This story was originally published by Stacker. Story by Emily Sherman.

Homeownership lets you build equity, put down roots, and make a place your own. But in recent years, achieving this part of the American dream has become much more difficult.

Adjusting for inflation, the cost of a newly constructed single-family home in 2022 was over 2 1/2 times more expensive than in the 1960s. So for young adults in their mid-20s—an age when many people think they should buy a home—the goal might seem out of reach. The actual average age of a first-time home buyer in 2022 was 36, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Stacker ran the numbers on the cost of a new, single-family home for the last 60 years to illustrate how home prices have grown. Using Census Bureau data, we analyzed the median list price for a newly constructed home from 1963 to 2021 and the Consumer Price Index to calculate each year’s absolute and inflation-adjusted prices.

The basis of the Census Bureau data is new constructions, which are often more expensive than existing homes. The list price includes both the house and the land. This story does not include houses built for rent, those built by the owner, or ones by a general contractor on the owner’s land.

It’s true that location plays a role in home prices. For example, homes in the Northeast and West have always generally been higher than the rest of the country. But the data still shows that average prices have grown substantially over time.

Check out the cost of buying a home the year you turned 25.A line chart showing the price of a newly built, single-family home since 1963.

Stacker

Homes continue to get more expensive

Adjusted for inflation, the cost of a newly constructed family home is more than twice as expensive in the early 2020s as it was in 1960. With some fluctuation over the years, costs have grown steadily, reaching a median of more than $450,000 by 2022—with regions like the Northeast showing even higher prices.Exterior view of a newly built house in 1963.

Lambert // Getty Images

1963

– Median list price: $18,000
– Inflation-adjusted price: $171,938
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $20,300 ($193,908 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $17,900 ($170,982 in today’s dollars)
— South: $16,100 ($153,789 in today’s dollars)
— West: $18,800 ($179,579 in today’s dollars)The living room of a home in 1964.

Archive Photos // Getty Images

1964

– Median list price: $18,900
– Inflation-adjusted price: $178,179
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $20,300 ($191,377 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $19,400 ($182,893 in today’s dollars)
— South: $16,700 ($157,439 in today’s dollars)
— West: $20,400 ($192,320 in today’s dollars)A street with a row of identical houses in 1965.

Archive Photos // Getty Images

1965

– Median list price: $20,000
– Inflation-adjusted price: $185,619
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $21,500 ($199,540 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $21,600 ($200,468 in today’s dollars)
— South: $17,500 ($162,416 in today’s dollars)
— West: $21,600 ($200,468 in today’s dollars)A suburban housing development of split level homes in 1966.

D. Corson/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1966

– Median list price: $21,400
– Inflation-adjusted price: $192,847
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $23,500 ($211,771 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $23,200 ($209,068 in today’s dollars)
— South: $18,200 ($164,010 in today’s dollars)
— West: $23,200 ($209,068 in today’s dollars)A wooden frame-type house converted to a semi-brick house using volcanic lava clip-on bricks in 1967.

F. Roy Kemp // Getty Images

1967

– Median list price: $22,700
– Inflation-adjusted price: $199,020
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $25,400 ($222,692 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $25,100 ($220,062 in today’s dollars)
— South: $19,400 ($170,088 in today’s dollars)
— West: $24,100 ($211,295 in today’s dollars)A red ranch-style home in 1968.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1968

– Median list price: $24,700
– Inflation-adjusted price: $207,737
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $27,700 ($232,969 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $27,400 ($230,445 in today’s dollars)
— South: $21,500 ($180,824 in today’s dollars)
— West: $25,100 ($211,102 in today’s dollars)A suburban home for sale in 1969.

Camerique/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1969

– Median list price: $25,600
– Inflation-adjusted price: $204,204
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $31,600 ($252,064 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $27,600 ($220,157 in today’s dollars)
— South: $22,800 ($181,869 in today’s dollars)
— West: $25,300 ($201,811 in today’s dollars)The living room of a home in 1970, which is covered in yellow decor.

H. Armstrong Roberts // Getty Images

1970

– Median list price: $23,400
– Inflation-adjusted price: $176,283
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $30,300 ($228,264 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $24,400 ($183,817 in today’s dollars)
— South: $20,300 ($152,929 in today’s dollars)
— West: $24,000 ($180,803 in today’s dollars)A blue home with black shutters in 1971.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1971

– Median list price: $25,200
– Inflation-adjusted price: $182,145
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $30,600 ($221,176 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $27,200 ($196,601 in today’s dollars)
— South: $22,500 ($162,629 in today’s dollars)
— West: $25,500 ($184,313 in today’s dollars)A white suburban home with olive shutters in 1972.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1972

– Median list price: $27,600
– Inflation-adjusted price: $193,170
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $31,400 ($219,766 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $29,300 ($205,068 in today’s dollars)
— South: $25,800 ($180,572 in today’s dollars)
— West: $27,500 ($192,470 in today’s dollars)A white timbered house in 1973.

Mirrorpix // Getty Images

1973

– Median list price: $32,500
– Inflation-adjusted price: $214,067
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $37,100 ($244,365 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $32,900 ($216,701 in today’s dollars)
— South: $30,900 ($203,528 in today’s dollars)
— West: $32,400 ($213,408 in today’s dollars)A home's kitchen in 1974.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1974

– Median list price: $35,900
– Inflation-adjusted price: $213,007
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $40,100 ($237,927 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $36,100 ($214,194 in today’s dollars)
— South: $34,500 ($204,700 in today’s dollars)
— West: $35,800 ($212,414 in today’s dollars)A home's bedroom in 1975.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1975

– Median list price: $39,300
– Inflation-adjusted price: $213,649
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $44,000 ($239,200 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $39,600 ($215,280 in today’s dollars)
— South: $37,300 ($202,777 in today’s dollars)
— West: $40,600 ($220,717 in today’s dollars)A white home with trees in the foreground in 1976.

Archive Photos // Getty Images

1976

– Median list price: $44,200
– Inflation-adjusted price: $227,169
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $47,300 ($243,101 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $44,800 ($230,252 in today’s dollars)
— South: $40,500 ($208,152 in today’s dollars)
— West: $47,200 ($242,587 in today’s dollars)A dining room with a mural of a tree in 1977.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1977

– Median list price: $48,800
– Inflation-adjusted price: $235,570
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $51,600 ($249,087 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $51,500 ($248,604 in today’s dollars)
— South: $44,100 ($212,882 in today’s dollars)
— West: $53,500 ($258,258 in today’s dollars)A home with a sold sign outside it in 1978.

Harold M. Lambert / Contributor // Getty Images

1978

– Median list price: $55,700
– Inflation-adjusted price: $249,818
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $58,100 ($260,582 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $59,200 ($265,515 in today’s dollars)
— South: $50,300 ($225,598 in today’s dollars)
— West: $61,300 ($274,934 in today’s dollars)A home in Vermont during fall 1979.

ClassicStock // Getty Images

1979

– Median list price: $62,900
– Inflation-adjusted price: $253,575
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $65,500 ($264,057 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $63,900 ($257,607 in today’s dollars)
— South: $57,300 ($230,999 in today’s dollars)
— West: $69,600 ($280,585 in today’s dollars)A home's living room in 1980.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1980

– Median list price: $64,600
– Inflation-adjusted price: $229,449
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $69,500 ($246,853 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $63,400 ($225,187 in today’s dollars)
— South: $59,600 ($211,690 in today’s dollars)
— West: $72,300 ($256,798 in today’s dollars)Apartments above storefronts in New Orleans in 1981.

Jim Steinfeldt // Getty Images

1981

– Median list price: $68,900
– Inflation-adjusted price: $221,712
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $76,000 ($244,559 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $65,900 ($212,058 in today’s dollars)
— South: $64,400 ($207,231 in today’s dollars)
— West: $77,800 ($250,351 in today’s dollars)An aerial view of homes and buildings in San Pedro, California.

William Nation // Getty Images

1982

– Median list price: $69,300
– Inflation-adjusted price: $210,063
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $78,200 ($237,040 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $68,900 ($208,850 in today’s dollars)
— South: $66,100 ($200,363 in today’s dollars)
— West: $75,000 ($227,341 in today’s dollars)A home on the coast of Maine in 1983.

ClassicStock // Getty Images

1983

– Median list price: $75,300
– Inflation-adjusted price: $221,259
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $82,200 ($241,534 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $79,500 ($233,600 in today’s dollars)
— South: $70,900 ($208,330 in today’s dollars)
— West: $80,100 ($235,363 in today’s dollars)Rooftops in Provincetown, Massachusetts, in 1984.

Universal History Archive // Getty Images

1984

– Median list price: $79,900
– Inflation-adjusted price: $224,949
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $88,600 ($249,443 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $85,400 ($240,434 in today’s dollars)
— South: $72,000 ($202,708 in today’s dollars)
— West: $87,300 ($245,783 in today’s dollars)A ranch-style home at twilight in 1985.

Camerique/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1985

– Median list price: $84,300
– Inflation-adjusted price: $229,249
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $103,300 ($280,919 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $80,300 ($218,372 in today’s dollars)
— South: $75,000 ($203,959 in today’s dollars)
— West: $92,600 ($251,821 in today’s dollars)The exterior of a yellow house in 1986.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1986

– Median list price: $92,000
– Inflation-adjusted price: $245,418
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $125,000 ($333,449 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $88,300 ($235,548 in today’s dollars)
— South: $80,200 ($213,941 in today’s dollars)
— West: $95,700 ($255,288 in today’s dollars)Homes in Alamo Square, San Francisco, in 1987.

ClassicStock // Getty Images

1987

– Median list price: $104,500
– Inflation-adjusted price: $269,133
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $140,000 ($360,561 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $95,000 ($244,666 in today’s dollars)
— South: $88,000 ($226,638 in today’s dollars)
— West: $111,000 ($285,873 in today’s dollars)A split level suburban home in 1988.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1988

– Median list price: $112,500
– Inflation-adjusted price: $278,325
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $149,000 ($368,626 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $101,600 ($251,359 in today’s dollars)
— South: $92,000 ($227,608 in today’s dollars)
— West: $126,500 ($312,961 in today’s dollars)A two-story New Jersey home in 1989.

ClassicStock // Getty Images

1989

– Median list price: $120,000
– Inflation-adjusted price: $283,307
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $159,600 ($376,798 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $108,800 ($256,865 in today’s dollars)
— South: $96,400 ($227,590 in today’s dollars)
— West: $139,000 ($328,164 in today’s dollars)A two-story colonial tan home in 1990.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1990

– Median list price: $122,900
– Inflation-adjusted price: $275,238
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $159,000 ($356,084 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $107,900 ($241,645 in today’s dollars)
— South: $99,000 ($221,713 in today’s dollars)
— West: $147,500 ($330,330 in today’s dollars)An aerial view of houses on a golf course in Hawaii in 1991.

Douglas Peebles // Getty Images

1991

– Median list price: $120,000
– Inflation-adjusted price: $257,871
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $155,900 ($335,018 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $110,000 ($236,382 in today’s dollars)
— South: $100,000 ($214,893 in today’s dollars)
— West: $141,100 ($303,214 in today’s dollars)A home's living room in 1992.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

1992

– Median list price: $121,500
– Inflation-adjusted price: $253,388
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $169,000 ($352,449 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $115,600 ($241,083 in today’s dollars)
— South: $105,500 ($220,020 in today’s dollars)
— West: $130,400 ($271,949 in today’s dollars)A bright, sunlit kitchen in 1993.

ClassicStock // Getty Images

1993

– Median list price: $126,500
– Inflation-adjusted price: $256,207
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $162,600 ($329,322 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $125,000 ($253,169 in today’s dollars)
— South: $115,000 ($232,915 in today’s dollars)
— West: $135,000 ($273,422 in today’s dollars)A two-story, gray suburban home in 1994.

ClassicStock // Getty Images

1994

– Median list price: $130,000
– Inflation-adjusted price: $256,634
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $169,000 ($333,625 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $132,900 ($262,359 in today’s dollars)
— South: $116,900 ($230,773 in today’s dollars)
— West: $140,400 ($277,165 in today’s dollars)A row of picturesque homes in New Hampshire in 1995.

Universal History Archive // Getty Images

1995

– Median list price: $133,900
– Inflation-adjusted price: $257,120
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $180,000 ($345,643 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $134,000 ($257,312 in today’s dollars)
— South: $124,500 ($239,070 in today’s dollars)
— West: $141,000 ($270,754 in today’s dollars)A suburban home in 1996.

ClassicStock // Getty Images

1996

– Median list price: $140,000
– Inflation-adjusted price: $261,164
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $186,900 ($348,654 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $137,500 ($256,500 in today’s dollars)
— South: $125,000 ($233,182 in today’s dollars)
— West: $153,900 ($287,094 in today’s dollars)A home with maroon shutters in 1997.

ClassicStock // Getty Images

1997

– Median list price: $146,000
– Inflation-adjusted price: $266,136
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $190,000 ($346,341 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $149,900 ($273,245 in today’s dollars)
— South: $129,600 ($236,241 in today’s dollars)
— West: $160,000 ($291,656 in today’s dollars)An aerial view of Las Vegas homes in 1998.

Bob Riha Jr // Getty Images

1998

– Median list price: $152,500
– Inflation-adjusted price: $273,749
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $200,000 ($359,015 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $157,500 ($282,725 in today’s dollars)
— South: $135,800 ($243,771 in today’s dollars)
— West: $163,500 ($293,495 in today’s dollars)A Victorian-style cottage in 1999.

ClassicStock // Getty Images

1999

– Median list price: $161,000
– Inflation-adjusted price: $282,805
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $210,500 ($369,754 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $164,000 ($288,075 in today’s dollars)
— South: $145,900 ($256,281 in today’s dollars)
— West: $173,700 ($305,113 in today’s dollars)Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York City town homes in 2000.

Erik Freeland // Getty Images

2000

– Median list price: $169,000
– Inflation-adjusted price: $287,189
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $227,400 ($386,430 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $169,700 ($288,378 in today’s dollars)
— South: $148,000 ($251,503 in today’s dollars)
— West: $196,400 ($333,751 in today’s dollars)A row of brick homes in West Virginia in 2001.

ClassicStock // Getty Images

2001

– Median list price: $175,200
– Inflation-adjusted price: $289,569
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $246,400 ($407,247 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $172,600 ($285,271 in today’s dollars)
— South: $155,400 ($256,843 in today’s dollars)
— West: $213,600 ($353,036 in today’s dollars)A modern residential development in 2002.

Construction Photography/Avalon // Getty Images

2002

– Median list price: $187,600
– Inflation-adjusted price: $305,193
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $264,300 ($429,971 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $178,000 ($289,576 in today’s dollars)
— South: $163,400 ($265,824 in today’s dollars)
— West: $238,500 ($387,999 in today’s dollars)Seating an bookshelves in a home's library in 2003.

Construction Photography/Avalon // Getty Images

2003

– Median list price: $195,000
– Inflation-adjusted price: $310,106
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $264,500 ($420,630 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $184,300 ($293,090 in today’s dollars)
— South: $168,100 ($267,327 in today’s dollars)
— West: $260,900 ($414,905 in today’s dollars)A brick home in Atlanta in 2004.

Raymond Boyd // Getty Images

2004

– Median list price: $221,000
– Inflation-adjusted price: $342,321
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $315,800 ($489,163 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $205,000 ($317,538 in today’s dollars)
— South: $181,100 ($280,518 in today’s dollars)
— West: $283,100 ($438,512 in today’s dollars)An aerial view of a suburban housing development in Charlotte, North Carolina, in 2005.

Joe Sohm/Visions of America // Getty Images

2005

– Median list price: $240,900
– Inflation-adjusted price: $360,995
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $343,800 ($515,194 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $216,900 ($325,031 in today’s dollars)
— South: $197,300 ($295,660 in today’s dollars)
— West: $332,600 ($498,410 in today’s dollars)An aerial view of suburban homes in Oak View, California.

Joe Sohm/Visions of America // Getty Images

2006

– Median list price: $246,500
– Inflation-adjusted price: $357,857
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $346,000 ($502,306 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $213,500 ($309,949 in today’s dollars)
— South: $208,200 ($302,255 in today’s dollars)
— West: $337,700 ($490,256 in today’s dollars)A two-story yellow house in 2007.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

2007

– Median list price: $247,900
– Inflation-adjusted price: $349,847
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $320,200 ($451,879 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $208,600 ($294,385 in today’s dollars)
— South: $217,700 ($307,227 in today’s dollars)
— West: $330,900 ($466,980 in today’s dollars)An aerial view of an Los Angeles residential neighborhood in 2008.

Construction Photography/Avalon // Getty Images

2008

– Median list price: $232,100
– Inflation-adjusted price: $315,512
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $343,600 ($467,083 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $198,900 ($270,381 in today’s dollars)
— South: $203,700 ($276,906 in today’s dollars)
— West: $294,800 ($400,745 in today’s dollars)The South Side neighborhood of Pittsburgh in 2009.

Jeff Greenberg // Getty Images

2009

– Median list price: $216,700
– Inflation-adjusted price: $295,525
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $302,500 ($412,534 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $189,200 ($258,021 in today’s dollars)
— South: $194,800 ($265,658 in today’s dollars)
— West: $263,700 ($359,621 in today’s dollars)An urban garden and home in Los Angeles in 2010.

UniversalImagesGroup // Getty Images

2010

– Median list price: $221,800
– Inflation-adjusted price: $297,609
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $329,900 ($442,657 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $197,700 ($265,272 in today’s dollars)
— South: $196,800 ($264,064 in today’s dollars)
— West: $259,300 ($347,926 in today’s dollars)Snow-covered Brooklyn homes in 2011.

Education Images // Getty Images

2011

– Median list price: $227,200
– Inflation-adjusted price: $295,575
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $322,800 ($419,945 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $203,300 ($264,482 in today’s dollars)
— South: $211,400 ($275,020 in today’s dollars)
— West: $256,000 ($333,042 in today’s dollars)Colorful Florida properties in 2012.

Education Images // Getty Images

2012

– Median list price: $245,200
– Inflation-adjusted price: $312,513
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $368,800 ($470,044 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $230,600 ($293,905 in today’s dollars)
— South: $227,000 ($289,316 in today’s dollars)
— West: $270,000 ($344,121 in today’s dollars)A brick Kentucky home in 2013.

Education Images // Getty Images

2013

– Median list price: $268,900
– Inflation-adjusted price: $337,767
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $371,200 ($466,267 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $255,300 ($320,684 in today’s dollars)
— South: $246,600 ($309,756 in today’s dollars)
— West: $310,500 ($390,021 in today’s dollars)A home in the Garden District of New Orleans in 2014.

Tim Graham // Getty Images

2014

– Median list price: $288,500
– Inflation-adjusted price: $356,626
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $398,000 ($491,983 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $273,800 ($338,455 in today’s dollars)
— South: $264,000 ($326,341 in today’s dollars)
— West: $339,000 ($419,051 in today’s dollars)Washington D.C. townhomes in 2015.

DEA / ARCHIVIO J. LANGE // Getty Images

2015

– Median list price: $294,200
– Inflation-adjusted price: $363,232
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $442,800 ($546,700 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $276,700 ($341,626 in today’s dollars)
— South: $271,500 ($335,206 in today’s dollars)
— West: $348,500 ($430,273 in today’s dollars)A Kentucky home in 2016.

Education Images // Getty Images

2016

– Median list price: $307,800
– Inflation-adjusted price: $375,267
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $428,300 ($522,180 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $277,100 ($337,838 in today’s dollars)
— South: $281,400 ($343,080 in today’s dollars)
— West: $367,700 ($448,297 in today’s dollars)Historic Charleston homes in 2017.

Christopher Pillitz // Getty Images

2017

– Median list price: $323,100
– Inflation-adjusted price: $385,700
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $490,400 ($585,414 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $284,400 ($339,502 in today’s dollars)
— South: $291,200 ($347,619 in today’s dollars)
— West: $390,000 ($465,561 in today’s dollars)A modern bedroom in 2018.

View Pictures // Getty Images

2018

– Median list price: $326,400
– Inflation-adjusted price: $380,362
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $484,600 ($564,716 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $290,900 ($338,993 in today’s dollars)
— South: $294,600 ($343,305 in today’s dollars)
— West: $410,600 ($478,482 in today’s dollars)An aerial view of suburban Long Island in 2019.

Newsday LLC // Getty Images

2019

– Median list price: $321,500
– Inflation-adjusted price: $367,981
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $482,500 ($552,257 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $289,200 ($331,011 in today’s dollars)
— South: $289,000 ($330,782 in today’s dollars)
— West: $408,000 ($466,987 in today’s dollars)A Raleigh, North Carolina, home in 2020.

KAD Photo // Getty Images

2020

– Median list price: $336,900
– Inflation-adjusted price: $380,842
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $470,700 ($532,093 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $298,100 ($336,981 in today’s dollars)
— South: $299,000 ($337,999 in today’s dollars)
— West: $412,600 ($466,415 in today’s dollars)An aerial view of homes in Oakland, California.

MediaNews Group/East Bay Times // Getty Images

2021

– Median list price: $397,100
– Inflation-adjusted price: $428,814
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $560,900 ($605,696 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $339,900 ($367,046 in today’s dollars)
— South: $355,900 ($384,324 in today’s dollars)
— West: $510,400 ($551,163 in today’s dollars)An aerial view of the Gladden Farms subdivision in the Sonoran Desert.

Wild Horizon // Getty Images

2022

– Median list price: $457,800
– Inflation-adjusted price: $457,800
– Median list price by region:
— Northeast: $640,200 ($640,200 in today’s dollars)
— Midwest: $405,000 ($405,000 in today’s dollars)
— South: $412,700 ($412,700 in today’s dollars)
— West: $578,800 ($578,800 in today’s dollars)

Join the First Amendment Society, a membership that goes directly to funding TCB‘s newsroom.

We believe that reporting can save the world.

The TCB First Amendment Society recognizes the vital role of a free, unfettered press with a bundling of local experiences designed to build community, and unique engagements with our newsroom that will help you understand, and shape, local journalism’s critical role in uplifting the people in our cities.

All revenue goes directly into the newsroom as reporters’ salaries and freelance commissions.

âš¡ Join The Society âš¡