Department of Numbers

This section of Department of Numbers is no longer being updated and may be removed in the future. The data here is out of date and should no longer be used.

Nevada Home Affordability

The data below quantifies Nevada home affordability by using home prices and home price indices to calculate price-to-income and price-to-rent ratios.1 The maximum affordable loan amount for the median household income is also calculated. You can also compare Nevada home affordability to other states.

Nevada Home Price-to-Income Ratios

The home price-to-income ratio for Nevada comes from the Federal Housing Finance Agency's relatively new state median price series and their purchase only index combined with Nevada annual median household income data. The FHFA home price series yields a dollar ratio (top chart) while the index results in an index ratio (bottom chart). Based on the latest FHFA state home prices in June 2010, the price-to-income ratio for Nevada was 2.98.

Home Price-to-Income Dollar Ratio: FHFA

Chart of Nevada home price-to-income ratio using FHFA median price

Home Price-to-Income Index Ratio: FHFA

Chart of Nevada home price-to-income ratio using FHFA HPI

Note: Index set to 100 in Q1 of 2000

Nevada Home Price-to-Income Ratio History

Date FHFA
(Dollar Ratio)
FHFA
(Index Ratio)
December 2013 126.5
September 2013 121.4
June 2013 113.4
March 2013 107.4
December 2012 101.7
September 2012 96.3
June 2012 92.2
March 2012 87.3
December 2011 85.8
September 2011 88.1

Nevada Home Price-to-Rent Ratios

The price-to-rent ratio for Nevada is determined for both the FHFA median price and the purchase only index by calculating a ratio with the median contract rent. The price-to-adjusted rent value takes into account CPS reported household size to attempt to correct for quality differences in renter and owner occupied homes. More on that process here. Again, the median price ratio is a dollar ratio and the HPI ratio is an index ratio defined to be 100 in Q1 2000. The adjusted price-to-rent ratio for Nevada was 15.70 in June 2010.

Home Price-to-Rent Dollar Ratio: FHFA, FHFA Adjusted Rent

Chart of Nevada home price-to-rent ratio using FHFA median price

Home Price-to-Rent Index Ratio: FHFA

Chart of Nevada home price-to-rent ratio using FHFA HPI

Note: Index set to 100 in Q1 of 2000

Nevada Home Price-to-Rent Ratio History

Date FHFA
(Dollar Ratio)
FHFA Adjusted
(Dollar Ratio)
FHFA
(Index Ratio)
December 2013 102.5
September 2013 98.5
June 2013 91.9
March 2013 87.0
December 2012 82.5
September 2012 78.1
June 2012 74.8
March 2012 70.8
December 2011 69.2

Nevada Inferred Affordable Mortgage

The inferred affordable mortgage is determined by taking the median household income for Nevada and calculating the mortgage 30% of that income could afford. Traditionally, 30% of income is the maximum amount a homeowner could use towards a home loan. Inferred affordable loan values are calculated from median household income and average monthly mortgage rates. The amounts are not adjusted for inflation.

Inferred Affordable Mortgage

Chart of Nevada maximum affordable home loan amount

Nevada Inferred Affordable Mortgage History

Date Inferred Mortgage
February 2014 $239,118
January 2014 $235,472
December 2013 $234,642
November 2013 $240,257
October 2013 $242,270
September 2013 $233,817
August 2013 $234,642
July 2013 $237,145
June 2013 $245,779
May 2013 $262,216
April 2013 $265,167
March 2013 $261,243
February 2013 $262,541

1. Specifically, Home prices are from the FHFA seasonally adjusted, purchase only quarterly series. Rent data is from the Census ACS and income is from the Census CPS. Rent and income data for the previous year is carried into the following year for calculations prior to release of new data.