5 US cities where you can actually buy new, affordable homes

Americans can’t buy the homes they want because of tight supply and sky-high prices. Where can young professionals looking to settle down actually find homes to buy?

In an exclusive report with Trulia, Yahoo Finance assessed where exactly new and affordable homes are being built across America.

First, Trulia classified homes into three different categories — startup, tradeup or premium. For each of the urban areas, chief economist Ralph McLaughlin said his team assessed all home value estimates — not just those that end up selling. Any home that fell in the bottom third price bracket is a starter home; the middle bracket is a tradeup home; the top bracket is a premium home.

For example, in the New York metro area, a starter home is anything valued under $400,000. The cutoff points are set for every year and every metro.

By calculating the difference between the percentage of starter homes built post-recession (2010-2016) and the percentage of starter homes built pre-recession (1997-2007), Trulia ranked America’s 101 largest metros based on which saw the greatest increase.

Where are starter homes being built?

Thirty-five percent of all new homes being built in Ventura, Calif. are starter homes, a whopping 22% increase from its pre-recession levels (13%). It is also the only metro area that saw a double digit swing between pre- and post-recession periods.

McLaughlin said he’s surprised that Ventura experienced the biggest increase, given how costly California land is. But he but pointed out that it’s an affordable commuter suburb of Los Angeles.

“As home prices have gotten less and less affordable in Los Angeles, people are seeking options outside of the city,” he explained.

New Orleans, La.; Little Rock, Ark.; Cleveland, Ohio, and Richmond, Va. round out the top five regions where starter home construction has been on the rise.

What do these cities have in common? Besides the No. 1 spot, all are southern and midwest markets. All are fairly business friendly, have significant buildable land, and have relatively loose local and state regulations that don’t burden builders, said McLaughlin.

There are city-specific factors too, of course. New Orleans, for example, has recovered after the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina during the end of the pre-recession period.

“It was cheap and necessary to develop afterward because the land was so devastated afterward,” he said.

The big picture

The proportion of starter homes being built across the country has dwindled significantly. 2015 and 2016 saw the lowest and second lowest levels of starter home construction in two decades, and it has been part of a trend we’ve seen over the last 10 years.