Residential News » Tampa Edition | By WPJ Staff | September 29, 2025 8:00 AM ET
Homebuyer affordability strengthened in August for the fourth consecutive month, as easing mortgage rates and rising incomes helped reduce monthly housing costs, according to new data from the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA).
The trade group's Purchase Applications Payment Index (PAPI) fell 1.2% to 157.5 in August from 159.4 in July, reflecting improved affordability conditions nationwide. A lower PAPI indicates that borrowers are dedicating a smaller share of income to monthly mortgage payments.
The median monthly payment requested by purchase mortgage applicants declined to $2,100 in August, down $27 from July. Despite that drop, payments remained $43 higher than a year earlier, a 2.1% annual increase. By contrast, median earnings rose 3.2% year over year, helping offset payment gains and leaving affordability 1.1% stronger compared with August 2024.
"For four straight months, affordability conditions have improved, with lower mortgage rates and stronger income growth boosting prospective buyers' purchasing power," said Edward Seiler, MBA's associate vice president for housing economics and executive director of the Research Institute for Housing America. "MBA expects moderating home-price appreciation, coupled with lower rates, will continue to ease affordability constraints and support more housing market activity."
MBA data showed that borrowers at the lower end of the market also benefited. At the 25th percentile, median monthly payments fell to $1,445 from $1,468 in July. The association's Builders' Purchase Application Payment Index, which tracks loans tied to new-home sales, also reported a decline, with the median mortgage payment slipping to $2,210 in August from $2,233 a month earlier.
Loan Type and Demographic Trends
Regional Breakdown
The states with the highest affordability pressures in August were:
The most affordable states were: