DeKevia Cole’s family moved to Minnesota from Mississippi when she was a child, and her mother struggled to afford housing. The family bounced between living with others and in a shelter before renting in north Minneapolis. Last winter, Cole, who is Black, became the first homeowner in her family.
“I’m paving the way for my siblings and children,” she said.
Minnesota’s homeownership rate has remained steady since the 1970s, with slightly more than 70% of all households owning their residences. But the stability of that surface-level data hides dramatic variation among racial groups, particularly when they’re more narrowly defined.
“When you take a closer examination, that’s when you see real disparities,” said Jeff Howison, senior research analyst at the Minnesota State Demographic Center.
Past reports on Minnesotans’ homeownership rates have found significant inequality among broad racial categories, such as white, Black or African American and Asian. But new data from the 2020 census, the U.S. Census Bureau’s most comprehensive effort to document in detail race, ethnicity and tribal groups, has allowed researchers to assess the nuances within those categories.
A recent report Howison created for the Demographic Center reveals differing homeownership rates between Dakota and Ojibwe people in Minnesota, for example, as well as between U.S.-born African Americans and those of newer African immigrants.
Howison also used the disaggregated data to analyze how homeownership rates for the detailed groups have changed over time. Some showed substantial gains in recent decades. For example, homeownership rates of Asian Americans are closing in on those of white Minnesotans (who have the highest rates of any racial group, at 77%), with Hmong Americans showing the largest increase.
But for other groups, disparities have worsened.