Personal Finance

Here's The Actual Wage Needed To Rent In Tacoma, Pierce County

The National Low Income Housing Coalition published its annual "Out of Reach" report, finding that rental housing needs are worsening.

TACOMA, WA β€” There is no state in which the typical minimum-wage worker charting a 40-hour week can afford to rent a modest two-bedroom apartment. Furthermore, that same worker couldn’t afford a one-bedroom rental in 99 percent of counties in the United States. That’s according to an annual report published Tuesday by researchers at the National Low Income Housing Coalition, which looked at rental costs in counties and metro areas nationwide.

In the Tacoma metro area, a person would need to make $24.33 per hour in wages to afford a two-bedroom rental at fair market rent. That's only slightly less than the $27.78 per hour needed to rent in the state overall, and just more than the national wage of $22.96.

Here’s the breakdown for Pierce County and the Tacoma metro area:

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Cost of a two-bedroom apartment:

  • Tacoma/Pierce County overall: $1,265

Yearly income needed to afford a two-bedroom apartment:

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  • Tacoma/Pierce County: $50,600

Number of full-time, minimum wage jobs needed to afford a two-bedroom rental:

  • Tacoma/Pierce County: 2

At the national level, renters earning the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour fall far short of the hourly income needed to live in a two-bedroom home β€” $15.71 an hour, to be exact. To afford even a one-bedroom, they would need to earn an additional $5 an hour.

That struggle isn’t limited to low-wage workers.

The average hourly wage for American renters also falls short by $5.39 an hour for a two-bedroom, and $1.08 for a one-bedroom.

β€œAs a result, an average renter must work 52 hours per week to afford a modest two-bedroom apartment of his or her own, a challenging task that is even more difficult for a single parent of a young child or a person with a disability,” the report said.

The report blamed low wages, wage gaps, inequality along racial lines and a severe shortage of affordable and available rentals as reasons that too many Americans struggle to put a roof over their heads. These reasons are also why, on average, a renter making the federal minimum wage would have to work 127 hours every single week to afford a two-bedroom rental and 103 hours a week to afford a one-bedroom.

Just to be clear, there are only 168 hours in a week. So, unless your employer allows you to sleep on the job, good luck.

Rental housing needs β€œworsened considerably” over the last three decades and left housing β€œout of reach” for millions of low-wage workers, Diane Yentel, president and CEO of the organization, said in a news release. The deteriorating situation has gained the attention of lawmakers though, she said, with β€œbig, bold bills” introduced and 2020 presidential candidates addressing it at campaign events.

β€œWe now have a tremendous opportunity to implement federal housing policy solutions to fund affordable housing programs at the scale necessary,” said Yentel.

The wage needed to afford a two-bedroom rental was highest in Hawaii, California and Massachusetts, at $36.82, $34.69 and $33.81, respectively. It was lowest in Arkansas, West Virginia and Mississippi, at $14.26, $14.27, and $14.43, respectively.

But that hides the reality many renters see in major metro areas, such as San Francisco, where renters need to make nearly $61 an hour to be able to afford a two-bedroom apartment. That’s roughly $122,000 a year, laughably out of reach for many. California was home to seven of the 10 priciest metro areas in the country and nine of the 10 costliest counties.

The housing wage was based on fair market rents provided by the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development, which are the agency’s best estimate of what families can currently expect to pay for a modest rental home. It does not reflect what all current renters are paying on average, rather the number is typically the 40th percentile of rents that a family can be expected to pay.


Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.

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