As Mortgage Rates Continued to Climb, Affordability Fell in September

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Homebuyer affordability dropped in September, as the national median payment applied for by applicants increased 5.5% to $1,941 from $1,839 in August. This is according to the Mortgage Bankers Association‘s (MBA) Purchase Applications Payment Index (PAPI), which measures how new monthly mortgage payments vary across time – relative to income – using data from MBA’s Weekly Applications Survey (WAS).

“Homebuyer affordability took an enormous hit in September, with the 75-basis-point jump in mortgage rates leading to the typical homebuyer’s monthly payment rising $102 from August,” says Edward Seiler, MBA’s associate vice president of housing economics, and executive director of the Research Institute for Housing America. “With mortgage rates continuing to rise, the purchasing power of borrowers is shrinking. The median loan amount in September was $305,550 – much lower than the February peak of $340,000.”

“MBA expects supply and affordability constraints and economic uncertainty to continue to hamper the purchase market,” adds Seiler. “Purchase origination volume is forecast to decrease 3.3 percent next year to $1.53 trillion.”

An increase in MBA’s PAPI – indicative of declining borrower affordability conditions – means that the mortgage payment to income ratio (PIR) is higher due to increasing application loan amounts, rising mortgage rates, or a decrease in earnings. A decrease in the PAPI – indicative of improving borrower affordability conditions – occurs when loan application amounts decrease, mortgage rates decrease, or earnings increase.

The national PAPI (Figure 1) increased 5.5% to 163.6 in September from 155.0 in August – this increase reverses four consecutive months of declines from a high of 164.2 in May 2022. Compared to September 2021 (117.6), the index has jumped 32.5% in the first nine months of 2022. For borrowers applying for lower-payment mortgages (the 25th percentile), the national mortgage payment increased to $1,271 in September from $1,210 in August.

The national median mortgage payment was $1,941 in September, up from $1,839 in August and from $1,844 in July. It is up by $558 in the first nine months of the year, equal to a 40.4% increase. The national median mortgage payment for FHA loan applicants was $1,566 in September, up from $1,469 in August and $1,022 in September 2021.

The national median mortgage payment for conventional loan applicants was $2,003, up from $1,901 in August and $1,373 in September 2021.

The top five states with the highest PAPI were Nevada (264.4), Idaho (257.0), Arizona (238.5), Utah (217.0) and Florida (210.7). The top five states with the lowest PAPI were Washington, D.C. (107.4), Connecticut (113.2), West Virginia (118.3), Alaska (118.7) and Iowa (120.7).

Homebuyer affordability decreased for Black households, with the national PAPI increasing from 155.4 in August to 164.0 in September. Homebuyer affordability decreased for Hispanic households, with the national PAPI increasing from 142.0 in August to 149.9 in September. Homebuyer affordability decreased for White households, with the national PAPI increasing from 155.3 in August to 163.9 in September.

Image: “Mortgage” by Got Credit is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

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