Home Values and Incomes Rise Faster than Household Debt, Studies Find

'Overall, it’s very, very positive,' Bankrate Financial Analyst Stephen Kates said.
Published: 8/14/2025, 5:54:33 PM EDT
Home Values and Incomes Rise Faster than Household Debt, Studies Find
A new report shows a dramatic increase in home equity in most states. (Pla2na/Shutterstock)
Americans are de-leveraging, with both home equity and income growing faster than debt levels, new studies show. 
An Aug. 13 report by Bankrate, a financial analytics firm, shows a dramatic increase in home equity in most states. West Virginia led the pack with an average increase of 450 percent since 2020, followed by Oklahoma (431 percent), Connecticut (297 percent), Kansas (234 percent), and Illinois (217 percent). 

Americans have taken on more debt recently, with the Federal Reserve reporting that total household debt increased by $185 billion to $18.39 trillion in the second quarter of 2025. On average, however, Americans’ mortgage debt, relative to home values, has been falling, Bankrate reports.

Only the District of Columbia and Louisiana showed a decline in home equity levels, falling by 38 percent and 22 percent, respectively, over the past five years, the study states. And though still positive, Alaska showed the smallest level of home equity appreciation at 17 percent, followed by North Dakota (19 percent) and Colorado (48 percent).

“The total value of mortgaged homes nationwide has risen fast, by over $10 trillion in the last five years—much faster than mortgage debt,” the report stated.

Meanwhile, Americans’ mortgage debt relative to home values fell significantly over the past five years, increasing the wealth of those who own their homes.

“On a national level, the average [home] loan-to-value ratio in 2020 was 82 percent; it’s now 70 percent,” Bankrate financial analyst Stephen Kates told The Epoch Times.

“Overall, it’s very, very positive.”

The reasons for this vary state by state, Kates said. In some states, such as West Virginia, the increase in home equity is primarily due to a substantial rise in home values. 

West Virginia has seen a relatively large influx of new residents in recent years, as a percentage of its population, and the state features some of the lowest home prices nationwide, averaging $171,861, the Bankrate report states.

Home prices in Oklahoma are also relatively affordable, at an average of $217,142.

In other states, such as Connecticut, which has some of the highest average home prices at $426,752, the increase in home equity was largely driven by homeowners deleveraging, either paying down mortgages or borrowing less to buy, Kates said.

The District of Columbia, by contrast, featured high home prices, on average $617,355, with little price appreciation. Home values in D.C. increased by less than 3 percent over the past five years, compared to a 45 percent average increase across the United States, while D.C. residents took on more mortgage debt.

Job cuts and the threat of job cuts for federal workers since President Donald Trump took office have had an impact on D.C. real estate, according to a June report by Lisa Sturtevant for Bright MLS, a real estate analytics firm.

About 40 percent of Washington-area real estate agents said their clients’ decision to buy or sell was due to federal workforce layoffs, and 38 percent said that layoffs are causing home prices to come down in the D.C. market, Sturtevant wrote

While migration drove some of the price increases for housing, it didn’t always correlate with home equity valuation.

Illinois, for example, ranked fifth nationwide in home equity appreciation, but according to a migration study by Unleash Prosperity, a free-market advocacy organization, that state had 881,000 more people move out than between 2012 and 2022.
Likewise, Connecticut, which ranked third for home equity appreciation, had 117,000 more people move out than during that period. 

To calculate average home equity amounts, Bankrate relied on data from companies such as Zillow, Experian, and ICE Mortgage Technology. Homes that had no mortgage were not counted in the study, indicating that average household leverage is even lower, Kates said.

Total home equity in the United States is now more than $34 trillion, according to Bankrate, which is a significant percentage of Americans’ $170 trillion in total net worth. However, for most Americans, the share of personal wealth represented by home equity is much larger.
A 2023 study by Pew Research found that the median net worth of U.S. households was $166,900, but $109,000 of this was the net equity of their homes. According to this survey, 62 percent of Americans owned the house they lived in. 
Americans’ average debt-to-income ratios are also improving. A 2024 Federal Reserve study found that while Americans’ total household debt has risen since 2019—reaching $17.94 trillion in the third quarter of 2024—Americans’ disposable personal income increased even more during this period, reaching $21.8 trillion.

The ratio of total debt to income was 82 percent in 2024, below the pre-pandemic level of 86 percent in 2019, the Fed reported.