Montana · Affordability

Home Price-to-Income Ratio in Montana

Median home value divided by median household income; a higher ratio means homes cost more relative to what residents earn.

5.7× in 2024

#44 of 50 · Bottom tier (lower is better)

Montana is worse than the 50-state median (4.2×). That's a gap of 1.5×.

View interactive chart & trend → See full 50-state ranking →

2005 – 2024 · Montana only · interactive chart with US median overlay →

About home price-to-income ratio

What this measures: Median home value divided by median household income.

Why it matters: A higher ratio means it takes more years of typical income to buy a typical home, predicting both first-time buyer barriers and wealth inequality.

Watch out: This does not capture mortgage rates, property taxes, or other financing costs that shift the actual monthly payment.

Recent trend

YearMontanaUS median
20144.3×3.4×
20154.2×3.4×
20164.3×3.5×
20174.3×3.5×
20184.5×3.5×
20194.4×3.4×
20215.1×3.8×
20225.4×4.1×
20235.5×4.1×
20245.7×4.2×

Montana vs. neighboring states

Same metric (home price-to-income ratio), latest year with full state coverage. Click any name for that state's full report.

StateHome Price-to-Income RatioNational rank
Idaho 5.5× #41 of 50
Wyoming 4.5× #32 of 50
South Dakota 3.8× #18 of 50
North Dakota 3.4× #9 of 50

How Montana compares (2024)

Top 5 best

#1West Virginia2.8×
#2Iowa3.0×
#3Mississippi3.1×
#4Kansas3.2×
#5Ohio3.3×

Bottom 5

#46Oregon5.8×
#47Colorado5.9×
#48Washington6.1×
#49California7.6×
#50Hawaiʻi8.7×

Source and methodology

Source: Census ACS · Direction: lower is better · Unit: ×

Download raw CSV (all 50 states, all years)

Related Affordability metrics for Montana

← Back to Montana dashboard