The text is too small, everywhere. It’s extremely hard to read.
The background is distracting, and I can’t read the metropolitan over the colors, because the text is too small.
So these are top ten metro areas by size sorted by value and not the top ten metro areas by value. The title is a little confusing.
Texas has such high property taxes that the prices might as well be double based on that
This data is not beautiful
Come on Trump, give us another 2008.
SF must be above this chart
It would be (IMHO) more interesting to see this adjusted for inflation, too.
WTF is going on with Los Angeles that is making it more than New York and Boston??
This can’t be right. Prices in Austin Texas has grown at a much greater rate than almost any city on that chart. I believe the same is true of Nashville.
Agree with comments asking to see top 10 metros BY value since you’re showing the value index. Would be really interesting to see Austin included here since prices fell there before they fell in any of the other major metros starting in 2023.
Surprised LA is higher given that NYC’s economy is twice as large. Is this because of all the insanely expensive real estate in places like Orange County?
Why didn’t I buy a house instead of Tony Hawk pro skater 2 when I was 11 years old, I’m an idiot.
Leaving out SF/SJ just because they’re technically two separate metros was a choice
14 comments
Made with Matplotlib. Data from [Zillow](https://www.zillow.com/research/data/)
Some comments:.
The text is too small, everywhere. It’s extremely hard to read.
The background is distracting, and I can’t read the metropolitan over the colors, because the text is too small.
So these are top ten metro areas by size sorted by value and not the top ten metro areas by value. The title is a little confusing.
Texas has such high property taxes that the prices might as well be double based on that
This data is not beautiful
Come on Trump, give us another 2008.
SF must be above this chart
It would be (IMHO) more interesting to see this adjusted for inflation, too.
WTF is going on with Los Angeles that is making it more than New York and Boston??
This can’t be right. Prices in Austin Texas has grown at a much greater rate than almost any city on that chart. I believe the same is true of Nashville.
Agree with comments asking to see top 10 metros BY value since you’re showing the value index. Would be really interesting to see Austin included here since prices fell there before they fell in any of the other major metros starting in 2023.
Surprised LA is higher given that NYC’s economy is twice as large. Is this because of all the insanely expensive real estate in places like Orange County?
Why didn’t I buy a house instead of Tony Hawk pro skater 2 when I was 11 years old, I’m an idiot.
Leaving out SF/SJ just because they’re technically two separate metros was a choice
Comments are closed.