I mean... I'm up in Canada but in one of the highest cost of living cities in the country which isn't as bad as San Francisco or NYC but it's bad...
20k is 1666 a month extra.
The only thing thats gone up $1666 a month more would be a larger house.
Fancy 1 bedrooms are up to 2000-2500 and they were never $334 to 734 even 15 years ago.
Something is wrong with that headline or their math
Rent as a percentage of income. General rule (and what I’m assuming the article is using without getting around the paywall) is 1/3 of your income should be rent. So if the avg rent in 2019 was $1666 and it’s now $2000 you should be making $80k/year instead of $60K.
Ah, assuming that's what's behind the paywall that makes much more sense.
I'm old enough to have learned that housing should be 1/4 of your take home pay
That's the general rule of thumb that I learned as well... try to stay within 1/4th of salary for mortgage/rent.
Just a small distinction. Not more than 1/3 of your income should be rent. Also this figure is based on the net income, not pre-tax
It could be including how much food has gone up as well
if the rent is, for instance, 40% of income then the additional income is also to offset the 60% nonrental income.
eg if you pay 400 in rent and now its 700 your overall income needs to go from 1000 to 1750 to maintain the same level of affordability.
That's a major issue about inflation - it's really just an additional tax. In inflation, cost of living goes up, income/wages do not.
it's relative to where you live, yes.
but generally rents and housing costs have doubled the past 5 years. and doubled the ten years ebfore that, so are about triple where they were in 2009. A 2 bed in my city was 1200-1500, now it's 3000-4000 and often 3-4 people are living there to make rent. a lot of two beds were converted to 3-4 beds (remove living and dining room).
I mean... I'm up in Canada but in one of the highest cost of living cities in the country which isn't as bad as San Francisco or NYC but it's bad...
20k is 1666 a month extra.
The only thing thats gone up $1666 a month more would be a larger house.
Fancy 1 bedrooms are up to 2000-2500 and they were never $334 to 734 even 15 years ago.
Something is wrong with that headline or their math
Rent as a percentage of income. General rule (and what I’m assuming the article is using without getting around the paywall) is 1/3 of your income should be rent. So if the avg rent in 2019 was $1666 and it’s now $2000 you should be making $80k/year instead of $60K.
Ah, assuming that's what's behind the paywall that makes much more sense.
I'm old enough to have learned that housing should be 1/4 of your take home pay
That's the general rule of thumb that I learned as well... try to stay within 1/4th of salary for mortgage/rent.
Just a small distinction. Not more than 1/3 of your income should be rent. Also this figure is based on the net income, not pre-tax
It could be including how much food has gone up as well
if the rent is, for instance, 40% of income then the additional income is also to offset the 60% nonrental income.
eg if you pay 400 in rent and now its 700 your overall income needs to go from 1000 to 1750 to maintain the same level of affordability.
That's a major issue about inflation - it's really just an additional tax. In inflation, cost of living goes up, income/wages do not.
it's relative to where you live, yes.
but generally rents and housing costs have doubled the past 5 years. and doubled the ten years ebfore that, so are about triple where they were in 2009. A 2 bed in my city was 1200-1500, now it's 3000-4000 and often 3-4 people are living there to make rent. a lot of two beds were converted to 3-4 beds (remove living and dining room).