25 Most Expensive Cities in the U.S. to Buy a House

In this article we take a look at the 25 most expensive cities in the US to buy a house. Click to skip ahead and jump to the 10 most expensive cities in the US to buy a house.

Statistically, it is very unlikely that the person reading this article actually owns their own home, especially if they are residing in the United States. The median age of a home buyer in the US is now 47, which is a significant increase over the previous decades. Go back less than 40 years and the age was just 34, showing how owning a home has become more and more impossible for people in the US as time has gone by. In just the 9 years after the financial crash in 2009, the median age had increased by 8 years. In real terms, the US housing prices has increased by 45% in just the last 8 years.

While the recession has been one of the main reasons behind the increase in the median age of purchasing, another factor is student loans. People in the US owe over $1.4 trillion in student loans alone, with interest payments alone eating into their savings. There are tons of stories about people paying off tens of thousands of dollars in student loans, only for the amount to increase, since they only paid off part of the interest, not even denting the principal.

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In the larger US cities, which are the focus of this article, home prices have increased drastically, pricing out most people. Meanwhile, home builders have decided to concentrate more on people on the richer end of the spectrum, again leaving out the average Joe being unable to buy his own property. Some of the prices are really obscene; in San Francisco the median home costs over a million dollars. You literally have to be a millionaire to be able to afford the median price of a home; in fact, a multi millionaire because you will still need money to take care of other expenses. There's a reason why the average salary of homeowners is significantly higher than those who don't.

Of course, this pricing boom doesn't only relate to properties, but to rent as well. Rent has increased so much in recent times that people have to spend a far greater percentage of their income on just rent, leaving very little for other necessities or luxuries. In San Francisco, the average rent is around $3,500! This is for a one bedroom apartment, not a mansion. The reason for some of the high prices is that many people are living in places like San Francisco or Manhattan, where due to various reasons, there is limited additional construction and as the population increases, so does the price of the property.