Breaking News
Housing is so expensive that people earning $200,000 qualify for help
Brendi Bluitt didn’t think she fit the typical profile of someone needing public assistance to pay for housing. She had a good job in public relations, earning $80,000 a year.
Subscribe to The Post Most newsletter for the most important and interesting stories from The Washington Post.
But she qualified for D.C.’s home-purchase-assistance program, and she ended up getting an interest-free loan of more than $84,000. She had to contribute only $1,000 from her savings to buy her $376,000 condo.
“People maybe would think of someone else who maybe doesn’t look like me or isn’t in the same career field as me” receiving assistance, said Bluitt, who is also an advisory neighborhood commissioner in her Petworth neighborhood. “Honestly, without the program, it probably would have been a very long time before I was able to plant roots and purchase a home here.”
Across the country, as housing and other costs continue to outpace income increases, many middle-class home buyers like Bluitt are finding they can’t easily scrape together a down payment on their own. That has prompted city, state and nonprofit programs to expand eligibility for down-payment support – with some areas offering loans to people making more than $200,000.
Down Payment Resource, a company that compiles information on more than 2,700 home-buying programs, shared data with The Washington Post that showed more than 115 programs have raised their income threshold requirements since 2023. In most of those cases, the programs now offer aid to would-be home buyers whose income is above their local median, sometimes well above.
Memphis, for instance, now offers down-payment assistance to households with twice the local median income that purchase in designated areas of the city. San Francisco offers loans of up to half a million dollars for first-time home buyers; a single person with income up to $218,200 can apply.
“The affordability crisis is climbing up the income ladder,” said Rob Chrane, Down Payment Resource’s chief executive. “Today, even if you have a six-figure income in your household, it’s not easy to save money for a down payment for a home because costs everywhere are going up.”
The median U.S. home price now tops $405,000. The Urban Institute found that home sales prices have risen 80 percent since 2017, while wages have grown 38 percent.
Adam Grubbs, who runs a municipal down-payment-assistance program in Aurora, Illinois, said local leaders there decided to use municipal funds (about $300,000) to give middle-income households support similar to a federally subsidized program for low-income buyers.
Story Continues