Inventory
info icon
Single family homes on the market. Updated weekly.Powered by Altos Research
722,032+456
30-yr Fixed Rate30-yr Fixed
info icon
30-Yr. Fixed Conforming. Updated hourly during market hours.
6.97%0.00
Mortgage

Homeownership hits 20-year low in 4Q14

Level buoyed by delinquencies

The homeownership rate in America hit a 20-year low, dropping to 64% in the fourth quarter of 2014.

This was 1.2 percentage points (+/-0.4) lower than the fourth quarter 2013 rate (65.2%) and 0.4 percentage points (+/-0.4) lower than the rate last quarter (64.4%).

The rental vacancy rate of 7% was 1.2 percentage points (+/-0.4) lower than the rate in the fourth quarter 2013 and 0.4 percentage points (+/-0.3) lower than the rate last quarter.

Click to enlarge

(Source: Census Bureau)

The homeowner vacancy rate of 1.9% was 0.2 percentage points (+/-0.2) lower than the rate in the fourth quarter 2013 and 0.1 percentage point higher (+/-0.1)* than the rate last quarter.

Click to enlarge

(Source: Census Bureau)

The homeownership rate of 64% was 1.2 percentage points (+/-0.4) lower than the fourth quarter 2013 rate (65.2%) and 0.4 percentage points (+/-0.4) lower than the rate last quarter (64.4%).

Paul Diggle, property economist for Capital Economics said that the decade-long decline in the share of the population who own their home may now be drawing to an end.

“The usual health warnings apply regarding the reliability of the Census Bureau’s notoriously noisy homeownership and vacancy rate survey. The figures show that the homeownership rate in the US slipped from 64.4% in Q3 to 64.0% in Q4,” Diggle says in a client note. “That’s a 20-year low, and in line with the forecast that we first made in 2012.

“Yet the long decline in the homeownership rate may finally be drawing to a close,” he says. “After all, mortgage delinquency and foreclosure rates have fallen back to long-run norms, mortgage credit conditions are showing signs of loosening and wage growth may soon accelerate, helping young households to make the leap into homeownership. The survey evidence certainly suggests that owning a home remains part of most people’s perception of the American dream.”

Notably, prolific housing commentator and loan originator Logan Mohtashami had this to say about the report. 

[Updated to add Tweet.]

Most Popular Articles

Latest Articles

Lower mortgage rates attracting more homebuyers 

An often misguided premise I see on social media is that lower mortgage rates are doing nothing for housing demand. That’s ok — very few people are looking at the data without an agenda. However, the point of this tracker is to show you evidence that lower rates have already changed housing data. So, let’s […]

3d rendering of a row of luxury townhouses along a street

Log In

Forgot Password?

Don't have an account? Please