ScholarGate
Assistant
Process / pipelineAffordability indices / cost-burden measures

Housing Affordability Index

A housing affordability index summarises how the cost of housing in a city or market relates to what households can pay, condensing prices, rents and incomes into a single interpretable number. The simplest forms are ratios — the median house price divided by median income, or housing outlays as a share of income — while the residual-income approach championed by Michael Stone instead asks what is left for everything else after housing is paid. Together these measures let analysts compare affordability across places and over time, flag cost-burdened populations, and track housing stress as markets shift.

Open in MethodMindSoonApply, compare, get guidance
Tools & resources
Download slides
Learn & explore
VideoSoon

Read the full method

Members only

Sign in with a free account to read this section.

Sign in

Method map

The neighbourhood of related methods — select a node to explore.

Sources

  1. Stone, M. E. (2006). What is housing affordability? The case for the residual income approach. Housing Policy Debate, 17(1), 151–184. DOI: 10.1080/10511482.2006.9521564

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Housing Affordability Index (Cost-to-Income Ratios and Residual-Income Measures). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/urban-studies/housing-affordability-index

Which method?

Set this method beside its closest kin and read them side by side — the library lays the books on the table; the choice is yours.

Compare side by side

Referenced by

ScholarGateHousing Affordability Index (Housing Affordability Index (Cost-to-Income Ratios and Residual-Income Measures)). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/urban-studies/housing-affordability-index · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026