Even as the COVID-fueled real estate boom loses steam, home prices remain near their all-time highs. These soaring values are a windfall for homeowners but a headache for first-time homebuyers, who are struggling to achieve homeownership.
For frustrated home shoppers, moving to a more favorable market offers one solution to the affordability conundrum. Some metropolitan areas offer an enticing combination of affordable real estate, a robust job market, and high marks for wellness and cultural amenities.
Best Metro Areas for First-Time Buyers in 2023
Bankrate ranked 50 metro areas across four broad categories: housing prices in relation to local wages, the tightness of the local housing market, the employment picture, and wellness and culture. Based on that scoring, the top areas are:
- Austin: This metro area's job market is booming, and it ranks first in that category. Austin also placed second in market tightness and near the top in wellness and culture. It lags in just one area: affordability. With a median home price of $565,000 as of September, according to Redfin, Austin can be a challenging market for young buyers looking for a starter home.
- Kansas City: The Kansas City metro area ranked No. 3 in affordability and No. 11 in market tightness. However, its ranking was pulled down by middle-of-the-pack showings in the job market and wellness and culture.
- Raleigh: Raleigh ranks No. 1 in market tightness, or lack thereof. In this category, Bankrate graded metro areas by how many homes were for sale compared to a year ago and how quickly those homes sell. In the other three categories, the Research Triangle region (which includes nearby Durham and Chapel Hill) ranked outside the top 10 but still above average.
- Minneapolis: The Twin Cities region placed fifth in the labor market category, thanks to a low unemployment rate, strong job growth, and short commutes. While it didn't dominate in any other category, the metro area performed well overall, posting top 20 finishes in wellness and affordability.
- Jacksonville: This northern Florida metro area placed in the top 10 in both the job market category and housing market tightness.
Illustrated map of best markets for first-time homebuyers
Austin Still 'a Boomtown'
Ashley Jackson, president of the Austin Board of Realtors and an agent at Realty Austin, remembers when the state capital had a small-town vibe. Homes were affordable, and chain restaurants counted as fine dining.
"My running joke is, in the 1980s, you had to wait in line for 45 minutes at the Olive Garden," Jackson says. "Austin has turned into a boomtown."
In recent years, tech giants like Apple, Amazon, Google, and more have set up shop in Austin, already home to the University of Texas and a thriving music scene. Median family income soared to $110,300 in 2022, up 45 percent from a decade earlier. And of course, the restaurant offerings have grown more diverse.
The metro area's prosperity is reflected in rising home prices—they've more than doubled over the past decade, outpacing wage gains. Still, the housing market has turned in favor of buyers over the past year, as illustrated by Austin's No. 2 ranking in market tightness.
"It actually is a good time to be a first-time buyer in Austin," Jackson says. "It's returned to a pre-pandemic normalcy. An FHA or a VA buyer can now have an offer accepted, whereas during the pandemic, it was impossible for those buyers."
Matt Smith, 35, can attest to that shift in the market. He moved to Austin from New York City in 2019. During the pandemic, he decided he wanted to stay and began shopping for a condo. But he quickly encountered the reality of an intense seller's market: In one case, his bid was just one of 20 offers on a single unit. "I had no chance," he recalls.
In 2022, as Austin's housing market cooled, Smith resumed his search. In November, he closed on a one-bedroom condo in downtown Austin. He put in the only offer on the unit.
Smith lived most of his life in the New York City metro area, but he had grown weary of eye-watering home prices, frigid winters, and high taxes. He says he doesn't mind Texas' sweltering summers, and he appreciates Austin's modest property taxes and the lack of a state income tax.
"You just can't afford anything in the New York City metro area. I was like, 'I can't do this anymore,'" he says. "And I've had enough snowstorms and polar vortexes."
He was able to afford Austin homeownership despite rising mortgage rates and hefty student loans. "I tell people, 'If I can do it, you can do it,'" he says.
Worst Metro Areas for First-Time Buyers in 2023
At the bottom of the ranking are a group of five metro areas with steep home prices and tight housing markets:
- Riverside: California homebuyers who are willing to move inland can get a house for hundreds of thousands of dollars less than they'd spend in a beachside city like San Diego. One trade-off is long commute times, which pulled Riverside down in our rankings. Lower incomes compared to coastal Southern California also make affordability a challenge.
- San Diego: San Diego ranked 49th out of 50 in affordability, easily offsetting its No. 4 ranking in wellness and culture.
- New York City: The largest metro area in the U.S. had back-of-the-pack showings in Bankrate's job market and affordability categories. The lone bright spot was a No. 3 showing in wellness and culture.
- Boston: Boston came in 46th in affordability, and its rankings in the other three categories were in the middle of the pack.
- Washington, D.C.: The nation's capital ranks 44th in the job market, a result of weak job growth and long commutes. In another poor showing, D.C. ranks 39th in market tightness. Its only top 10 finish came in wellness and culture.
Methodology
The 2023 Bankrate Best Metros for First-Time Homebuyers was compiled using data from a variety of sources, including the U.S. Census Bureau, the U.S. Labor Department, and the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. Here is a breakdown of each category:
- Affordability (40 percent): In this category, Bankrate calculated the typical income needed to qualify for a mortgage in each metro area, based on each area's median home price for September 2022 as reported by Redfin. The calculation considered a 10 percent down payment, a 5 percent mortgage rate on a 30-year loan, and a mortgage debt-to-income ratio of 25 percent. The comparison was made with the Census Bureau's 2021 estimate of median income for households headed by 25- to 44-year-olds in each metro area, along with each metro's Cost of Living Index.
- Job market (30 percent): Bankrate ranked each metro area based on its unemployment rate, total employees year-over-year change, and average commute time.
- Housing market tightness (15 percent): For this category, Bankrate used Realtor.com's median days on the market statistic for homes for sale and the year-over-year change in housing inventory.
- Wellness and culture (15 percent): This category utilized Sharecare's Community Well-Being Index for 2020-2021, the U.S. Census Bureau's 2020 Diversity Index, and the number of arts, entertainment, and recreation establishments per capita.
Now armed with this information, first-time homebuyers can make more informed decisions about where to search for their dream homes.