: Evidence from Housing Policy in the Great Recession
The Case for Allowing Tenants and Owners to Remain in Their Homes Post-Foreclosure
Homeownership Rates for Children of Immigrants—Age Matters
Homeowner Households and the U.S. Homeownership Rate: Tenure Projections for 2015-2035