Salt Lake City—The COVID-19 pandemic years created unmatched volatility in Utah’s housing market. The Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute’s State of the State’s Housing Market report provides a detailed analysis of current market conditions in Utah, which shows residential construction activity, existing home sales, housing shortages, and affordability were all impacted in a way not seen since the Great Recession.
“In over 50 years of Utah’s housing history, there are no back-to-back years like 2021 and 2022,” said Jim Wood, Ivory-Boyer Senior Fellow, and lead author of the report. “Building permits for residential units increased by 26 percent in 2021, only to fall by 26 percent in 2022. These COVID-19 pandemic years now join the Great Recession as one of the most extraordinary moments for Utah’s housing market.”
Key findings from the report include the following:
– Utah’s ten-year home building and real estate boom ended abruptly in 2022 – First quarter home building activity and real estate sales in 2022 seemed to indicate another exceptional year for Utah’s housing market. But over the following nine months, the mortgage rate increased from 4.0 percent to 6.5 percent, undercutting homebuyer demand.
– The Federal Reserve’s monetary policy affected all types of residential construction – Year-over comparisons show single-family residential construction was hardest hit with a 32 percent drop in building permits in 2022, a 27 percent decline in apartment unit permits, and a 9.5 percent decline in condominium, townhome, and twin home permits.
– The housing market contraction continued through Q2 2023 – Through June 2023, the year-over number of residential units receiving building permits in Utah fell 37 percent, existing homes sales fell 20 percent, and the median sales price of a home fell by 7.5 percent.
– Utah’s housing shortage is likely to increase by 2024 – Utah’s housing shortage decreased from 56,800 units in 2017 to 28,400 units in 2022; however, as homebuilding activity contracts, new households will outnumber new housing units. Consequently, Utah’s housing shortage will likely increase to over 37,000 units by 2024.
– Despite the dip in housing prices, housing affordability continues to prevent homeownership opportunities for many households – In Q2 2023, the median income household in the Salt Lake City Metropolitan Area could afford only 21 percent of the homes sold in that area. In an affordable housing market, the median income household should be able to afford 50 percent of homes sold.
The full report is now available online.
ABOUT THE KEM C. GARDNER POLICY INSTITUTE
The Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute serves Utah by preparing economic, demographic, and public policy research that helps the state prosper. We are Utah’s demographic experts, leaders on the Utah economy, and specialists on public policy and survey research. We are an honest broker of INFORMED RESEARCH, which guides INFORMED DISCUSSIONS and leads to INFORMED DECISIONS™. For more information, please visit gardner.utah.edu or call 801-587-3717.
ABOUT THE DAVID ECCLES SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
The Eccles School is synonymous with ‘doing.’ The Eccles experience provides a world-class business education with a unique, entrepreneurial focus on real-world scenarios where students put what they learn into practice long before graduation. Founded in 1917 and educating more than 6,000 students annually, the University of Utah David Eccles School of Business offers nine undergraduate majors, four MBAs, nine other graduate programs, a Ph.D. in seven areas and executive education curricula. The School is also home to more than 20 institutes, centers, and initiatives, which deliver academic research and support an ecosystem of entrepreneurship and innovation. For more information, visit Eccles.Utah.edu or call 801-581-7676.
Contact: Nick Thiriot, Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute, 801-842-9150, nick.thiriot@utah.edu