California housing costs at 7-year low, relatively speaking

“Survey says” looks at various rankings and scorecards judging geographic locations while noting these grades are best seen as a mix of artful interpretation and data.

Buzz: California’s housing costs – compared with other states – were at a seven-year low in 2022.

Source: My trusty spreadsheet looked at a curious cost-of-living yardstick – the federal government’s annual “price parity” report that puts key consumer expenses into a national perspective between the 50 states and the District of Columbia. We focused on the recently released data for 2002 and compared those stats with the last time California had a better housing cost number (2015). 

Topline

California housing costs ran 60% above the US norm in 2022, by this math. That’s the smallest premium since 2015’s 58%.

So you see, I’m not saying the cost of putting a roof over your head in California has become any bargain. I’m only highlighting a sliver of calm in California’s affordability mess.

Golden State housing expenses still rank second-priciest in the US. Only DC was higher by this measurement, at 77% above average. New Jersey was No. 3 at 36%.

Now, if you’re looking for a housing-cost utopia, try West Virginia (46% below average), Arkansas (44% below) or Mississippi (43% below).

Details

The report highlights how some of the nation’s fast-growth economies are now suffering from what were once seen as exclusively coastal challenges: soaring housing costs.

California’s relative housing costs are up by 2 percentage points in seven years – but that’s only the No. 17 gain among the states. Ponder the bigger jumps since 2015.

Idaho is up 13.5 points, though its housing is still 12% cheaper than the US average. Nevada rose 13 points to become 12% above average. Arizona increased 12.5 points to 6% above average. Those are some of the nation’s fastest-growing economies – and common destinations for relocating Golden Staters.

And California’s arch-rivals? Florida was No. 7 with a 7-point jump to 16% above average. Texas was No. 14, up 3 points to 3% below average.

Yes, housing in some states got relatively much cheaper. Costs in Hawaii were off 22 percentage points but were still 32% above average. Alaska fell 18 points to 3% below average. And Connecticut was off 13 points to 19% above average.

Caveats

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