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In 2022, single women owned 58% of the nearly 35.2 million homes owned by unmarried Americans, while single men owned 42%. In 2000, by comparison, single women owned 64% of the almost 25 million homes ...
Report finds single women lead men in homeownership 04:24. Kyla Wright's original plan was to complete her master's degree, move out of her parents' home and rent an apartment somewhere in Detroit.
Single women own roughly 10.7 million homes in America, compared to 8.1 million owned by single men, according to a recent analysis from LendingTree that looked at 2021 census data.
Single women are now the fastest growing group in the labor market. Yet a new study from Wells Fargo finds that as their numbers in the workforce increase, their wage gap is too.. According to the ...
Today, single women own more homes than single men. Analysis from online lending marketplace "Lending Tree" found single women own about 13% of owner-occupied homes compared to 10% among single men.
Research by Maxwell shows more than half of single women buying homes are under 35. Most have a college degree, and 39% are people of color. Around 40% say rising rental costs are what prompted ...
In 2024, single women represent 20% of all homebuyers, compared to 8% for single men. Three single women shared with BI their motivations for buying a home without a partner or a spouse.
Single women in the United States are outpacing single men in homeownership. A 2023 Pew Research Center survey using 2022 census data found that single women owned 58 percent of the nearly 35.2 ...
Single women here own roughly 76,569 more properties than single men. Connecticut was the New England state with the highest gender gap. Skip to Main Content ...
That means single women control 13.01% of owner-occupied homes, compared to 9.83% for single men. This gendered homeownership gap is also growing. In 2022, the difference stood at 2.71 million homes.