Indiana Earns Top Marks, New York Falls Short: Realtor.com®'s 2026 State Report Cards for Homebuilding, Affordability Reveal a Nation Divided
South and Midwest sweep every A and B grade;
"A year ago, we launched this report to give policymakers a clear benchmark for progress at the state level," said
Indiana Takes the Top Spot
The top five holds familiar names from last year's inaugural rankings:
-
(2)
Iowa (A, 75.8) holds strong as the nation's affordability leader, with the lowest share of income required to purchase a median home (25.4%) and the highest REALTORS® Affordability Score (0.96) in the country. -
(3)
South Carolina (A, 75.2) remains the nation's building champion with a permit-to-population ratio of 1.96, nearly double its population share, and a rare negative new construction premium, meaning newly built homes are actually 5.7% cheaper than existing ones. -
(4)
Texas (A-, 71.0) continues to lead all states in raw construction volume, accounting for 14.6% of all building permits issued, far above its 9.3% population share. -
(5)
North Carolina (B+, 68.6) mirrorsSouth Carolina's building success, with a permit-to-population ratio of 1.84 and a slightly negative new construction premium of -1.5%, meaning builders are delivering homes priced just below existing inventory.
The Regional Divide: Every A and B Grade Belongs to the South or Midwest
The trend first identified in last year's report has sharpened considerably. Every A and B grade belongs to a state in the South or Midwest. Southern states average a score of 60.4 (average rank: 16); Midwestern states average 60.9 (average rank: 16). Western states average 41.8 (average rank: 35). The Northeast averages just 30.0 (average rank: 43) — and it shows: all six F grades went to states in those two regions alone.
Only 11 states can claim that a median-priced home is affordable to a median earner under the 30%-of-income rule, and all but one of them are in the South or Midwest.
"The regional divide we saw last year is a continuing structural feature of the American housing market," said
The Biggest Movers
Notable climbs in the 2026 rankings:
-
Delaware (+12 spots, No. 7, B) is one of this year's most improved states, vaulting into the top 10 on the strength of above-average building activity (permit-to-population ratio of 1.46) and a strong median income of$87,667 . -
Utah (+12 spots, No. 17, C+) matchesDelaware's leap, driven by an exceptional permit-to-population ratio of 1.82, a clear sign that aggressive construction can improve a state's trajectory even when current prices remain elevated. -
Colorado (+9 spots, No. 18, C+) also climbed significantly, with a healthy permit-to-population ratio of 1.34 and a relatively contained new construction premium of 9.6%. -
Kansas (+7 spots, No. 13, B) rose on the strength of its affordability numbers: a median priced home of$292,632 requires just 27.0% of median income, with a REALTORS® Affordability Score of 0.85.
On the other side,
Bold Policy Is the Only Path Forward
States climbing the rankings share a common denominator: they build more, regulate less and deliver homes buyers can actually afford. States at the bottom share the opposite. More permissive zoning, streamlined permitting, and incentives for competitively priced construction are not aspirational — they are proven levers that are already moving the rankings for states willing to use them.
Realtor.com ®' s Let America Build campaign calls on federal, state and local leaders to tear down the barriers to homebuilding driving the nation's 4-million-home shortage. States that act will likely see positive benefits and the states that don't are expected to fall further behind.
State-by-State Housing Affordability & Homebuilding Report Card (2026)
|
Rank |
State |
Total Score |
Grade |
REALTORS® Affordability Score |
Median Listing Price |
Median Household Income |
Share of 2025 Permitted Units |
Share of Population |
New Construction Premium |
|
1 |
|
76.3 |
A |
0.89 |
|
|
2.08 % |
2.04 % |
40.5 % |
|
2 |
|
75.8 |
A |
0.96 |
|
|
0.94 % |
0.95 % |
56.0 % |
|
3 |
|
75.2 |
A |
0.68 |
|
|
3.19 % |
1.63 % |
-5.7 % |
|
4 |
|
71 |
A- |
0.66 |
|
|
14.60 % |
9.28 % |
7.6 % |
|
5 |
|
68.6 |
B+ |
0.62 |
|
|
6.02 % |
3.28 % |
-1.5 % |
|
6 |
|
68.6 |
B+ |
0.75 |
|
|
0.74 % |
0.59 % |
49.9 % |
|
7 |
|
66.1 |
B |
0.70 |
|
|
0.45 % |
0.31 % |
16.0 % |
|
8 |
|
65.8 |
B |
0.61 |
|
|
0.38 % |
0.27 % |
7.1 % |
|
9 |
|
65.2 |
B |
0.74 |
|
|
1.08 % |
0.91 % |
33.3 % |
|
10 |
|
64.5 |
B |
0.79 |
|
|
1.06 % |
1.21 % |
29.4 % |
|
11 |
|
63.7 |
B |
0.59 |
|
|
12.28 % |
6.86 % |
-3.1 % |
|
12 |
|
63 |
B |
0.68 |
|
|
4.24 % |
3.31 % |
15.1 % |
|
13 |
|
62.6 |
B |
0.85 |
|
|
0.70 % |
0.87 % |
77.6 % |
|
14 |
|
59.8 |
C+ |
0.80 |
|
|
1.45 % |
1.71 % |
48.8 % |
|
15 |
|
59.4 |
C+ |
0.74 |
|
|
2.33 % |
2.60 % |
30.9 % |
|
15 |
|
59.4 |
C+ |
0.88 |
|
|
2.32 % |
3.48 % |
84.6 % |
|
17 |
|
58.2 |
C+ |
0.57 |
|
|
1.88 % |
1.04 % |
4.7 % |
|
18 |
|
57.8 |
C+ |
0.62 |
|
|
2.36 % |
1.76 % |
9.6 % |
|
19 |
|
57.5 |
C |
0.79 |
|
|
1.01 % |
1.35 % |
10.5 % |
|
20 |
|
57.3 |
C |
0.56 |
|
|
3.57 % |
2.23 % |
1.5 % |
|
21 |
|
56.7 |
C |
0.74 |
|
|
1.32 % |
1.52 % |
13.0 % |
|
22 |
|
55.5 |
C |
0.83 |
|
|
1.20 % |
1.83 % |
48.1 % |
|
23 |
|
55.2 |
C |
0.67 |
|
|
1.78 % |
1.75 % |
38.0 % |
|
24 |
|
54.8 |
C |
0.76 |
|
|
1.01 % |
1.35 % |
23.5 % |
|
25 |
|
54.6 |
C |
0.88 |
|
|
0.29 % |
0.52 % |
56.7 % |
|
26 |
|
52.8 |
C |
0.45 |
|
|
1.25 % |
0.59 % |
-4.6 % |
|
27 |
|
52.4 |
C |
0.58 |
|
|
3.02 % |
2.14 % |
14.0 % |
|
28 |
|
51.7 |
C |
0.85 |
|
|
1.64 % |
2.96 % |
89.1 % |
|
29 |
|
50.2 |
C |
0.74 |
|
|
0.17 % |
0.23 % |
48.7 % |
|
30 |
|
49.7 |
C |
0.87 |
|
|
1.31 % |
3.72 % |
67.2 % |
|
31 |
|
49.4 |
C |
0.81 |
|
|
0.93 % |
1.83 % |
46.7 % |
|
32 |
|
48.2 |
C |
0.82 |
|
|
1.82 % |
3.82 % |
79.9 % |
|
33 |
|
47.5 |
C- |
0.60 |
|
|
0.47 % |
0.41 % |
44.8 % |
|
34 |
|
45.8 |
C- |
0.52 |
|
|
1.30 % |
0.96 % |
18.5 % |
|
35 |
|
44.5 |
C- |
0.72 |
|
|
0.59 % |
0.86 % |
36.3 % |
|
36 |
|
44.1 |
C- |
0.59 |
|
|
0.15 % |
0.17 % |
17.1 % |
|
37 |
|
42.6 |
C- |
0.76 |
|
|
0.06 % |
0.22 % |
22.3 % |
|
38 |
|
40.8 |
C- |
0.54 |
|
|
2.45 % |
2.34 % |
15.1 % |
|
39 |
|
40.1 |
C- |
0.59 |
|
|
0.54 % |
0.62 % |
6.8 % |
|
40 |
|
39.3 |
D+ |
0.56 |
|
|
0.17 % |
0.19 % |
32.5 % |
|
41 |
|
38.9 |
D+ |
0.72 |
|
|
0.11 % |
0.20 % |
13.7 % |
|
42 |
|
38 |
D+ |
0.58 |
|
|
0.35 % |
0.41 % |
37.5 % |
|
43 |
|
36.4 |
D |
0.60 |
|
|
2.25 % |
2.79 % |
71.6 % |
|
44 |
|
35.4 |
D |
0.41 |
|
|
0.36 % |
0.33 % |
6.8 % |
|
45 |
|
30.8 |
D- |
0.48 |
|
|
1.05 % |
1.25 % |
1.4 % |
|
46 |
|
29 |
F |
0.67 |
|
|
0.49 % |
1.08 % |
72.0 % |
|
47 |
|
21.7 |
F |
0.47 |
|
|
7.34 % |
11.51 % |
-3.8 % |
|
48 |
|
16.6 |
F |
0.49 |
|
|
0.26 % |
0.42 % |
31.1 % |
|
49 |
|
11.8 |
F |
0.47 |
|
|
0.12 % |
0.33 % |
35.0 % |
|
50 |
|
11.2 |
F |
0.50 |
|
|
0.85 % |
2.09 % |
37.2 % |
|
51 |
|
8.5 |
F |
0.51 |
|
|
2.66 % |
5.85 % |
73.9 % |
Methodology
The 2026 report cards are largely based on data with a 2025 reference period. The REALTORS® Affordability Score is derived from the REALTORS® Affordability Distribution Curve, which examines how many listings are affordable to those in a particular income percentile. The Affordability Score varies between 0 and 2 and is a calculation that is equal to twice the area below the Affordability Distribution Curve on a graph. Median list price is calculated for each state across Realtor.com listings active in 2025. Median Household Income comes from 2025 estimates by Claritas. Permit data comes from the
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Media Contact: Mallory Micetich, press@realtor.com
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