95°F
weather icon Clear

Can you afford a mortgage in Nevada? Here’s how much you need to make

Updated April 5, 2024 - 11:52 am

Nevadans now need to make at least $111,557 to afford a monthly mortgage payment, according to a new study from Bankrate.

This is a 56 percent income increase from four years ago as related to what it takes to afford a median-priced single-family home in the state, which is now $434,400. That puts the average monthly mortgage payment at $2,603 for a household with two incomes.

Bankrate estimated that in 2020 the average Nevada household only had to make $71,221 to spend less than 30 percent of its monthly income on housing, which analysts mark as the benchmark for affordability.

Charles Dougherty, a senior economist at Wells Fargo, told the Las Vegas Review-Journal in an interview that skyrocketing housing costs could become a big-ticket item this fall for the 2024 presidential election given the growing unaffordability of real estate across the country.

“I think it’s already an issue, if you look at some of the proposals that this administration has put forth in regards to housing affordability and potential solutions, or at least to relieve some of the affordability strains that have cropped up over the past few years; I think that shows this is top of mind for politicians and the population in general.”

In March, Gov. Joe Lombardo sent President Joe Biden a letter urging him to release more of Nevada’s federally owned land to make way for more housing developments. Biden in turn keyed in on affordable housing when he last spoke in Las Vegas, highlighting his administration’s plan to invest nearly $260 billion into the issue.

Redfin estimates the median down payment for a U.S. homebuyer now sits at $55,640 as of the end of February, a 24.1 percent increase from a year earlier ($44,850). That’s the biggest annual percentage increase since April 2022.

Dougherty said housing supply on the residential side, which has been hampered by high interest rates, has become a point of contention as the real estate market has dried up and new construction has not returned to pre-pandemic levels.

“How do you expand the housing supply to help relieve some of the pressure off home prices and bolster or improve affordability for residents? It’s certainly hit a boiling point because you have seen really rapid home price appreciation and it’s risen faster than income growth.”

Contact Patrick Blennerhassett at pblennerhassett@reviewjournal.com.

THE LATEST
 
What’s happening with Las Vegas’ apartment market?

Variable rate financing for multifamily projects during Covid is coming back to haunt some apartment owners as interest rates have risen sharply in the past three years.

 
Lombardo urges Biden to cut red tape on housing projects

Gov. Joe Lombardo called on President Joe Biden to streamline the process for releasing federal land so that more affordable housing can be built in Nevada.

 
Las Vegas developer planning 2 valley hotels

Bob Schulman, the chairman of Schulman Properties, recently opened a luxury apartment complex in Henderson but has plans to build more hotels in the Las Vegas area.