It’s Getting Harder to Afford a Home
in Rhode Island, New Data Shows

HousingWorksRI said that for the first time, a $100,000 household income
is not enough to afford a house in any municipality

The statewide average for a two-bedroom apartment was $1,887 a month, according to HousingWorksRI’s 2023 Rental Survey.
The statewide average for a two-bedroom apartment was $1,887 a month, according to HousingWorksRI’s 2023 Rental Survey.
Jeremy Bernfeld/The Public’s Radio
Share
The statewide average for a two-bedroom apartment was $1,887 a month, according to HousingWorksRI’s 2023 Rental Survey.
The statewide average for a two-bedroom apartment was $1,887 a month, according to HousingWorksRI’s 2023 Rental Survey.
Jeremy Bernfeld/The Public’s Radio
It’s Getting Harder to Afford a Home
in Rhode Island, New Data Shows
Copy

If you make less than $100,000 a year, you can’t comfortably afford to buy a home in Rhode Island, according to new data from the think tank HousingWorksRI at Roger Williams University. And if you make less than $75,000, you can’t afford to rent.

In its annual housing factbook, which it released on Friday, HousingWorksRI once again paints a bleak picture for housing affordability in the state. More than one-third of Rhode Island households put more than one-third of their income toward housing, marking them as “cost-burdened” and at-risk, according to the factbook.

The group calculated that the lowest income that would enable one to affordably buy a home in Rhode Island is in Woonsocket at $119,123. Burrillville is the only municipality in which someone making the state’s median renter income of $45,560 can afford to rent an average-priced two-bedroom unit.

Despite increased attention on the cost of housing in Rhode Island in recent years, the problem continues to get worse, according to Brenda Clement, HousingWorksRI’s executive director.

“We know it’s a problem that needs to be addressed not only for workforce retention and development, but also to improve people’s health and educational outcomes,” Clement said. “Housing advocates like me say that housing is the foundation and that nothing works right in your life unless you have that decent place to get up from every day and to go back to every night.”

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

The Ward 3 councilor touts her policy background as a member of the City Council since 2022
‘Tortious interference’ claim may not pass muster, business attorney says. But questions linger over R.I. Secretary Richard Charest’s courtship of Prime Healthcare
For the first time since a critical audit, House and Senate Oversight committees will grill RIDOT leaders about who knew what — and why warning signs were missed before the bridge’s abrupt closure in 2023
People from across Rhode Island caught a glimpse of the colorful show
$1.74 million in homelessness response grants will expand capacity during cold weather months
Adrian Bautista and Evan Perez founded Color Your Life, a subscription business that allows children to use AI technology to create personalized coloring books featuring real-life pictures