Feature Photo: America’s housing deficit grew by 159,000 homes in 2023, according to the latest Census data. Image: iStock.
Posted: 7-13-2025
Houston (Harris County) — America’s housing shortage grew to an all-time high of 4.7 million units, according to a new Zillow analysis of recently released Census data. This deepening housing deficit remains the prime driver of the nation’s housing affordability crisis.
Construction boomed in response to high demand and price growth during the early years of the pandemic. However, that hasn’t been enough to keep up with the growing population, let alone undo nearly two decades of underbuilding that began during the Great Recession.
“The unfortunate fact is that we still don’t have enough housing in this country for people who need it. Construction has helped prevent the housing deficit from ballooning, but it hasn’t yet begun to close the gap,” said Orphe Divounguy, senior economist at Zillow. “We know what works: lower building restraints to allow for more density and less expensive housing. More of these measures at the local level can help get more homes built and begin to ease this outsize financial burden for millions of Americans.”
In 2023, 3.4 million homes sat vacant and available for rent or sale, according to Census data. Meanwhile, 8.1 million families shared their homes with people who weren’t related to them. While some people choose to live with roommates, most of these families would probably prefer their own place if one were available that they could afford.
While mortgage costs are slightly lower than last year nationwide, buying a home remains a challenge, especially for first-time buyers. A family earning the median household income could afford to buy a typical home in 2019; now they would need a $17,000 raise.
Construction boom slows deficit increase, but hasn’t stopped it
A surge in home building over the past five years has helped slow the growth of the housing deficit, but it has not reversed it. The housing deficit grew by 159,000 homes in 2023 — still an increase, but smaller than the jump of 257,000 in 2022.
The total number of homes in America grew by 1.4 million homes in 2023, up from 1.3 million added the year before. This includes new construction and subtracts units that were destroyed. While the total number of families also increased, fewer new families had to share a home compared to the previous year.
Fewer building restrictions and more density are needed
Builders completed 1.45 million units in 2023, and that momentum continued in 2024, with 1.63 million units completed; both are records since 2007. Builders responded more quickly to the pandemic-era surge in demand in areas with fewer building restrictions, Zillow Research found. This has helped ease price and rent growth in those metros and balance those markets faster than in places with more stringent regulations.
According to the Zillow news release, experts overwhelmingly agree that relaxing zoning laws to increase density is one of the most effective ways to make housing more affordable. These measures have broad support among homeowners and renters. Even adding a modest amount of density in the country’s largest markets could create millions of new homes.
Millennials share housing with nonrelatives more than any other generation, making up 38% of the families “doubling up” in 2023, followed by Gen Z at 29%, Gen X at 17%, and baby boomers and older generations at 16%.
Among the 50 largest major metros, New York, Los Angeles, Boston, San Francisco and Washington, DC, have the most significant housing deficits. Dallas and Houston ranked fourth and fifth, respectively, on the list, while San Antonio and Austin ranked 24th and 29th, respectively.
Edited from news release.
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