Average house price compared with resident median annual pay.
Boston Wages, Employment and Property Affordability
Resident earnings, employment, unemployment and affordability context for reading Boston prices and rents.
Boston wages, employment and affordability
Resident earnings and labour-market context help explain local affordability, rental pressure and housing demand.
Average monthly rent compared with estimated monthly earnings.
Labour market rates are from the ONS Annual Population Survey profile shown by Nomis. Where the local APS unemployment value is suppressed, the ONS model-based unemployment estimate is used. Earnings are ONS ASHE resident-analysis median full-time employee earnings. Annual pay is annualised from weekly pay for display context.
Incomes Explain Affordability Pressure
Wage and employment data does not predict house prices by itself. It gives demand-side context: how average prices and rents compare with resident earnings, whether employment conditions support demand, and where affordability pressure may limit the buyer or renter pool.
Boston’s labour-market picture in the latest ONS and Nomis data points to a working town with a lower pay base than Great Britain overall. The resident population was 71,080 in 2024, so these figures relate to a relatively small local market.