This Chart Shows the Average American Can No Longer Afford to Live in a Big US City

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Skyrocketing rent has effectively priced the average worker out of America’s cities, and not just the major ones, according to a recent survey by United Way.

SO WHAT

The rent is too damn high!

THE NUMBERS

Average-wage workers would have to work more than 40 hours per week to afford a two-bedroom apartment in 47 of the 50 largest U.S. cities, United Way of the National Capital Area found in July.

“Say goodbye to the 40-hour workweek,” United Way wrote, citing National Low Income Housing Coalition data on average wages per state and fair market rents per city.

  • Only in Houston, Texas, can average-wage workers afford a two-bedroom rental working under 40 hours per week.

For minimum-wage workers, the situation is even worse: Working 50 hours a week would only be enough to afford a two-bedroom rental in two cities, Buffalo, New York and Tucson, Arizona, according to the survey.

  • In New York City, it would take working 111 hours a week, or 22 hours per weekday, for minimum wage to afford a one-bedroom apartment.
  • In San Francisco, it would be 161 hours per week, or nearly all day every day of the week.

THE UPSHOT

With one-in-three Americans earning less than $15 an hour, millions of workers can’t afford to live where they work: About 30% of New York City’s workforce earns minimum wage.

  • In the past year and a half, high inflation without concomitant wage increases has exacerbated a long-term problem of unaffordable housing.
  • Lower-income earners have been forced to move farther and farther for work.
  • The National Low Income Housing Coalition, reported last year that minimum wage earners working a 40-hour week could not afford a two-bedroom rental in 91% of U.S. counties.

WHAT’S NEXT

According to an August forecast by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, average rents nationwide will continue to rise much faster than wages through May 2023.

By We'll Do It Live