Housing in Virginia
Housing in Virginia comes in a wide variety of forms, from single-family homes to apartment complexes. The rate of home ownership in the Commonwealth of Virginia was measured at 69.1% in 2023, a 2.5% increase from 2022's figure of 67.4%.
As with much of the United States, housing in Virginia is extremely commodified. As with the rest of the United States and much of the western world, Virginia has a crisis regarding housing affordability and availability. Affordability is exacerbated by estimates that over 10% of the population lives below the poverty line. The U.S. Census Bureau reported in 2023 that the median cost for rent is $1,440, around $300 lower than the US average of $1,739.
Types of housing
Affordable
Mostly an issue in major urban centers such as Alexandria and Virginia Beach, affordable (or low-income) housing is housing that is cheaper than the market in order to provide a home for people that have low income. Those most likely to be affected by the lack in affordable housing, a Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission study found, were renters, with low incomes, that live in urban centers, and work in common and essential occupations.The study reported that 67% of cost-burdened households live in major population centers like Northern Virginia and Hampton Roads, with the majority of them being in Hampton Roads than the rest of the state. The most likely professions to need affordable housing were home health aides, teaching assistants, bus drivers, and social workers. The same study further reported that the state has a shortage of at least 200,000 affordable housing units.
Apartment
Larger apartment buildings are the second-largest group of houses to have been constructed in the past decade, only behind single-family homes. Multi-family apartments account for less than one in every four homes in Virginia. Almost half of renters live in large apartment complexes with five or more units. These apartments are more likely to be leased rather than owned; only 5% of owners live in multifamily buildings.The increase in the construction of apartments is most noticeable in Northern Virginia, Richmond, and Hampton Roads. However, as of 2020, they were still behind four of Virginia's six small housing markets in terms of multi-family apartments. Since 2010, the construction of apartments has been largest in the Blacksburg-Christiansburg, Roanoke, and Lynchburg areas. In 2020, more than three-quarters of all new homes in the Blacksburg-Christiansburg area were apartments, most likely due to an influx of graduates from Virginia Tech and Radford University.