The American housing market is revealing a shift that goes far beyond rising interest rates, because what we are witnessing is the disappearance of the entry-level buyer, and once that foundation erodes, the entire structure of the market becomes unstable.
The data is striking. The income required to purchase a typical home has climbed to around $111,000, a level far beyond what most young workers earn, while the median age of first-time homebuyers has surged to 40. That alone tells you everything. A generation that should be forming households in their late 20s and early 30s is now being pushed a decade or more down the timeline.
At the same time, nearly two million “missing households” have been identified, representing young adults who, under normal conditions, would have entered the housing market but simply cannot. This is not a demand problem. It is an affordability collapse.
The implications extend beyond real estate. Housing has always been a primary driver of economic activity, influencing everything from construction to consumer spending. When young people are unable to buy homes, they delay other major life decisions, which feeds back into the economy as slower growth and reduced momentum.
What policymakers fail to acknowledge is that this is not simply the result of interest rates. It is the consequence of years of artificially inflated asset prices combined with stagnant wage growth. The system has been stretched to the point where even small increases in borrowing costs can shut out entire segments of the population.
From the standpoint of capital flows, housing has become less about shelter and more about investment, and that shift has created a market where prices are sustained by capital rather than affordability. The entry point for new buyers rises continuously, eventually reaching a level where participation becomes impossible.