Median House Prices in the USA Since 1970 (Inflation Adjusted)

Chart of the Day recently provided this graph, illustrating the (inflation adjusted)  U.S. median price of a single-family home over the past 40 years -- 1970 - 2010. Following the increasingly rapid increase that began in 1991 and ended in 2005, the U.S. median house price dropped by 35% from the peak.   As Chart of the Day, points out, a  home buyer who bought the median priced single-family home at the 1979 peak has actually seen that home lose 4.3% of its value. Not an impressive performance considering that over three decades have passed,  Of course, this is a nation-wide median figure and does not reflect the fact that some regions or neighborhoods have seen dramatic appreciation over the past several decades--even after the dramatic price drops of recent years. 

The current (2010) median price is still at the high end of the trading range that existed from the late 1970s when environmental restrictions first took hold in major coastal metropolitan areas. This suggests to me that there issome room for further price declines--unless we see some strong job growth in the very near future.

H. Pike Oliver

Born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area, H. Pike Oliver has worked on real estate development strategies and master-planned communities since the early 1970s, including nearly eight years at the Irvine Company. He resided in the City of Irvine for five years in the 1980s and nine years in the 1990s.

As the founder and sole proprietor of URBANEXUS, Oliver works on advancing equitable and sustainable real estate development and natural lands management. He is also an affiliate instructor at the Runstad Department of Real Estate at the University of Washington.

Early in his career, Oliver worked for public agencies, including the California Governor’s Office of Planning and Research where he was a principal contributor to An Urban Strategy for California. Prior to relocating to Seattle in 2013, Oliver taught real estate development at Cornell University and directed the undergraduate program in urban and regional studies. He is a member of the Urban Land Institute, the American Planning Association and a founder and emeritus member of the California Planning Roundtable.

Oliver is a graduate of the urban studies and planning program at San Francisco State University and earned a master’s degree in urban planning at UCLA.

https://urbanexus.com
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