Homes With Low Natural Disaster Risk Are Rising in Value Faster Than Homes With High Risk for the First Time in Over a Decade
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The total value of
U.S. homes facing low risk of extreme heat is up 7% year over year to$17.7 trillion . The total value of homes facing high risk of extreme heat is up 6.3% to$29.7 trillion . -
The total value of homes facing low flood risk is up 6.7% year over year to
$40.2 trillion . The total value of homes facing high flood risk is up 6% to$7.2 trillion . -
The total value of homes facing low fire risk is up 6.6% year over year to
$39 trillion . The total value of homes facing high fire risk is up 6.4% to$8.4 trillion .
While these differences are small, they are notable because this year marked the first time since 2010 that low-risk homes across all three categories—heat, flood and fire—rose in value faster than high-risk homes.
Low-risk homes across all three risk categories have been gaining value faster than high-risk homes since
“The fact that this is happening across risk types—and thus, across the country—is some of the best evidence we have that climate change is impacting people’s homebuying decisions,” said Redfin Senior Economist
Recent shifts in where Americans are choosing to live also indicate that people may be growing more responsive to climate risk. In
One reason the value of low-risk homes is rising faster than the value of high-risk homes is that
While climate risk has become a top consideration for some house hunters, that’s certainly not the case for everyone. There are still more people moving into than out of disaster-prone America as a whole, which is one reason home values in disaster-prone areas continue to climb.
Home Values in High-Risk Areas Are Still Up More Than 60% Since Before the Pandemic
The value of both high- and low-risk homes is up substantially from before the pandemic—largely due to the 2020-2021 homebuying frenzy—but it’s up most for high-risk homes:
- The total value of homes facing high risk of extreme heat is up 62.5% from before the pandemic. The total value of homes facing low risk of extreme heat is up 53.2%.
- The total value of homes facing high flood risk is up 60.3% from before the pandemic. The total value of homes facing low risk is up 58.7%.
- The total value of homes facing high fire risk is up 67.8%from before the pandemic. The total value of homes facing low fire risk is up 57.2%.
The value of the
Home values in disaster-prone areas continue to rise in part because there’s still demand for homes in these areas. Some people relocate to disaster-prone areas because many of those areas are relatively affordable.
Home values in both risky and non-risky areas also continue to rise because the mortgage rate lock-in effect has exacerbated America’s shortage of homes for sale, putting upward pressure on values.
This is based on a Redfin analysis of climate-risk scores from
To view the full report, including charts and more details on methodology, please visit: https://www.redfin.com/news/home-values-climate-risk-2024/
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Source: Redfin