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Homeownership Racial Disparity in Ohio
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Ohio Value:

35.1

Difference between the homeownership rates of the white population and the racial/ethnic population with the lowest rate (varies by state)

Ohio Rank:

30

Homeownership Racial Disparity in depth:

Additional Measures:

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Appears In:

Homeownership Racial Disparity by State

Difference between the homeownership rates of the white population and the racial/ethnic population with the lowest rate (varies by state)

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Homeownership Racial Disparity in

Data from U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey, 2022

<= 27.9

28.0 - 32.6

32.7 - 35.1

35.2 - 41.1

>= 41.2

• Data Unavailable
Top StatesRankValue
223.2
Your StateRankValue
Nevada
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[35]
2935.0
3035.1
3135.8
Bottom StatesRankValue
4847.2
4948.0
5048.8

Homeownership Racial Disparity

223.2
525.3
727.1
1027.9
1128.7
1228.8
1329.2
1329.2
1329.2
1831.3
Hawaii
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[35]
2032.6
2132.9
2132.9
2433.3
2533.4
2634.5
2734.6
Nevada
chevron-right
[35]
2935.0
3035.1
3135.8
3337.0
3638.2
3940.9
4142.7
4244.2
4344.9
4344.9
4545.1
4645.2
4746.6
4847.2
4948.0
5048.8
Data Unavailable
[35] Highest ownership among a non-white group
Source:
  • U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey, 2022

Homeownership Racial Disparity Trends

Difference between the homeownership rates of the white population and the racial/ethnic population with the lowest rate (varies by state)

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About Homeownership Racial Disparity

US Value: 28.9

Top State(s): Mississippi: 22.1

Bottom State(s): Maine: 48.8

Definition: Difference between the homeownership rates of the white population and the racial/ethnic population with the lowest rate (varies by state)

Data Source and Years(s): U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey, 2022

Suggested Citation: America's Health Rankings analysis of U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey, United Health Foundation, AmericasHealthRankings.org, accessed 2024.

Housing is essential to overall health and well-being. Racial segregation and mortgage discrimination have historically kept Black Americans from purchasing houses; these issues persist today. Black residents face significant barriers to becoming homeowners due to the lasting effects of segregation laws on generating personal wealth. Research shows that 1 in 6 Black mortgage applicants are rejected when applying for a mortgage, compared with 1 in 14 white applicants. 

Homeownership provides a sense of stability and safety by preventing frequent moves and minimizing the financial burdens associated with renting. Additionally, homeownership plays an important role in wealth accumulation. Wealth is a major determining factor of health, and income inequality remains a significant public health issue. Low-income households, in particular, may accumulate wealth more successfully through homeownership than through other means.

According to America’s Health Rankings data, the largest racial and ethnic disparities in homeownership are among: 

  • Black and Hawaiian/Pacific Islander adults, who have the lowest rates of homeownership compared with white adults, who have the highest rate of homeownership. 

Given the depth and complexity of the structural racism behind wealth inequality, addressing racial disparities in homeownership requires a multi-pronged approach. Policy recommendations to close racial gaps in homeownership include

  • Increasing support for mortgages for lower-value homes. 
  • Expanding financial subsidies for down payments to increase purchasing power among low-income minority households. 
  • Adopting less discriminatory credit scoring practices so Black individuals can build their credit scores. 
  • Increasing diversity in the appraisal profession. 
  • Expanding government grants that finance affordable home construction. 

Strategies to ensure greater access to homeownership include

  • Providing information and knowledge about homebuying, especially among low-income and racial/ethnic minority households. 
  • Expanding financial support for low-income and minority homeowners like housing reparations, especially during the pandemic, to prevent them from transitioning back to renting. 
  • Enforcing fair housing laws to protect racial/ethnic minority buyers from discrimination. 

Healthy People 2030 identifies housing instability as a key issue within the Economic Stability domain of the other social determinants of health.

 

Boehm, Thomas P., and Alan Schlottmann. “Wealth Accumulation and Homeownership: Evidence for Low-Income Households.” Cambridge, MA: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, December 2004. https://www.huduser.gov/publications/pdf/wealthaccumulationandhomeownership.pdf.

Herbert, Christopher E., Shannon Rieger, and Jonathan Spader. “Expanding Access to Homeownership as a Means of Fostering Residential Integration and Inclusion.” In A Shared Future: Fostering Communities of Inclusion in an Era of Inequality. Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies, 2017. https://www.jchs.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/media/imp/a_shared_future_expanding_access_to_homeownership_fostering_inclusion.pdf.

Krisberg, Kim. “Income Inequality: When Wealth Determines Health: Earnings Influential as Lifelong Social Determinant of Health.” The Nation’s Health 46, no. 8 (October 2016): 1–17. 
https://www.thenationshealth.org/content/46/8/1.1.

Ray, Rashawn, Andre M. Perry, David Harshbarger, Samantha Elizondo, and Alexandra Gibbons. “Homeownership, Racial Segregation, and Policy Solutions to Racial Wealth Equity.” The Brookings Institution, September 1, 2021. https://www.brookings.edu/essay/homeownership-racial-segregation-and-policies-for-racial-wealth-equity/.

Rolfe, Steve, Lisa Garnham, Jon Godwin, Isobel Anderson, Pete Seaman, and Cam Donaldson. “Housing as a Social Determinant of Health and Wellbeing: Developing an Empirically-Informed Realist Theoretical Framework.” BMC Public Health 20, no. 1 (December 2020): 1138. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-09224-0.

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