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How a Desire to Live in DC is Hindering Millennial Homeownership

  • July 18th 2018

by Nena Perry-Brown

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How a Desire to Live in DC is Hindering Millennial Homeownership: Figure 1
Homeownership rate over time for persons 18-34 years old. Click to enlarge.

Earlier this week, UrbanTurf explored the conclusions of a new study from Urban Institute that examines why the millennial home ownership rate is lower than previous generations. Today, we take a look at the study's parsing of how millennials' preferences on where to live have contributed to these lower rates of homeownership, particularly in the DC area.

A major contributor to the lower homeownership rate among millennials with higher levels of educational attainment is a preference for living in urban areas, which often have an inelastic housing supply. This is particularly true in the DC area, where millennials' migration patterns have mirrored the shift in median home prices. 

How a Desire to Live in DC is Hindering Millennial Homeownership: Figure 2
Millennial migration patterns and home price increases in the DC area. Click to enlarge.

"In Loudoun County, a suburban county an hour outside the city center, the share of 18-to-34-year old residents decreased 5.8 percentage points, from 25.5 percent in 2005 to 19.7 percent in 2015," the report states. "The county saw median home prices decline from $499,900 to $441,000. In contrast, both DC proper and Arlington County, denser counties toward the city center, saw their 18-to-34-year-old population share increase 8.2 and 6.6 percent, respectively. In DC proper, the median home price rose 29 percent between 2005 and 2015, and in Arlington County, home prices rose 22 percent."

How a Desire to Live in DC is Hindering Millennial Homeownership: Figure 3
How the distribution of home prices changed in the DC area. Click to enlarge.

The above graphs illustrate that shift in the distribution of home prices, toward the seven-figure range in DC proper and Arlington County over the last decade, compared to a shift in the opposite direction in Loudoun County. Additionally, the lack of affordable housing for rent in city centers hinders millennials' ability to save up to make a down payment on a home purchase.

The recommendations Urban Institute offers to help increase the rate of homeownership among millennials would be beneficial to more than just millennials, including more lenient zoning that would increase the supply of affordable housing (a well-documented need in DC proper) and using rental payment history as a factor in determining credit-worthiness (a concept floated in DC Council, albeit only in reference to public housing residents).

This article originally published at http://dc.urbanturf.production.logicbrush.com/articles/blog/how-desiring-to-live-in-dc-is-hindering-millennial-homeownership/14223.

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