State Rankings

U.S. States With the Cheapest Housing, According to the Census

West Virginia, Mississippi, and Arkansas offer the lowest median home values in the country. But the affordability ranking changes once you control for local income.

By City Zip Compare Editorial · March 22, 2026 · 6 min read

If you sort all 50 states by median home value, the top of the list (cheapest) is dominated by interior states with low population density and slow growth: West Virginia, Mississippi, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Kentucky, Alabama. Median home values in these states sit in the $130,000–$175,000 range — about half the national median.

The cheap-housing list is not the affordability list

Cheap housing matters less than how that price compares to local income. West Virginia has the lowest median home value in the country but also one of the lowest household incomes — its price-to-income ratio is similar to many mid-cost states.

The truly most-affordable states by price-to-income ratio are Iowa, Indiana, Ohio, and Kansas — places with median home values in the $180,000–$220,000 range but median household incomes near or above the national average. The math is roughly 3.0x income for a typical home in these states, against 4.5x nationally and 9x+ in California.

  • Lowest median home value: West Virginia (~$143,000)
  • Best price-to-income ratio: Iowa, Indiana, Ohio (~3.0x)
  • Worst price-to-income ratio: Hawaii, California, Massachusetts (>7x)
  • National price-to-income ratio: ~4.5x

Why the cheapest states are cheap

Housing prices reflect demand more than construction cost. Cement, lumber, and labor cost roughly the same in Detroit and San Francisco. The difference is buyer competition. States losing population (West Virginia, Mississippi, Illinois in absolute terms) have weak buyer competition, so prices stay low. States gaining population (Florida, Texas, Arizona) have strong demand, so prices rise even when the construction cost base is low.

If you're optimizing purely for housing dollar value, the cheapest states are correct. If you're optimizing for housing affordability relative to local opportunity, the Midwest mid-tier (Iowa, Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin) is a better answer.

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Source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 5-year estimates. Data: census.gov/programs-surveys/acs.