草莓传媒

What did a DC-area house cost when Reagan was President?

WASHINGTON 鈥 The National Association of Realtors will release its annual buyer and seller survey later this month. It began doing the survey in 1981, the year Ronald Reagan was sworn in for his first term as President of the United States, and the local housing market is a lot different from what it was 35 years ago.

One obvious difference? Price.

The median price of a home in the Washington metro area 35 years ago was 鈥 wait for it 鈥 about $88,000. Today, the median price is closer to $407,000, the NAR says.

Mortgage rates are the other notable difference. 鈥淲hen you look back to the 1980s, there was actually double-digit interest rates, a little above 15 percent [on a 30-year mortgage], so not the historical lows that we鈥檙e seeing today of below 4 percent,鈥 NAR鈥檚 Jessica Lautz told聽草莓传媒.

Here鈥檚 some math to put that in perspective. An $88,000 loan at 15.2 percent meant a monthly payment of $1,130. A $407,000 loan at 3.5 percent (roughly today鈥檚 30-year rate) is about $1,830.

Even more fun math: Today鈥檚 $407,000 mortgage in Washington at 1981鈥檚 15.2 percent mortgage rate would have been about $5,200 a month.

The NAR survey has also been asking about the internet for the last 20 years.

鈥淲e started asking about the internet in 1995, and we were a little ahead of the time then. Only 2 percent of homebuyers were looking on the internet then, which is laughable. Today, now more than 90 percent of buyers are searching online,鈥 Lautz says.

Thirty-five years ago, more than 40 percent of homebuyers were first-time buyers. Today it is closer to 30 percent.

Jeff Clabaugh

Jeff Clabaugh has spent 20 years covering the Washington region's economy and financial markets for 草莓传媒 as part of a partnership with the Washington Business Journal, and officially joined the 草莓传媒 newsroom staff in January 2016.

Federal 草莓传媒 Network Logo
Log in to your 草莓传媒 account for notifications and alerts customized for you.