Minneapolis Now One of Worst Cities in Entire Country For Housing Shortages
(The Center Square) – According to a recent study by Zillow, Minneapolis has the eighth-worst housing shortage in the country.
Despite a pandemic construction boom, the home buying site says the U.S. is short 4.5 million homes as of 2022. That year, 8.09 million households lived with nonrelatives, while 3.55 million units were for sale or rent, leaving 4.5 million unaccounted for.
In Minneapolis, 12% of non-homeowning residents would be able to still afford a mortgage. Zillow estimates the city has a housing shortage of 77,560 units.
NEW STUDY: Minneapolis One of the Happiest Cities in the World
The study argues, using the Wharton Residential Land Use Regulatory Index, that areas with more zoning laws have a greater housing shortage. The top cities with housing shortages, such as Boston, Sacramento, Portland, San Diego and San Francisco all have strong zoning regulations.
“It seems straightforward: We need to build more homes,” said Skylar Olsen, Zillow’s chief economist. “Changes through policies like modest densification will give us more ‘at bats’ to create density and help communities stay livable for everyone. Without a huge injection of new homes in the near future, affordability will continue to be a challenge for many — especially for first-time home buyers.”
The pandemic construction boom resulted in the most homes built since before the Great Recession, about 1.4 million units. Despite this boom, a gap still exists. With millennials now in the marketplace for mortgages, the demand continues to grow.