The gap between Black and white homeownership
rates closed over the pandemic, but disparities
remain
- Nearly 1 in 4 Black mortgage applicants are denied, versus 1 in
10 white applicants.
- Credit history is the most common reason given for denying a
Black applicant.
- If the typical home was worth $1,
Black-owned homes would be worth 85
cents and white-owned homes worth $1.03.
SEATTLE, May 29, 2024
/PRNewswire/ -- The homeownership rate for Black households
has grown faster than average since 2019, but it's still below the
high-water mark reached in 2004, before the Great
Recession.
Insufficient credit is holding many Black households back from
homeownership. Nearly 1 in 4 mortgage applications from Black
borrowers — 24% — are denied, according to 2023 Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act data, which can be explored on this interactive
Zillow® dashboard on housing inequality.
That's almost twice the rate of all applicants (12.6%) and far
higher than the 1-in-10 denial rate for white
applicants1. Of those mortgages denied Black applicants,
more than 43% are turned down due to credit history – the most
common reason given. That's a higher rate than in past years and
also when compared to 32% of denials for white
applicants.
"While discriminatory policies like redlining have long been
outlawed, the damage from these historic practices is still felt
today. Many communities once barred from accessing credit are now
finance deserts, with few traditional financial institutions,
making it harder to build credit and buy a house," said Zillow
senior economist Orphe Divounguy. "That's why it's so important to
expand credit access. Allowing rent payments to count in credit
scores is one example of how to move the industry forward."
Today, nearly 46% of Black households own their home, an
improvement from a low point of 43% in 2019, but still down from a
49.7% peak ownership rate reached in 2004, before the Great
Recession, and far off from the 74% rate for white households. Many
Black households have been left out of major wealth gains during
that time. Since the Black homeownership rate peaked in 2004, U.S.
home values have more than doubled, rising 117%.
Although the gap between white homeownership rates and
those of Black and Hispanic households has diminished since 2019,
the deficit is still large and contributes to vast inequalities in
wealth.
The single largest asset for most homeowners is their house, and
it's a major means of building wealth and passing it on to the next
generation. Zillow Research found a $3
trillion wealth gap between Black and white families. Nearly
40% of the gap — $1.18 trillion —
could be credited to disparities in home values and
ownership.
Despite rising faster than average since 2019, Black-owned home
values are still far lower than average. If the typical home was
worth $1, Black-owned homes would be
worth 85 cents and white-owned homes
worth $1.03.
How Zillow leverages technology to understand and address
housing inequality and accessibility challenges.
- Rent payments made to landlords on the Zillow Rentals platform
can now count toward a renter's credit score. Zillow is pushing for
systemic, national changes on this front, advocating for bipartisan
legislation that would encourage property owners and utility and
telecom providers to report payment data to credit reporting
agencies. This would give consumers who pay their bills on time the
chance to build a positive credit history.
- Home shoppers can see what down payment
assistance programs they could qualify for on every Zillow
listing, saving shoppers the hassle of looking up their eligibility
on various government websites.
- Continuing its investment in new technology to address biases
and inequalities in housing, Zillow recently released the
open-source Fair Housing Classifier. This free and easy-to-access
new tool establishes guardrails to help prevent historic biases
from resurfacing in real estate conversations powered by large
language model (LLM) technology.
1 For conventional purchases of a primary
residence.
About Zillow Group
Zillow Group,
Inc. (Nasdaq: Z and ZG)
is reimagining real estate to make home a reality for
more and more people. As the most visited real estate website in
the United States, Zillow
and its affiliates help people find and get the home they
want by connecting them with digital solutions, dedicated partners
and agents, and easier buying, selling, financing and renting
experiences.
Zillow Group's affiliates, subsidiaries and brands include
Zillow®, Zillow Premier Agent®, Zillow Home Loans℠, Trulia®, Out
East®, StreetEasy®, HotPads®, ShowingTime+℠, Spruce® and
Follow Up Boss®.
All marks herein are owned by MFTB Holdco, Inc., a Zillow
affiliate. Zillow Home Loans, LLC is an Equal Housing Lender, NMLS
#10287 (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org). © 2023 MFTB Holdco, Inc., a
Zillow affiliate.
View original content to download
multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/black-homeownership-rate-rises-but-hasnt-returned-to-2004-level-302157526.html
SOURCE Zillow