How many households in Kansas spend too much on housing?

About 313K in 2022. That’s 27.4% of all Kansas households. These households spent at least 30% of their total income on rent or mortgage payments and utilities. The Department of Housing and Urban Development considers households that spend more than 30% of their income on housing to be cost-burdened. Cost-burdened households may have less money for other necessities such as food, healthcare, or savings.
Showing data for
In 2022,

313K

households were cost burdened
In 2022,

27.4%

of households were cost burdened
The number of cost-burdened households in Kansas increased from 300 thousand in 2012 to 313 thousand in 2022. Cost burden considers both household income and housing costs, so factors affecting either of these can influence the number of burdened households. For example:
  • Changes in wages, employment status, or the number of people in a household can impact household income.
  • Changes in housing supply/demand or interest rates can affect costs.
A growing or declining US population can also affect the number of cost-burdened households. To counteract this, USAFacts analyzed the percentages of cost-burdened households rather than just the number. This prevents such population changes from skewing the data.
In 2022, 27.4% of Kansas households were cost burdened, lower than the national average of 32.5%.

In Kansas, 27.4% of households were cost burdened in 2022.

Share of households that spent at least 30% of their income on housing

Cost burden varies for renters and homeowners. For example, during the Great Recession (2007–2009) unemployment rose, millions of homes entered foreclosure, and rental demand increased. By 2010, cost burden had increased among renters while staying flat among homeowner households.

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Since 2012, the proportion of cost-burdened owner households in Kansas changed from 19.9% to 18.7% in 2022. Meanwhile, cost burden changed from 44.5% to 46.6% among renter households.

In Kansas, 46.6% of renter and 18.7% of owner households were cost burdened in 2022.

Share of households that spent at least 30% of their income on housing

In 2018–2022, the metro areas with the highest and lowest share of cost-burdened owner households were the Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim metro area in California at 33.8% and Morgantown, West Virginia, at 12.8%. In Kansas, the highest and lowest were Manhattan at 18.2% and Wichita at 16.5%.

Across metro areas, 22.7% of owner households were cost burdened.

Share of owner households that spent at least 30% of their income on housing, 2018–2022

In 2018–2022, the share of renter households in metro areas that were cost burdened was 50.5%. The metro areas in the US with the highest and lowest share of cost-burdened renter households were the Greater Miami metro area at 62.6% (highest) and Appleton, Wisconsin, at 32.8% (lowest). In Kansas, the highest and lowest were the Lawrence area at 51.3% and the Wichita area at 43.5%.

Across metro areas, 50.5% of renter households were cost burdened.

Share of renter households that spent at least 30% of their income on housing, 2018–2022

The difference between the cost-burdened share of owner and renter households was narrowest in the Wichita, KS area, where cost burden was 27.0 percentage points higher among renters than owners, and highest in the Lawrence, KS area where the gap was 34.2 percentage points. Within the state overall, the gap was 27.9 percentage points.

Cost-burdened households, Kansas metro areas (2018-2022)

Cost-burdened households, Kansas metro areas (2018-2022)

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