U.S. Housing Market Shows Echoes of 2008 as Mortgage Rates Double and Affordability Crisis Deepens
U.S. mortgage rates have surged to 6.82% as of July 2025, more than double the 2.99% average seen in mid-2021. This sharp increase, coupled with a 45% jump in home prices since 2020, has pushed the average home price to $355,328—up 2.7% year-over-year. The affordability crunch has led to a dramatic pullback in homebuying, with new home sales hitting a 30-year low this spring and 15% of pending deals canceled in June alone.
Renters face even starker challenges. The U.S. now faces a shortage of 7.1 million affordable rental units, leaving just 35 available for every 100 low-income renters. As a result, 75% of low-income renters spend over half their pay on housing, fueling the largest rise in homelessness since the Great Recession. Middle-class families are increasingly stretched thin, with many forced into overcrowded living arrangements or paycheck-to-paycheck survival.
Builders are freezing projects as demand wanes, while sellers struggle to find buyers in a market paralyzed by high costs. Analysts warn the current trajectory bears unsettling similarities to the lead-up to the 2008 housing crash.