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This section of Department of Numbers is no longer being updated and may be removed in the future. The data here is out of date and should no longer be used.

Greensboro, North Carolina Home Affordability

The data below measures home affordability for the Greensboro-High Point, North Carolina metropolitan area using price-to-income and price-to-rent metrics.1 The maximum affordable loan amount for the median household income is also calculated. You can also compare Greensboro home affordability to other cities.

Greensboro, North Carolina Home Price-to-Income Ratios

The current price-to-income ratio for Greensboro is 2.9 as determined by March 2014 Realtor median sales prices. The second chart shows a history of the ratio as an index calculated from the Federal Housing Finance Agency's Greensboro HPI series. Median household income data for Greensboro is from the Census American Community Survey.

Price-to-Income Dollar Ratio: Realtor

Price-to-Income Index Ratio: FHFA

Note: Index set to 100 in Q1 of 2000

Greensboro, North Carolina Home Price-to-Income Ratio History

Date Realtor
(Dollar Ratio)
FHFA
(Index Ratio)
March 2014 2.90
December 2013 3.04 114.4
September 2013 3.26 115.8
June 2013 3.26 115.7
March 2013 2.93 113.9
December 2012 2.99 115.1
September 2012 2.99 114.5
June 2012 2.99 113.4

Greensboro, North Carolina Home Price-to-Rent Ratios

The current adjusted price-to-rent ratio for Greensboro is 16.29 as determined by March 2014 Realtor median sales prices. This ratio is calculated using household size adjusted median contract rent for Greensboro. The chart below shows an index of the rent ratio calculated from the metro FHFA HPI series and the Greensboro median contract rent data from the Census ACS.

Price-to-Rent Dollar Ratio: Realtor, Realtor Adjusted Rent

Price-to-Rent Index Ratio: FHFA

Note: Index set to 100 in Q1 of 2000

Greensboro, North Carolina Home Price-to-Rent Ratio History

Date Realtor
(Dollar Ratio)
Realtor Adjusted
(Dollar Ratio)
FHFA
(Index Ratio)
March 2014 17.77 16.29
December 2013 18.62 17.07 89.4
September 2013 19.97 18.31 90.5
June 2013 19.94 18.28 90.5
March 2013 17.93 16.44 89.0
December 2012 18.31 16.79 89.9
September 2012 18.31 16.79 89.5
June 2012 18.31 16.79 88.6

Greensboro, North Carolina Home Rent-to-Mortgage Payment Ratio

The rent-to-mortgage payment ratio uses the adjusted rent for Greensboro against a 100% loan-to-value mortgage (30-year fixed) for the median price home using Realtor home sales statistics. It's a lot like a cap rate, but I find it more appealing in ratio form. A ratio of 1.0 means that annual rent is equivalent annual mortgage payments. Values less than 1.0 indicate rents are cheaper and values greater than 1.0 mean mortgage payments are cheaper. Beware, taxes are not considered here. The rent-to-mortgage payment ratio for Greensboro was 1.03 in March 2014.

Rent-to-Mortgage Payment Dollar Ratio: Realtor

Greensboro, North Carolina Home Rent-to-Mortgage Payment Ratio History

Date Realtor Adjusted Rent
(Dollar Ratio)
March 2014 1.03
December 2013 0.97
September 2013 0.90
June 2013 0.95
March 2013 1.12
December 2012 1.13
September 2012 1.11
June 2012 1.08

Greensboro, North Carolina Inferred Affordable Mortgage

The inferred affordable mortgage value is determined by taking the median household income for Greensboro, North Carolina 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 ACS median household income and average monthly mortgage rates.

Inferred Affordable Mortgage

Greensboro, North Carolina Inferred Affordable Mortgage History

Date Inferred Mortgage
February 2014 $210,918
January 2014 $207,702
December 2013 $206,970
November 2013 $211,923
October 2013 $213,698
September 2013 $206,242
August 2013 $206,970
July 2013 $209,177
June 2013 $216,793
May 2013 $231,291
April 2013 $233,894
March 2013 $230,433
February 2013 $231,578

1. Specifically, home prices are from the non seasonally adjusted FHFA all-transactions quarterly series. Dollar ratios are calculated using NAR metro prices when available. Rent and income data are from the Census ACS and are carried forward into the following year prior to release of the new data.