How hard is it to buy a home right now? The NBC News Home Buyer Index measures the market

This version of Us Home Buyer Index Data Cost Availability Difficulty Rcna139257 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

Home prices, interest rates, availability and more factor into our new metric, updated monthly, that gauges how difficult it is to buy a home where you live.
Eleni Kalorkoti for NBC News

Why is it so hard to buy a home? Prices have far outpaced middle-class incomes. Mortgage rates are still above 6%. And 3 out of 10 homes are sold above listing price.

But none of those factors fully captures the variety of challenges buyers nationwide face in the current market. The conditions on the ground can vary widely across state and even county lines.

To better capture how housing market conditions shift at the local level — as comprehensively and in as close to real time as possible — we’re introducing a monthly gauge: the NBC News Home Buyer Index.

The Home Buyer Index, which NBC News developed with the guidance of a real estate industry analyst, a real estate expert from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta and other experts, is a number on a scale of 0 to 100 representing the difficulty a potential buyer faces trying to buy a home. The higher the index value, the higher the difficulty. 

A low index value, of 10 for example, suggests better purchasing conditions for a buyer — low interest rates, ample homes for sale.

A high value closer to 90 suggests extremely tough conditions, which can result from intense bidding, high insurance costs or steep jumps in home prices relative to income.

The index measures difficulty nationwide, as well as on the county level, in the counties where there’s enough homebuying data to make informed assessments.

The national index, presented below, captures the big-picture market and economic conditions that affect homebuying across the United States.

The index consists of four factors: 

  • Cost: How much a home costs relative to incomes and inflation — as well as how related expenses, such as insurance costs, are changing. 
  • Competition: How many people are vying for a home — and how aggressive the demand is. This is measured through observations including the percentage of homes sold above list price and the number that went under contract within two weeks of being listed. 
  • Scarcity: The number of homes that are on the market — and how many more are expected to enter the market in the coming month.
  • Economic instability: Market volatility, unemployment and interest rates — reflecting the broader climate in which home shoppers are weighing their decisions. 

For March, the national Home Buyer Index was 72, up from February and down 7 points from where it was this time one year ago.

The index typically updates monthly on the last Thursday of the month. The next update is May 28.

Methodology

The NBC News Home Buyer Index combines real estate and financial data with forecasting techniques to assess market conditions from a buyer’s perspective. 

The perspective is framed as a combination of factors shaping a buyer’s experience of the housing market: cost, scarcity, competition and overall economic instability. 

Each factor is measured by a monthly analysis that takes the following approach: 

  1. Data is collected from sources including Redfin, the Census Bureau, the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. 
  2. The data is then cleaned, filtered for quality and transformed to address properties that are needed for statistical analysis, including stationarity and seasonality. 
  3. The data is then brought to a monthly frequency where appropriate, among other steps. 
  4. The data is scaled to make component variables comparable.
  5. Finally, the data is combined to generate a single, aggregate measure of homebuyer difficulty. The final output is a single value between 0 and 100, where 0 represents the least difficult market possible and 100 is the most difficult. 

NBC News worked with real estate industry experts to refine the data that would best answer the question ‘How difficult is it to buy a home in the U.S.?’ The experts came from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, and Redfin.

Caveats to this analysis include variation in data availability at the county level, which is generally tied to market size, which correlates with regional characteristics such as population count. Therefore, systematic gaps affect low-population counties, leading them to be underrepresented.

In addition, recent index values may shift slightly in future releases as final data comes in.

CORRECTION (Sept. 3, 2024, 9:54 a.m. ET): A previous version of this article misidentified the profession of the person from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta who helped NBC News develop the Home Buyer Index. He is a real estate expert, not an economist.

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