How the Fed studies and understands housing’s key role in the economy
As the single largest expense for most consumers, housing costs play a major role in how people make ends meet. A home is often both a homeowner’s primary wealth building opportunity and their largest source of debt. And with over $34 trillion in home equity and nearly $17 trillion owed on residential mortgages in 2025, housing sector stability matters to the health of the overall US economy.
Housing cost and availability also significantly affect the labor force. If workers can’t afford good-quality homes in economically dynamic regions, businesses may struggle to fill needed roles.
Housing’s economic influence and importance often come into sharp focus during shocks. The subprime mortgage crisis of the 2000s and resulting Great Recession, for instance, devastated household balance sheets and pushed unemployment levels to a multi-decade high. More recently, following the pandemic, rising housing costs contributed to above-target inflation.
“Rapid price and rent increases over the past five years have created enormous pressure on household budgets and placed homeownership beyond reach for many Americans. This affordability crisis constrains labor mobility, limits the ability of businesses to hire, affects where businesses choose to expand operations, and reduces the wealth-building potential that homeownership has historically provided to many American families.”
Susan M. Collins, president and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
“Rapid price and rent increases over the past five years have created enormous pressure on household budgets and placed homeownership beyond reach for many Americans,” said Federal Reserve Bank of Boston President Susan M. Collins at a June 2025 event. “This affordability crisis constrains labor mobility, limits the ability of businesses to hire, affects where businesses choose to expand operations, and reduces the wealth-building potential that homeownership has historically provided to many American families.”
These significant economic impacts make housing a key consideration for the Federal Reserve in advancing its dual mandate of price stability and maximum employment. In regular conversations and work with local stakeholders around the country, Fed community development staff hear a growing urgency related to housing affordability.
Community development initiatives underway at the Fed illuminate the housing affordability challenges and strategies at play in neighborhoods across the country. This work complements and is often interwoven with the Fed’s economic research and bank supervisory functions, supporting a robust understanding of households’ economic experiences.
This work also informs Fed leadership and national policymakers on critical housing issues and trends. The regional structure of the Federal Reserve System enables a deep understanding of local conditions, supporting communities’ efforts to pursue informed, data-supported housing strategies.
To track and understand key US housing challenges, the Fed’s work helps answer three overarching questions. What is necessary to ensure a robust range of housing is available to consumers? What impacts the affordability and stability of rental housing? And what affects people’s ability to buy a home and hold onto it over time?
Below, learn more about why these housing questions matter to the Fed and the economy and explore some examples of how Fed staff around the country are researching, working with communities, and bringing stakeholders together around these issues.
Communities that build more homes and offer a wider range of housing types in response to growing demand achieve greater affordability than those with less supply. Even building higher-priced new units can help keep current prices down for everyone by opening up new opportunities for low- and moderate-income households through a succession of residential moves.
Fed staff monitor housing supply investments and convene practitioners and policymakers to discuss appropriate approaches to local housing construction.
Manufactured housing offers a uniquely affordable homeownership onramp at a time when aspiring buyers can’t afford pricier site-built homes. Even with perception and financing challenges to surmount, some are finding creative ways to extend this homeownership option to more buyers.
Fed staff also consider how investment in a wider array of housing types can help meet changing demand and expand the availability of lower-cost units.
Financing affordable housing can be particularly complex. Apart from public subsidies, affordable housing can require capital from a range of investors, including banks and Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs), institutional or impact investors, and nonprofits.
Demand is up among underserved borrowers for community development financial institutions’ loans. Some industry experts are exploring whether these mission-driven lenders might leverage broader secondary market opportunities to increase available lending capital.
Fed staff have helped document this complexity and shared examples of strategies to address it for different kinds of developments, from large-scale multifamily affordable housing to smaller format homes such as ADUs.
Fed staff have also explored avenues for producing more affordable housing without the use of public subsidy.
Existing homes that remain both affordable and in good condition are vital to the overall supply of affordable housing. Yet risks ranging from natural disasters to expiring affordability restrictions can threaten this important housing stock. Fed staff research these risks and engage with communities to deepen understanding and highlight mitigation strategies.
Increasingly frequent and severe flooding can have devastating impacts on communities. The Federal Reserve Banks of New York, Cleveland, and Philadelphia examine flood risk in their regions and the implications for low-and-moderate income communities.
Natural hazards both acutely and indirectly impact low-to-moderate income (LMI) households’ residential security by heightening risks of displacement, asset loss, and unaffordable increases in insurance premiums. Recent work helps clarify communities’ exposure to disaster risks and inform proactive responses.
Where housing preservation challenges are economic rather than environmental, Fed researchers leverage public datasets and engage housing providers to shed light on operational costs and issues.
Research conducted by the Chicago Fed explains how the exit of guaranteed affordable rental units from the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit program will affect the long-term supply of affordable housing.
Over the past decade, increasing rents have emerged as a significant driver of inflation. Rising rents also place a major burden on less-affluent households and can impede residential and economic mobility.
The Federal Reserve Board of Governors’ Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking (SHED) provides one of the richest nationally representative datasets on renter households’ financial and residential security. The survey provides unique insights on renters’ experiences and housing outcomes, including reasons for renting, neighborhood satisfaction, and ability to keep up with rent payments.
Fed research and engagement initiatives shed light on rental affordability and stability challenges. Regional collaborations have also yielded innovative solutions.
In this explainer, learn more about some of the factors recently complicating affordable US homeownership and discover how some communities and organizations are helping to extend affordable homeownership to more families.
Across the country, roughly two out of every three housing units are owner-occupied. To better understand the needs of these households and changes in the homeownership market, Fed researchers actively monitor and research homebuying and ownership trends.
Over the past two decades, investors make up an expanding share of single-family homebuyers. Some stakeholders have expressed concern that investors, particularly those backed by private equity, are outbidding low- and middle-income homebuyers for lower-priced houses. Fed research has confirmed across multiple urban areas that neighborhoods with the highest shares of investor- or corporate-owned single-family homes are more likely to be in lower-income neighborhoods.
Native CDFIs use creative approaches to help their neighbors navigate homeownership in Indian Country, making notable progress even at their smaller scale. But they can’t do it alone. Learn how other lenders can join NCDFIs to connect Native homebuyers with the loans they seek.
In 2025, only about one in five primary residences was purchased with cash. Most homebuyers need a loan—whether from a bank, a credit union, or a CDFI—to finance their purchase. Mortgage rates are a key pathway through which monetary policy influences household finances.
Fed researchers use their access to Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data and other sources to understand who can access home mortgages and at what prices.
Contract for deed homeownership agreements can appeal to lower-priced home buyers who believe they are unable to qualify for or secure a mortgage. But CFDs often lack consumer protections and can cost unsuspecting buyers their home and their investment in it.
Even among lower-income buyers able to purchase a home, long-term obstacles remain to homeownership stability and wealth-building. Fed work on these topics has informed interventions to expand consumer protections, helping ensure homeowners and their heirs can fully realize the benefits of homeownership.
For some households, legal and regulatory issues raise barriers to building and sustaining family wealth through homeownership. Building both novel research datasets and relationships with stakeholders to understand who is affected and where, Fed researchers are shedding light on these unconventional situations.
Heirs’ property situations can strain family relationships and put billions of dollars of wealth at stake. Read one woman’s story and learn how she’s now working to help others preserve their family ties, homes, and financial stability.
The research, convening, and engagement efforts featured here are just some of the ways Fed community development work examines the economic impact of housing challenges and strategies to mitigate them. Efforts related to this key sector of the nation’s economy have developed regional evidence, drawn on practitioner insights, and deepened community connections to help the Fed serve the public, advancing its dual mandate of price stability and maximum employment.
This work shows the importance of housing affordability and availability to economic mobility, stable employment, and steady household finances. It demonstrates that expanding and diversifying the housing supply in turn helps businesses and local economies grow. And it emphasizes housing’s vital role in supporting a strong and thriving national economy.
One of the more memorable sayings my dad used to recite came from a character in a movie he watched...
As the single largest expense for most consumers, housing costs play a major role in how people make ends meet....
A single year of undergraduate study (tuition, fees, room and board) used to cost just $1,286 during the 1963-64 academic...