A unique ranking of cities for prospective home-buyers puts a city on top that might not be familiar to many—Elkhart, Indiana. The metro area of the city of approximately 200,000 people is No. 1 in the rankings compiled by the Wall Street Journal and Realtor.com. Their idea was to find places that provide a good value (including a potential return on investment) and also are nice places to live, with jobs available. "All of the top 20 markets in our index fall into one of two categories: affordable or outdoorsy," says George Ratiu of Realtor.com. "For many young professionals, especially those with growing families, the cost premium of living in a city like San Francisco or New York has lost its allure during the pandemic." The top 10 on the "Summer Emerging Housing Markets Index:"
                                    
                                    
                                
                                
                             
                            
                            
                            
                            
                            
                                
                                
                                    
                                        
 -  Elkhart-Goshen, Indiana
-  Burlington, North Carolina
-  Johnson City, Tennessee
-  Fort Wayne, Indiana
-  Billings, Montana
-  Raleigh, North Carolina
-  Rapid City, South Dakota
-  North Port-Sarasota-Bradenton, Florida
-  Topeka, Kansas
-  Visalia-Porterville, California
                                        And the bottom 10 on the list of the 300 biggest metro areas:
 
 -  McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, Texas
-  Lake Charles, Louisiana
-  Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington (Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland)
-  Albany-Schenectady-Troy, New York
-  Kingston, New York
-  Jackson, Mississippi
-  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
-  Odessa, Texas
-  Shreveport-Bossier City, Louisiana
-  New York-Newark-Jersey City
 See the 
full rankings, along with the full methodology.