04/13/2026 | Press release | Archived content
The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta's Home Ownership Affordability Monitor (HOAM) provides a monthly measure of the median-income household's capacity to afford the median-priced home at the national, metro, and metro-county levels. HOAM takes into consideration the monthly principal and interest cost, given the current mortgage interest rates, as well as the costs associated with taxes, property insurance, and private mortgage insurance. HOAM uses the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) standard 30 percent share of income threshold to measure affordability. If the annual cost of homeownership exceeds a 30 percent share of the annual median household income, homeownership is considered unaffordable. Conversely, if the annual cost of homeownership is below a 30 percent share of the annual median household income, homeownership is considered affordable. Alternatively, HOAM allows the user to view affordability using an Affordability Index, where an index value of 100 or above indicates a median-income family could afford a median-priced home; a value below 100 indicates a median-income family would not be able to afford a median-priced home given the current interest rate.
The National View allows the user to analyze various aspects of homeownership affordability at the national level.
The National View includes tabs for National Affordability, Drivers, Affordability Gap, and Cost Breakdown:
The Metro View allows the user to analyze various aspects of homeownership affordability at the metropolitan area level.
The Metro View includes tabs for Metro Affordability, Drivers, Affordability Gap, Price/Income, Share of Income, County Level, and Cost Breakdown:
The following are the formulas used to calculate the major components of the Home Ownership Affordability Monitor:
This tool relies on the following data inputs and assumptions:
| HOAM Index Input |
Description |
Source |
|
Median household income (a) |
Median |
US Census Bureau's American Community Survey one-year estimates |
|
Median existing home sales price (b) |
Median, monthly three-month moving average |
Zonda Home |
|
Mortgage interest rate (c) |
30-year fixed-rate mortgage-commitment rate |
Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey/FRED |
|
Property taxes (d) |
Metro- and county-level (median) |
Derived from SmartAsset |
|
Property insurance (e) |
State- and county-level (average, annual) |
ICE McDash Analytics |
|
Down payment (f) |
10% of home price |
Black Knight Financial Services |
|
Private mortgage insurance (PMI) (g) |
0.558% of home mortgage amount |
Federal Housing Finance Agency |
For more detail, please see the definitions below.
a. Median household income: The US Census Bureau's American Community Survey (ACS) one-year estimates produce household income measures, which include the incomes of the head of household and anyone else in the household who is 15 years or older, regardless of the relationship to the head of household. The median represents the midpoint income within the distribution of incomes, meaning 50 percent of households earn more and 50 percent earn less. While the incomes are based on household estimates from the ACS, they are projected to the current month by Atlanta Fed staff using additional data series produced by the Current Population Survey and Decennial Census. There is more recent evidence, however, that suggests the single-person household comprises a higher share of overall housing activity. Because of this trend, this tool incorporates household income estimates rather than family income estimates. The distinction is important because median household incomes are typically lower than median family incomes, which has direct implications for affordability measures.HOAM metro Data: This file contains monthly affordability scores per Metro.
HOAM County Data: This file contains monthly affordability scores per county.
HOAM US Affordability Data: This file contains monthly national affordability index, monthly change in national affordability, monthly national median housing payment as a share of income, monthly estimated income that qualifies to purchase a median home vs actual median income differences, and monthly estimated income that qualifies to purchase a median home vs actual income percent difference.