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Housing Index in Spain increased to 2033 EUR/SQ. METRE in the first quarter of 2025 from 1972.10 EUR/SQ. METRE in the fourth quarter of 2024. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - Spain House Prices - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.
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License information was derived automatically
United States House Price Index: FHFA: Nevada data was reported at 376.110 Mar1980=100 in Jun 2018. This records an increase from the previous number of 360.180 Mar1980=100 for Mar 2018. United States House Price Index: FHFA: Nevada data is updated quarterly, averaging 176.065 Mar1980=100 from Mar 1975 (Median) to Jun 2018, with 174 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 410.680 Mar1980=100 in Sep 2006 and a record low of 39.760 Mar1980=100 in Mar 1975. United States House Price Index: FHFA: Nevada data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Federal Housing Finance Agency. The data is categorized under Global Database’s USA – Table US.EB014: House Price Index.
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Graph and download economic data for Residential Property Prices for Japan (QJPN628BIS) from Q1 1955 to Q1 2025 about Japan, residential, HPI, housing, price index, indexes, and price.
New housing price index (NHPI). Monthly data are available from January 1981. The table presents data for the most recent reference period and the last four periods. The base period for the index is (201612=100).
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Abstract (en): The Public Use Microdata Samples (PUMS) contain person- and household-level information from the "long-form" questionnaires distributed to a sample of the population enumerated in the 1980 Census. This data collection, containing 5-percent data, identifies every state, county groups, and most individual counties with 100,000 or more inhabitants (350 in all). In many cases, individual cities or groups of places with 100,000 or more inhabitants are also identified. Household-level variables include housing tenure, year structure was built, number and types of rooms in dwelling, plumbing facilities, heating equipment, taxes and mortgage costs, number of children, and household and family income. The person record contains demographic items such as sex, age, marital status, race, Spanish origin, income, occupation, transportation to work, and education. All persons and housing units in the United States and Puerto Rico. For this data collection, the full 1980 Census sample that received the "long-form" questionnaire (19.4 percent of all households) was sampled again through a stratified systematic selection procedure with probability proportional to a measure of size. This 5-percent sample, i.e., 5 households for every 100 households in the nation, includes over one-fourth of the households that received the long-form questionnaire. 2006-01-12 All files were removed from dataset 81 and flagged as study-level files, so that they will accompany all downloads.2006-01-12 All files were removed from dataset 80 and flagged as study-level files, so that they will accompany all downloads.2006-01-12 All files were removed from dataset 81 and flagged as study-level files, so that they will accompany all downloads.2006-01-12 All files were removed from dataset 80 and flagged as study-level files, so that they will accompany all downloads.1997-08-25 Part 72, Puerto Rico data, has been added to the collection, as well as supplemental documentation for Puerto Rico in the form of a separate PDF file. The household and person records in each hierarchical data file have logical record lengths of 193 characters, but the number of records varies with each file.The record layout for Part 72, Puerto Rico, is different from the state datasets. Refer to the supplemental documentation for this part.The codebook is available in hardcopy form only, while the Puerto Rico supplemental documentation is provided as a Portable Document Format (PDF) file.
The tables below provide statistics on the sales of social housing stock – whether owned by local authorities or private registered providers. The most common of these sales are by the Right to Buy (and preserved Right to Buy) scheme and there are separate tables for sales under that scheme.
The tables for Right to Buy, tables 691, 692 and 693, are now presented in annual versions to reflect changes to the data collection following consultation. The previous quarterly tables can be found in the discontinued tables section below.
From April 2005 to March 2021 there are quarterly official statistics on Right to Buy sales – these are available in the quarterly version of tables 691, 692 and 693. From April 2021 onwards, following a consultation with local authorities, the quarterly data on Right to Buy sales are management information and not subject to the same quality assurance as official statistics and should not be treated the same as official statistics. These data are presented in tables in the ‘Right to Buy sales: management information’ below.
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This extraction of data from 1980 decennial Census files (CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING, 1980 UNITED STATES: SUMMARY TAPE FILES 3A AND 3B (ICPSR 8071, 8318)) was designed to provide a set of contextual variables to be matched to any survey dataset that has been coded for the geographic location of respondents, such as the PANEL STUDY OF INCOME DYNAMICS, 1968-1988 (ICPSR 7439). This geographic area data can also be analyzed independently with neighborhoods, labor market areas, etc., as the units of analysis. Over 120 variables were selected from the original Census sources, and more than 100 variables were derived from those component variables. The variables characterize geographic areas in terms of population counts, ethnicity, family structure, income and poverty, education, residential mobility, labor force activity, and housing. The geographic areas range from neighborhoods, through intermediate levels of geography, through large economic areas, and beyond to large regions. These variables were selected from the Census data for their relevance to problems associated with poverty and income determination, and 80 percent were present in comparable form in both the 1970 and 1980 Census datasets. (Source: downloaded from ICPSR 7/13/10)
This dataset is part of the historical CISER Data Archive Collection and is also available at ICPSR -- https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR09693.v3. We highly recommend using the ICPSR version as they made this dataset available in multiple data formats.
The Public Use Microdata Samples (PUMS) contain person- and household-level information from the "long-form" questionnaires distributed to a sample of the population enumerated in the 1980 Census. The A Sample identifies every state, county groups, and most individual counties with 100,000 or more inhabitants (350 in all). In many cases, individual cities or groups of places with 100,000 or more inhabitants are also identified. As a percentage of the 5-Percent Public Use Microdata Sample (A Sample) (CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING, 1980 (UNITED STATES): PUBLIC USE MICRODATA SAMPLE (A SAMPLE): 5-PERCENT SAMPLE (ICPSR 8101)), this file constitutes a 1-in-1000 sample, and contains all household- and person-level variables from the original A Sample. Household-level variables include housing tenure, year structure was built, number and types of rooms in dwelling, plumbing facilities, heating equipment, taxes and mortgage costs, number of children, and household and family income. Person-level variables include sex, age, marital status, race, Spanish origin, income, occupation, transportation to work, and education. (Source: downloaded from ICPSR 7/13/10)
Please Note: This dataset is part of the historical CISER Data Archive Collection and is also available at ICPSR at https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR08210.v1. We highly recommend using the ICPSR version as they may make this dataset available in multiple data formats in the future.
VITAL SIGNS INDICATOR
Housing Affordability (EQ2)
FULL MEASURE NAME
Housing Affordability
LAST UPDATED
December 2022
DATA SOURCE
U.S. Census Bureau: Decennial Census - https://nhgis.org
Form STF3 – https://nhgis.org (1980-1990)
Form SF3a – https://nhgis.org (2000)
U.S. Census Bureau: American Community Survey - https://data.census.gov/
Form B25074 (2009-2021)
Form B25095 (2009-2021)
CONTACT INFORMATION
vitalsigns.info@bayareametro.gov
METHODOLOGY NOTES (across all datasets for this indicator)
The share of income brackets used for different Census and American Community Survey (ACS) forms vary over time. To allow for historical comparisons, the Census Bureau merges housing expenditure brackets into three consistent bins (less than 20 percent, 20 percent to 34 percent, and more than 35 percent) that work for all years. The highest income bracket for renters in the ACS data was $100,000 or more, while the homeowner dataset included brackets for $100,000 to $149,999 and $150,000 and above. These brackets were merged together to allow for uniform comparison across tenure. While some studies use 30 percent as the affordability threshold, Vital Signs uses 35 percent as this is the closest break point using the standardized affordability brackets above.
ACS 1-year data is used for larger geographies – Bay counties and most metropolitan area counties – while smaller geographies rely upon 5-year rolling average data due to their smaller sample sizes. Note that 2020 data uses the 5-year estimates because the ACS did not collect 1-year data for 2020.
Income breakdown data is only provided for one year as it is not possible to compare consistent inflation-adjusted income brackets over time given Census data limitations. For the county breakdown, Napa was missing ACS 1-Year renter data for all years except 2012 and 2013, and Marin was missing ACS 1-Year renter data for 2019 — these counties used 5-Year data for those years.
These data, which correspond to tables provided in the documentation, summarize information on the United States population aged 60 years and over that was collected in the 1980 Census of Population and Housing. The tables were prepared by the Bureau of the Census at the request of the National Institute on Aging. Variables appearing in one or more of the tables are age (in single years or five-year intervals), sex, race (black/white), living arrangements (institutionalization status, household/group quarters, living in families/alone, relationship to householder, persons per room), income (source, personal level, family level, household level, poverty status), veteran status, educational attainment, urban/rural residence, marital status, nativity status, and Spanish origin. In some of the tables totals that exclude amounts allocated for missing data are provided for purposes of comparison. The variables for which non-allocated figures are included are age, race, institutionalization status, income, veterans status, educational attainment, marital status, and Spanish origin. The file contains a complete set of tables for the United States as a whole, for each of the four Census regions, and for each of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and five territories. (Source: downloaded from ICPSR 7/13/10)
Please Note: This dataset is part of the historical CISER Data Archive Collection and is also available at ICPSR at https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR08533.v1. We highly recommend using the ICPSR version as they may make this dataset available in multiple data formats in the future.
Generally referred to as “urban task”, the urban envelope is defined as the area delimiting a set of parcels built on a given date. This urban envelope is a spatial reference for locating a boundary of construction according to different design criteria. These criteria can be adapted according to the definition assigned to this urban envelope (artificialisation, habitat area, area of activity, etc.). The urban envelope serves as a reference point to contribute to the assessment of space consumption in urban planning documents. This is a data to characterise the urban envelope of dwellings (house, apartment). This envelope was generated from the parcels identified in the land files as bearing at least one dwelling space and having a habitat rather than activity purpose. Some specific features of the spatial distribution of built-up areas are observed in more detail. These differences can be attributed to the land structure of agricultural areas (cultural typology, parcel geometry, cultural methods of setting up farms, etc.), to land-based urbanisation patterns depending on the territory or, on the contrary, to more intensified forms of this residential development (e.g. regulatory aspect of urban planning documents). In the department, these different forms of urban envelopes are identifiable. For example, in the Deux-Sèvres, the periphery of Parthenay is composed of a scattered set of habitat represented by an urban envelope in cloud of dots. Whereas in contrast, Niort’s periphery is marked by larger but more concentrated envelopes. This data specifies the number of parcels that make up each urban envelope. This allows, by simple processing, to select only the corresponding urban envelopes, those consisting of at least four units.
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Abstract (en): The Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS) 1-Percent Sample contains household and person records for a sample of housing units that received the "long form" of the 1990 Census questionnaire. Data items include the full range of population and housing information collected in the 1990 Census, including 500 occupation categories, age by single years up to 90, and wages in dollars up to $140,000. Each person identified in the sample has an associated household record, containing information on household characteristics such as type of household and family income. All persons and housing units in the United States. A stratified sample, consisting of a subsample of the household units that received the 1990 Census "long-form" questionnaire (approximately 15.9 percent of all housing units). 2006-01-12 All files were removed from dataset 85 and flagged as study-level files, so that they will accompany all downloads.2006-01-12 All files were removed from dataset 83 and flagged as study-level files, so that they will accompany all downloads.2006-01-12 All files were removed from dataset 82 and flagged as study-level files, so that they will accompany all downloads.2006-01-12 All files were removed from dataset 81 and flagged as study-level files, so that they will accompany all downloads.2006-01-12 All files were removed from dataset 80 and flagged as study-level files, so that they will accompany all downloads.1998-08-28 The following data files were replaced by the Census Bureau: the state files (Parts 1-56), Puerto Rico (Part 72), Geographic Equivalency File (Part 84), and Public Use Microdata Areas (PUMAS) Crossing State Lines (Part 99). These files now incorporate revised group quarters data. Parts 201-256, which were separate revised group quarters files for each state, have been removed from the collection. The data fields affected by the group quarters data revisions were POWSTATE, POWPUMA, MIGSTATE and MIGPUMA. As a result of the revisions, the Maine file (Part 23) gained 763 records and Part 99 lost 763 records. In addition, the following files have been added to the collection: Ancestry Code List, Place of Birth Code List, Industry Code List, Language Code List, Occupation Code List, and Race Code List (Parts 86-91). Also, the codebook is now available as a PDF file. (1) Although all records are 231 characters in length, each file is hierarchical in structure, containing a housing unit record followed by a variable number of person records. Both record types contain approximately 120 variables. Two improvements over the 1980 PUMS files have been incorporated. First, the housing unit serial number is identified on both the housing unit record and on the person record, allowing the file to be processed as a rectangular file. In addition, each person record is assigned an individual weight, allowing users to more closely approximate published reports. Unlike previous years, the 1990 PUMS 1-Percent and 5-Percent Samples have not been released in separate geographic series (known as "A," "B," etc. records). Instead, each sample has its own set of geographies, known as "Public Use Microdata Areas" (PUMAs), established by the Census Bureau with assistance from each State Data Center. The PUMAs in the 1-Percent Sample are based on a distinction between metropolitan and nonmetropolitan areas. Metropolitan areas encompass whole central cities, Primary Metropolitan Statistical Areas (PMSAs), Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs), or groups thereof, except where the city or metropolitan area contains more than 200,000 inhabitants. In that case, the city or metropolitan area is divided into several PUMAs. Nonmetropolitan PUMAs are based on areas or groups of areas outside the central city, PMSA, or MSA. PUMAs in this 1-Percent Sample may cross state lines. (2) The codebook is provided as a Portable Document Format (PDF) file. The PDF file format was developed by Adobe Systems Incorporated and can be accessed using PDF reader software, such as the Adobe Acrobat Reader. Information on how to obtain a copy of the Acrobat Reader is provided through the ICPSR Website on the Internet.
MARF is the 1980 Census counterpart of the Master Enumeration District List (MEDList) prepared for the 1970 census. It links state or state equivalent, county or county equivalent, minor civil division (MCD)/census county division (CCD), and place names with their respective geographic codes. It is also an abbreviated summary file containing selected population and housing unit counts. MARF 2 has the same geographic coverage as the first MARF and includes the following additional information: FIPS place codes, latitude and longitude coordinates for geographic areas down to the BG/ED level, land area in square miles for geographic areas down to the level of places or minor civil divisions (for 11 selected states) with a population of 2,500 or more, total population and housing count estimates based on sample returns, and per capital income for all geographic areas included in the file. There are 51 files, one for each state and the District of Columbia. (Source: downloaded from ICPSR 7/13/10)
Please Note: This dataset is part of the historical CISER Data Archive Collection and is also available at ICPSR at https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR08258.v1. We highly recommend using the ICPSR version as they may make this dataset available in multiple data formats in the future.
This layer was developed by the Research & Analytics Group of the Atlanta Regional Commission, using data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey 5-year estimates for 2010-2014, to show various demographic data by city in the state of Georgia (including the following categories: total population, household composition, grandparents, school enrollment, educational attainment, disability, foreign born status, linguistic isolation, unemployment, commuting mode, occupation, income, health insurance, poverty, housing characteristics, vehicle availability, housing values, and housing affordability).The user should note that American Community Survey data represent estimates derived from a surveyed sample of the population, which creates some level of uncertainty, as opposed to an exact measure of the entire population (the full census count is only conducted once every 10 years and does not cover as many detailed characteristics of the population). Therefore, any measure reported by ACS should not be taken as an exact number. The Census Bureau also calculates a corresponding margin of error (MOE) for ACS measures (although margins of error are not included in this dataset).The user should also note that for relatively small geographic areas, such as census tracts shown here, ACS only releases combined 5-year estimates, meaning these estimates represent rolling averages of survey results that were collected over a 5-year span (in this case 2010-2014). Therefore, these data do not represent any one specific point in time or even one specific year. For geographic areas with larger populations, 3-year and 1-year estimates are also available.For further explanation of ACS estimates and margin of error, refer to Census Bureau documentation.Base Attributes:NAME = Name of city or municipalityAcres = Area in acresSq_Miles = Area in square milesCounty20 = Within ARC 20-county regionCounty10 = Within ARC 10-county regionAttributes from ACS:Workers_16_years_and_over= Number, Workers, 16 years and overCar_Truck_or_Van_drove_alone= Number, Car, truck, or van – drove alonePct_Car_Truck_Van_drove_alone= Percent, Car, truck, or van – drove aloneCar_truck_or_van_carpooled= Number, Car, truck, or van – carpooledPct_Car_Truck_Van_carpooled= Percent, Car, truck, or van – carpooledPublic_Transport_excluding_Taxi= Number, Public transportation (excluding taxicab)Pct_Public_Transp_exclude_Taxi= Percent, Public transportation (excluding taxicab)Worked_at_home= Number, Worked at homePct_Worked_at_home= Percent, Worked at homeMean_Travel_Time_to_Work_min= Mean travel time to work (minutes)- - - - - -Civilian_nonInstitutional_Pop= Total Civilian Noninstitutionalized PopulationCiv_nonInstitution_Pop_wDisabil= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population With a disabilityPct_Civ_nonInstitut_Pop_wDisab= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population With a disabilityCiv_nonInstitut_Pop_under_18yrs= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population Under 18 yearsCiv_nonInst_under18_wDisab= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Under 18 years With a disabilityPct_Civ_nonInst_under18_wDisab= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Under 18 years With a disabilityCiv_nonInst_Pop_18_to_64= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population 18 to 64 yearsCiv_nonInst_18_to_64_wDisab= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized 18 to 64 years With a disabilityPct_Civ_nonInst_18to64_wDisab= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized 18 to 64 years With a disabilityCiv_nonInst_Pop_65years_up= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population 65 years and overCiv_nonInst_65up_wDisab= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized 65 years and over With a disabilityPct_Civ_nonInst_65up_wDisab= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized 65 years and over With a disability- - - - - -Population_25_years_and_over= #, Population 25 years and overLess_than_HS_or_GED= #, Less than HS or GEDPercent_Less_than_HS_or_GED= %, Less than HS or GEDBA_or_Higher= #, BA or HigherPercent_BA_or_Higher= %, BA or Higher- - - - - -US_Native= #, U.S. NativePercent_US_Native= %, U.S. NativeUSnative_Born_in_US= #, U.S. Native, Born in the United StatesPct_USnative_Born_US= %, U.S. Native, Born in the United StatesUSnative_Born_State_Resid= #, U.S. Native, Born in State of ResidencePct_USnative_Born_State_Resid= %, U.S. Native, Born in State of ResidenceUS_Native_Born_Diff_State= #, U.S. Native, Born in Different StatePct_US_Natv_Born_inDiff_State= %, U.S. Native, Born in Different StateForeign_Born= #, Foreign BornPercent_Foreign_Born= %, Foreign BornForBorn_Nat_UScitizen= #, Foreign Born, Naturalized U.S. CitizenPct_ForBorn_Nat_UScitizen= %, Foreign Born, Naturalized U.S. CitizenForeignBorn_notUS_Citizen= #, Foreign Born, Not a U.S. CitizenPct_ForBorn_notUS_Citizen= %, Foreign Born, Not a U.S. Citizen- - - - - -GParents_Liv_wOwn_GChild_und18= #, Grandparents living with own grandchildren under 18 yearsGParents_RespFor_Gchildren= #, Grandparents Responsible for grandchildrenPct_GPar_RespFor_Gchildren= %, Grandparents Responsible for grandchildren- - - - - -Pop_wHealth_Insurance= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with health insurance coveragePct_Pop_wHealth_Ins= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with health insurance coveragePop_wPriv_Health_Ins= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with private health insurancePct_Pop_wPriv_Health_Ins= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with private health insurancePopulation_with_public_coverage= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with public coveragePct_Pop_with_public_coverage= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with public coveragePop_wNo_Health_Ins= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with no health insurance coveragePct_Pop_wNo_Health_Ins= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with no health insurance coveragePop_u18_wNo_Health_Ins= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population Under 18 years with no health insurancePct_Pop_u18_wNo_Health_Ins= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population Under 18 years with no health insurancePop_18to64_Employed= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, employedPop_18to64_Empl_wNo_Health_Ins= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, employed with no health insurancePct_Pop_18to64_Emp_wNo_Hlth_Ins= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, employed with no health insurancePop_18to64_Unemployed= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, unemployedPop_18to64_Unemp_wNo_Health_Ins= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, unemployed with no health insurancePct_Pop_18to64_Unemp_No_HlthIns= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, unemployed with no health insurancePop_18to64_Not_in_Labor_Force= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, not in labor forcePop_18to64_Not_LabFor_NoHlthIns= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, not in labor force with no health insurancePctPop_18to64_NotLFor_NoHlthIns= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, not in labor force with no health insurance- - - - - -HousUnits_MonthOwnerCosts_toInc= #, Housing units for which Selected Monthly Owner Costs as % of income are computedSel_Mo_Own_Costs_30pct_of_Incom= #, Selected Monthly Owner Costs (SMOCAPI) are 30% or more of household incomePct_Sel_Mo_Own_Costs_30pct_Inc= %, Selected Monthly Owner Costs (SMOCAPI) are 30% or more of household incomeHousUnits_Compute_RentPctIncome= #, Housing units for which Gross rent as a percentage of income is computedRent_Pct_of_Inc_More30Pct= #, Gross rent as a percentage of household income (GRAPI) is 30% or morePctRent_PctIncome_More30Pct= %, Gross rent as a percentage of household income (GRAPI) is 30% or moreHousUnits_OwnRent_Compute= #, Housing units for which SMOCAPI or GRAPI are computedHousCosts_Units_30pctMore_Inc= #, Housing costs (GRAPI or SMOCAPI) are 30% or more of household incomePctHousCost_30pctMore_Income= %, Housing costs (GRAPI or SMOCAPI) are 30% or more of household income- - - - - -Total_housing_units = Housing Characteristics: Total housing unitsOccupied_housing_units= #, Occupied housing unitsPercent_Occupied_housing_units= %, Occupied housing unitsVacant_housing_units= #, Vacant housing unitsPercent_Vacant_housing_units= %, Vacant housing unitsHomeowner_vacancy_rate= Homeowner vacancy rateRental_vacancy_rate= Rental vacancy rateOne_unit_detatched_housing_unit= #, 1-unit detached housing unitsPercent_1Unit_Detached= %, 1-unit detached housing unitsHousing_units_built_since_2000= #, Housing units built since 2000Pct_Units_Built_Since_2000= %, Housing units built since 2000Units_Built_1980_to_1999= #, Housing units built 1980 to 1999Pct_Units_Built_1980_to_1999= %, Housing units built 1980 to 1999Units_Built_1979_or_Earlier= #, Housing units built 1979 or earlierPct_Units_Built_1979_or_Earlier= %, Housing units built 1979 or earlier- - - - - -Total_Housing_Units_Val = Housing Value: Total Housing UnitsOccupied_Housing_Units_Val = Housing Value: Occupied Housing UnitsOwnOcc_units_valued_less_100k= #, Owner occupied housing units valued less than $100,000Pct_OwnOcc_units_val_less_100k= %, Owner occupied housing units valued less than $100,000OwnOcc_units_valued_100k_300k= #, Owner occupied housing units valued $100,000-$299,999Pct_OwnOcc_units_val_100k_300k= %, Owner occupied housing units valued $100,000-$299,999OwnOcc_units_valued_300k_more= #, Owner occupied housing units valued $300,000 or morePct_OwnOcc_units_val_300k_more= %, Owner occupied housing units valued $300,000 or moreMedian_value_own_occ_units= Median value, owner occupied housing units- - - - - -Income_Total_households = Income: Total householdsHousehold_inc_less_35k= #, Household income less than $35,000Pct_Household_inc_less_35k= %, Household income less than $35,000Household_inc_35k_75k= #, Household income $35,000 to $74,999Pct_Household_inc_35k_75k= %, Household income $35,000 to $74,999Household_inc_75k_200k= #, Household income $75,000 to $200,000Pct_Household_inc_75k_200k= %, Household income $75,000 to $200,000Household_inc_200k_more= #,
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Graph and download economic data for All-Transactions House Price Index for Michigan (MISTHPI) from Q1 1975 to Q1 2025 about MI, appraisers, HPI, housing, price index, indexes, price, and USA.
This layer was developed by the Research & Analytics Group of the Atlanta Regional Commission, using data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey 5-year estimates for 2010-2014, to show various demographic data by city in the state of Georgia (including the following categories: total population, household composition, grandparents, school enrollment, educational attainment, disability, foreign born status, linguistic isolation, unemployment, commuting mode, occupation, income, health insurance, poverty, housing characteristics, vehicle availability, housing values, and housing affordability).The user should note that American Community Survey data represent estimates derived from a surveyed sample of the population, which creates some level of uncertainty, as opposed to an exact measure of the entire population (the full census count is only conducted once every 10 years and does not cover as many detailed characteristics of the population). Therefore, any measure reported by ACS should not be taken as an exact number. The Census Bureau also calculates a corresponding margin of error (MOE) for ACS measures (although margins of error are not included in this dataset).The user should also note that for relatively small geographic areas, such as census tracts shown here, ACS only releases combined 5-year estimates, meaning these estimates represent rolling averages of survey results that were collected over a 5-year span (in this case 2010-2014). Therefore, these data do not represent any one specific point in time or even one specific year. For geographic areas with larger populations, 3-year and 1-year estimates are also available.For further explanation of ACS estimates and margin of error, refer to Census Bureau documentation.Base Attributes:NAME = Name of city or municipalityAcres = Area in acresSq_Miles = Area in square milesCounty20 = Within ARC 20-county regionCounty10 = Within ARC 10-county regionAttributes from ACS:Workers_16_years_and_over= Number, Workers, 16 years and overCar_Truck_or_Van_drove_alone= Number, Car, truck, or van – drove alonePct_Car_Truck_Van_drove_alone= Percent, Car, truck, or van – drove aloneCar_truck_or_van_carpooled= Number, Car, truck, or van – carpooledPct_Car_Truck_Van_carpooled= Percent, Car, truck, or van – carpooledPublic_Transport_excluding_Taxi= Number, Public transportation (excluding taxicab)Pct_Public_Transp_exclude_Taxi= Percent, Public transportation (excluding taxicab)Worked_at_home= Number, Worked at homePct_Worked_at_home= Percent, Worked at homeMean_Travel_Time_to_Work_min= Mean travel time to work (minutes)- - - - - -Civilian_nonInstitutional_Pop= Total Civilian Noninstitutionalized PopulationCiv_nonInstitution_Pop_wDisabil= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population With a disabilityPct_Civ_nonInstitut_Pop_wDisab= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population With a disabilityCiv_nonInstitut_Pop_under_18yrs= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population Under 18 yearsCiv_nonInst_under18_wDisab= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Under 18 years With a disabilityPct_Civ_nonInst_under18_wDisab= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Under 18 years With a disabilityCiv_nonInst_Pop_18_to_64= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population 18 to 64 yearsCiv_nonInst_18_to_64_wDisab= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized 18 to 64 years With a disabilityPct_Civ_nonInst_18to64_wDisab= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized 18 to 64 years With a disabilityCiv_nonInst_Pop_65years_up= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population 65 years and overCiv_nonInst_65up_wDisab= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized 65 years and over With a disabilityPct_Civ_nonInst_65up_wDisab= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized 65 years and over With a disability- - - - - -Population_25_years_and_over= #, Population 25 years and overLess_than_HS_or_GED= #, Less than HS or GEDPercent_Less_than_HS_or_GED= %, Less than HS or GEDBA_or_Higher= #, BA or HigherPercent_BA_or_Higher= %, BA or Higher- - - - - -US_Native= #, U.S. NativePercent_US_Native= %, U.S. NativeUSnative_Born_in_US= #, U.S. Native, Born in the United StatesPct_USnative_Born_US= %, U.S. Native, Born in the United StatesUSnative_Born_State_Resid= #, U.S. Native, Born in State of ResidencePct_USnative_Born_State_Resid= %, U.S. Native, Born in State of ResidenceUS_Native_Born_Diff_State= #, U.S. Native, Born in Different StatePct_US_Natv_Born_inDiff_State= %, U.S. Native, Born in Different StateForeign_Born= #, Foreign BornPercent_Foreign_Born= %, Foreign BornForBorn_Nat_UScitizen= #, Foreign Born, Naturalized U.S. CitizenPct_ForBorn_Nat_UScitizen= %, Foreign Born, Naturalized U.S. CitizenForeignBorn_notUS_Citizen= #, Foreign Born, Not a U.S. CitizenPct_ForBorn_notUS_Citizen= %, Foreign Born, Not a U.S. Citizen- - - - - -GParents_Liv_wOwn_GChild_und18= #, Grandparents living with own grandchildren under 18 yearsGParents_RespFor_Gchildren= #, Grandparents Responsible for grandchildrenPct_GPar_RespFor_Gchildren= %, Grandparents Responsible for grandchildren- - - - - -Pop_wHealth_Insurance= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with health insurance coveragePct_Pop_wHealth_Ins= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with health insurance coveragePop_wPriv_Health_Ins= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with private health insurancePct_Pop_wPriv_Health_Ins= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with private health insurancePopulation_with_public_coverage= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with public coveragePct_Pop_with_public_coverage= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with public coveragePop_wNo_Health_Ins= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with no health insurance coveragePct_Pop_wNo_Health_Ins= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with no health insurance coveragePop_u18_wNo_Health_Ins= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population Under 18 years with no health insurancePct_Pop_u18_wNo_Health_Ins= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population Under 18 years with no health insurancePop_18to64_Employed= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, employedPop_18to64_Empl_wNo_Health_Ins= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, employed with no health insurancePct_Pop_18to64_Emp_wNo_Hlth_Ins= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, employed with no health insurancePop_18to64_Unemployed= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, unemployedPop_18to64_Unemp_wNo_Health_Ins= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, unemployed with no health insurancePct_Pop_18to64_Unemp_No_HlthIns= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, unemployed with no health insurancePop_18to64_Not_in_Labor_Force= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, not in labor forcePop_18to64_Not_LabFor_NoHlthIns= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, not in labor force with no health insurancePctPop_18to64_NotLFor_NoHlthIns= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, not in labor force with no health insurance- - - - - -HousUnits_MonthOwnerCosts_toInc= #, Housing units for which Selected Monthly Owner Costs as % of income are computedSel_Mo_Own_Costs_30pct_of_Incom= #, Selected Monthly Owner Costs (SMOCAPI) are 30% or more of household incomePct_Sel_Mo_Own_Costs_30pct_Inc= %, Selected Monthly Owner Costs (SMOCAPI) are 30% or more of household incomeHousUnits_Compute_RentPctIncome= #, Housing units for which Gross rent as a percentage of income is computedRent_Pct_of_Inc_More30Pct= #, Gross rent as a percentage of household income (GRAPI) is 30% or morePctRent_PctIncome_More30Pct= %, Gross rent as a percentage of household income (GRAPI) is 30% or moreHousUnits_OwnRent_Compute= #, Housing units for which SMOCAPI or GRAPI are computedHousCosts_Units_30pctMore_Inc= #, Housing costs (GRAPI or SMOCAPI) are 30% or more of household incomePctHousCost_30pctMore_Income= %, Housing costs (GRAPI or SMOCAPI) are 30% or more of household income- - - - - -Total_housing_units = Housing Characteristics: Total housing unitsOccupied_housing_units= #, Occupied housing unitsPercent_Occupied_housing_units= %, Occupied housing unitsVacant_housing_units= #, Vacant housing unitsPercent_Vacant_housing_units= %, Vacant housing unitsHomeowner_vacancy_rate= Homeowner vacancy rateRental_vacancy_rate= Rental vacancy rateOne_unit_detatched_housing_unit= #, 1-unit detached housing unitsPercent_1Unit_Detached= %, 1-unit detached housing unitsHousing_units_built_since_2000= #, Housing units built since 2000Pct_Units_Built_Since_2000= %, Housing units built since 2000Units_Built_1980_to_1999= #, Housing units built 1980 to 1999Pct_Units_Built_1980_to_1999= %, Housing units built 1980 to 1999Units_Built_1979_or_Earlier= #, Housing units built 1979 or earlierPct_Units_Built_1979_or_Earlier= %, Housing units built 1979 or earlier- - - - - -Total_Housing_Units_Val = Housing Value: Total Housing UnitsOccupied_Housing_Units_Val = Housing Value: Occupied Housing UnitsOwnOcc_units_valued_less_100k= #, Owner occupied housing units valued less than $100,000Pct_OwnOcc_units_val_less_100k= %, Owner occupied housing units valued less than $100,000OwnOcc_units_valued_100k_300k= #, Owner occupied housing units valued $100,000-$299,999Pct_OwnOcc_units_val_100k_300k= %, Owner occupied housing units valued $100,000-$299,999OwnOcc_units_valued_300k_more= #, Owner occupied housing units valued $300,000 or morePct_OwnOcc_units_val_300k_more= %, Owner occupied housing units valued $300,000 or moreMedian_value_own_occ_units= Median value, owner occupied housing units- - - - - -Income_Total_households = Income: Total householdsHousehold_inc_less_35k= #, Household income less than $35,000Pct_Household_inc_less_35k= %, Household income less than $35,000Household_inc_35k_75k= #, Household income $35,000 to $74,999Pct_Household_inc_35k_75k= %, Household income $35,000 to $74,999Household_inc_75k_200k= #, Household income $75,000 to $200,000Pct_Household_inc_75k_200k= %, Household income $75,000 to $200,000Household_inc_200k_more= #,
This is an extract of the decennial Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS) released by the Bureau of the Census. Because the complete PUMS files contain several hundred thousand records, ICPSR has constructed this subset to allow for easier and less costly analysis. The collection of data at ten year increments allows the user to follow various age cohorts through the life-cycle. Data include information on the household and its occupants such as size and value of dwelling, utility costs, number of people in the household, and their relationship to the respondent. More detailed information was collected on the respondent, the head of household, and the spouse, if present. Variables include education, marital status, occupation and income. The stratified sample has unequal sampling rates across strata and requires the use of weights for analyses using more than one stratum. The epsem sample was selected in a second stage from the stratified sample and used compensating sampling rates within each stratum so that the overall probability of selection for each person is equal. The person level weight for use with the stratified sample and the household weight to be used with the epsem sample are included in the data file.Conducted by the United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Stratified sample of adults contained in the Public Use Microdata Sample. Approximately 500 records were drawn from each of 28 sex/age/race strata. Additionally, an equal probability (epsem) sample was drawn from the stratified sample. Datasets: DS0: Study-Level Files DS1: United States Microdata Samples Extract File, 1940-1980: Demographics of Aging DS2: Frequencies, 1940-1980 For 1960-1980, all PUMS records for persons 18 and over. For 1940 and 1950, all sample line records.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
Starts and completions of new build dwellings in the UK, on a quarterly and annual basis, time series data
https://dataverse-staging.rdmc.unc.edu/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/2.0/customlicense?persistentId=hdl:1902.29/C-66https://dataverse-staging.rdmc.unc.edu/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/2.0/customlicense?persistentId=hdl:1902.29/C-66
STF2 A and B differ in geographic coverage only. They contain complete-count data. Population items tabulated include age in single years, race (provisional data), sex, marital status, Spanish origin (provisional data), household type, and household relationship. Housing items tabulated include occupancy/vacancy status, tenure, contract rent, value, condominium status, number of rooms, and plumbing facilities.Selected aggregates, means, and medians are provided also. The files comprise two record types. The first, record A, is presented once for each geographic area. Characteristics data in record A are subject to suppression criteria. Record B is present for a maximum of six race and Spanish origin categories in 2A and for a maximum of 26 race and Spanish origin categories in 2B. FILE A provides summaries for standard metropolitan statistical areas (SMSA's) and for the following SMSA components: counties or county equivalents, places of 10,000 or more inhabitants, census tracts, and totals for census tracts split by county components. A summary is also provided for the tracted area outside of SMSA's within each State. FILE B provides summaries for the State or State equivalent, State components, standard consolidated statistical areas (SCSA's) and the urban and ru ral portions of the SCSA, standard metropolitan statistical areas (SMSA's) and the urban and rural portions of the SMSA, urbanized areas, counties or county equivalents and the rural portion of the county, minor civil divisions (MCD's) or census country divisions (CCD's), places of 1,000 or more inhabitants and the urban portion of any places that have been split into urban and rural components, American Indian reservations and their county portions, and Alaska Native villages. Data for STF2 A and B will be for the state of North Carolina only.
This layer was developed by the Research & Analytics Group of the Atlanta Regional Commission, using data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey 5-year estimates for 2011-2015, to show various demographic data by House district in the state of Georgia (including the following categories: total population, age, race/ethnicity, household composition, grandparents, school enrollment, educational attainment, veteran status, disability, foreign born status, linguistic isolation, unemployment, commuting mode, occupation, income, health insurance, poverty, housing characteristics, vehicle availability, housing values, and housing affordability).The user should note that American Community Survey data represent estimates derived from a surveyed sample of the population, which creates some level of uncertainty, as opposed to an exact measure of the entire population (the full census count is only conducted once every 10 years and does not cover as many detailed characteristics of the population). Therefore, any measure reported by ACS should not be taken as an exact number. The Census Bureau also calculates a corresponding margin of error (MOE) for ACS measures (although margins of error are not included in this dataset).The user should also note that for relatively small geographic areas, such as census tracts shown here, ACS only releases combined 5-year estimates, meaning these estimates represent rolling averages of survey results that were collected over a 5-year span (in this case 2011-2015). Therefore, these data do not represent any one specific point in time or even one specific year. For geographic areas with larger populations, 3-year and 1-year estimates are also available.For further explanation of ACS estimates and margin of error, refer to Census Bureau documentation.- - - - - -Base Attributes:DISTRICT = GA House DistrictPOPULATION = District Population (2010 Census)Name = GA House District NameTotal_Population_2011_2015_ACS = Total Population, 2011-2015 American Community Survey (ACS)profile_url = Web address of district profile- - - - - -Attributes from ACS:Workers_16_years_and_over= Number, Workers, 16 years and overCar_Truck_or_Van_drove_alone= Number, Car, truck, or van – drove alonePct_Car_Truck_Van_drove_alone= Percent, Car, truck, or van – drove aloneCar_truck_or_van_carpooled= Number, Car, truck, or van – carpooledPct_Car_Truck_Van_carpooled= Percent, Car, truck, or van – carpooledPublic_Transport_excluding_Taxi= Number, Public transportation (excluding taxicab)Pct_Public_Transp_exclude_Taxi= Percent, Public transportation (excluding taxicab)Worked_at_home= Number, Worked at homePct_Worked_at_home= Percent, Worked at homeMean_Travel_Time_to_Work_min= Mean travel time to work (minutes)- - - - - -Civilian_nonInstitutional_Pop= Total Civilian Noninstitutionalized PopulationCiv_nonInstitution_Pop_wDisabil= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population With a disabilityPct_Civ_nonInstitut_Pop_wDisab= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population With a disabilityCiv_nonInstitut_Pop_under_18yrs= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population Under 18 yearsCiv_nonInst_under18_wDisab= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Under 18 years With a disabilityPct_Civ_nonInst_under18_wDisab= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Under 18 years With a disabilityCiv_nonInst_Pop_18_to_64= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population 18 to 64 yearsCiv_nonInst_18_to_64_wDisab= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized 18 to 64 years With a disabilityPct_Civ_nonInst_18to64_wDisab= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized 18 to 64 years With a disabilityCiv_nonInst_Pop_65years_up= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population 65 years and overCiv_nonInst_65up_wDisab= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized 65 years and over With a disabilityPct_Civ_nonInst_65up_wDisab= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized 65 years and over With a disability- - - - - -Population_25_years_and_over= #, Population 25 years and overLess_than_HS_or_GED= #, Less than HS or GEDPercent_Less_than_HS_or_GED= %, Less than HS or GEDBA_or_Higher= #, BA or HigherPercent_BA_or_Higher= %, BA or Higher- - - - - -US_Native= #, U.S. NativePercent_US_Native= %, U.S. NativeUSnative_Born_in_US= #, U.S. Native, Born in the United StatesPct_USnative_Born_US= %, U.S. Native, Born in the United StatesUSnative_Born_State_Resid= #, U.S. Native, Born in State of ResidencePct_USnative_Born_State_Resid= %, U.S. Native, Born in State of ResidenceUS_Native_Born_Diff_State= #, U.S. Native, Born in Different StatePct_US_Natv_Born_inDiff_State= %, U.S. Native, Born in Different StateForeign_Born= #, Foreign BornPercent_Foreign_Born= %, Foreign BornForBorn_Nat_UScitizen= #, Foreign Born, Naturalized U.S. CitizenPct_ForBorn_Nat_UScitizen= %, Foreign Born, Naturalized U.S. CitizenForeignBorn_notUS_Citizen= #, Foreign Born, Not a U.S. CitizenPct_ForBorn_notUS_Citizen= %, Foreign Born, Not a U.S. Citizen- - - - - -GParents_Liv_wOwn_GChild_und18= #, Grandparents living with own grandchildren under 18 yearsGParents_RespFor_Gchildren= #, Grandparents Responsible for grandchildrenPct_GPar_RespFor_Gchildren= %, Grandparents Responsible for grandchildren- - - - - -Pop_wHealth_Insurance= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with health insurance coveragePct_Pop_wHealth_Ins= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with health insurance coveragePop_wPriv_Health_Ins= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with private health insurancePct_Pop_wPriv_Health_Ins= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with private health insurancePopulation_with_public_coverage= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with public coveragePct_Pop_with_public_coverage= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with public coveragePop_wNo_Health_Ins= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with no health insurance coveragePct_Pop_wNo_Health_Ins= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized population with no health insurance coveragePop_u18_wNo_Health_Ins= #, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population Under 18 years with no health insurancePct_Pop_u18_wNo_Health_Ins= %, Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population Under 18 years with no health insurancePop_18to64_Employed= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, employedPop_18to64_Empl_wNo_Health_Ins= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, employed with no health insurancePct_Pop_18to64_Emp_wNo_Hlth_Ins= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, employed with no health insurancePop_18to64_Unemployed= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, unemployedPop_18to64_Unemp_wNo_Health_Ins= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, unemployed with no health insurancePct_Pop_18to64_Unemp_No_HlthIns= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, unemployed with no health insurancePop_18to64_Not_in_Labor_Force= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, not in labor forcePop_18to64_Not_LabFor_NoHlthIns= #, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, not in labor force with no health insurancePctPop_18to64_NotLFor_NoHlthIns= %, Civilian noninstitutionalized ages 18 to 64, not in labor force with no health insurance- - - - - -HousUnits_MonthOwnerCosts_toInc= #, Housing units for which Selected Monthly Owner Costs as % of income are computedSel_Mo_Own_Costs_30pct_of_Incom= #, Selected Monthly Owner Costs (SMOCAPI) are 30% or more of household incomePct_Sel_Mo_Own_Costs_30pct_Inc= %, Selected Monthly Owner Costs (SMOCAPI) are 30% or more of household incomeHousUnits_Compute_RentPctIncome= #, Housing units for which Gross rent as a percentage of income is computedRent_Pct_of_Inc_More30Pct= #, Gross rent as a percentage of household income (GRAPI) is 30% or morePctRent_PctIncome_More30Pct= %, Gross rent as a percentage of household income (GRAPI) is 30% or moreHousUnits_OwnRent_Compute= #, Housing units for which SMOCAPI or GRAPI are computedHousCosts_Units_30pctMore_Inc= #, Housing costs (GRAPI or SMOCAPI) are 30% or more of household incomePctHousCost_30pctMore_Income= %, Housing costs (GRAPI or SMOCAPI) are 30% or more of household income- - - - - -Total_housing_units= Total housing unitsOccupied_housing_units= #, Occupied housing unitsPercent_Occupied_housing_units= %, Occupied housing unitsVacant_housing_units= #, Vacant housing unitsPercent_Vacant_housing_units= %, Vacant housing unitsHomeowner_vacancy_rate= Homeowner vacancy rateRental_vacancy_rate= Rental vacancy rateOne_unit_detatched_housing_unit= #, 1-unit detached housing unitsPercent_1Unit_Detached= %, 1-unit detached housing unitsHousing_units_built_since_2000= #, Housing units built since 2000Pct_Units_Built_Since_2000= %, Housing units built since 2000Units_Built_1980_to_1999= #, Housing units built 1980 to 1999Pct_Units_Built_1980_to_1999= %, Housing units built 1980 to 1999Units_Built_1979_or_Earlier= #, Housing units built 1979 or earlierPct_Units_Built_1979_or_Earlier= %, Housing units built 1979 or earlierOwner_occupied_housing_units= Housing Tenure: #, Owner occupied housing unitsPct_Owner_Occ_HousUnits= Housing Tenure: %, Owner occupied housing unitsRenter_occupied_housing_units= Housing Tenure: #, Renter occupied housing unitsPct_Renter_Occ_Units= Housing Tenure: %, Renter occupied housing units- - - - - -OwnOcc_units_valued_less_100k= #, Owner occupied housing units valued less than $100,000Pct_OwnOcc_units_val_less_100k= %, Owner occupied housing units valued less than $100,000OwnOcc_units_valued_100k_300k= #, Owner occupied housing units valued $100,000-$299,999Pct_OwnOcc_units_val_100k_300k= %, Owner occupied housing units valued $100,000-$299,999OwnOcc_units_valued_300k_more= #, Owner occupied housing units valued $300,000 or morePct_OwnOcc_units_val_300k_more= %, Owner occupied housing units valued $300,000 or moreMedian_value_own_occ_units= Median value, owner occupied housing units- - - - - -Income_Total_households = Income: Total householdsHousehold_inc_less_35k= #, Household income less than $35,000Pct_Household_inc_less_35k= %, Household income less
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Housing Index in Spain increased to 2033 EUR/SQ. METRE in the first quarter of 2025 from 1972.10 EUR/SQ. METRE in the fourth quarter of 2024. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - Spain House Prices - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.