SEATTLE—Deteriorating housing affordability will drive 2016 housing trends. That is according to the latest report from locally based Zillow.

A lack of affordable homes near city centers will push new and first-time homebuyers to suburbs that feel like walkable, amenity-rich mini-cities, the report says. Rising rents will force more young renters to wait longer before buying a home.

"And the looming threat of rising mortgage interest rates will slowly erode some of the terrific mortgage affordability the market has enjoyed for the past few years," the report says.

Some of Zillow's other 2016 housing market predictions?

  1. The median age of first-time buyers will reach new highs in 2016 as millennials put off homeownership and other major life decisions.
  2. Growth in home values will outpace incomes, especially for low-income Americans. In 2016, those whose incomes fall in the bottom third of all incomes will be priced out of homeownership and unable to afford even the least expensive homes on the market.
  3. Rising rents won't let up in 2016, and will continue to set new records. The next year will bring the least affordable median rents ever.
  4. As affordable housing close to city centers grows increasingly scarce, people will move farther out. Dense, walkable suburbs with an urban feel—especially those that offer good access to the city—will be 2016's new hot spots.
  5. The median expectation of more than 100 economic and housing experts surveyed in the latest Zillow Home Price Expectations Survey was for home values to grow about 3.5% in 2016.

According to Zillow chief economist, Dr. Svenja Gudell, "Rents will continue to increase at a brisk rate in 2016, but many potential first-time buyers are living in hot markets where buying a home is really expensive. In 2016, we'll start to see more people in hot coastal markets forced to move farther from the core of the city to find housing. When they get there, they'll be looking for amenity-rich suburbs - mini-cities, with walkable cores and an urban feel."

Gudell continues that "As renters gradually transition into homeowners, the historically low homeownership rate should stop falling quite as quickly as it has been. However, the median age of first-time homebuyers - already the highest it has ever been at about 33—will climb higher. Millennials want to buy, but they are waiting longer than previous generations."

Lastly, Gudells says that "All of this will happen against a backdrop of slowly increasing interest rates. That will make some homeowners think twice about selling, and many of them will decide to remodel their current homes instead."

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Natalie Dolce

Natalie Dolce, editor-in-chief of GlobeSt.com and GlobeSt. Real Estate Forum, is responsible for working with editorial staff, freelancers and senior management to help plan the overarching vision that encompasses GlobeSt.com, including short-term and long-term goals for the website, how content integrates through the company’s other product lines and the overall quality of content. Previously she served as national executive editor and editor of the West Coast region for GlobeSt.com and Real Estate Forum, and was responsible for coverage of news and information pertaining to that vital real estate region. Prior to moving out to the Southern California office, she was Northeast bureau chief, covering New York City for GlobeSt.com. Her background includes a stint at InStyle Magazine, and as managing editor with New York Press, an alternative weekly New York City paper. In her career, she has also covered a variety of beats for M magazine, Arthur Frommer's Budget Travel, FashionLedge.com, and Co-Ed magazine. Dolce has also freelanced for a number of publications, including MSNBC.com and Museums New York magazine.