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Business Environment Profiles - United States

Homeownership rate

Published: 09 September 2025

Key Metrics

Homeownership rate

Total (2025)

65 %

Annualized Growth 2020-25

-0.5 %

Definition of Homeownership rate

The homeownership rate represents the proportion of households that own the home in which they live. Data is sourced from the US Census Bureau.

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Recent Trends – Homeownership rate

The homeownership rate is projected to decline to 65.1% in 2025, down from 65.6% the previous year. This continued erosion reflects persistent affordability challenges as elevated mortgage rates and housing prices constrain homebuying accessibility for many American households. First-time homebuyer participation remains particularly weak, as younger demographics face the dual burden of student loan debt and record-high home prices relative to median incomes. Construction costs and land scarcity continue limiting new housing supply in high-demand markets, exacerbating affordability pressures across metropolitan areas. Credit tightening by mortgage lenders has also reduced loan accessibility, particularly affecting borrowers with marginal credit profiles or limited down payment resources. Regional variations remain significant, with affordable markets in the Midwest and South maintaining higher ownership rates while coastal metropolitan areas experience more pronounced declines due to extreme price appreciation over recent decades.

Homeownership rates have exhibited considerable volatility over the past five years, reflecting the complex interplay of pandemic-related disruptions, monetary policy changes, and structural housing market challenges. The period began with an exceptionalsurge to 66.6% in 2020, up from 64.6% in the previous year, representing the largest single-year increase since the housing boom of the early 2000s. This dramatic expansion reflected unique pandemic-era conditions including record-low mortgage rates, remote work flexibility enabling geographic relocation, and substantial government stimulus programs that enhanced household savings and purchasing power.

However, this pandemic-driven homeownership surge proved unsustainable, with rates declining steadily from the 2020 peak through subsequent years. The homeownership rate fell to 65.5% in 2021, representing a significant contraction as mortgage rates began rising and housing inventory shortages intensified competition among buyers. Modest recovery attempts occurred in 2022 and 2023, with rates reaching 65.8% and 65.9% respectively, though these gains reflected temporary market adjustments rather than fundamental improvements in housing accessibility.

The trajectory resumed its downward path in 2024, declining to 65.6%, and this erosion has accelerated into 2025. The fundamental drivers of this decline include mortgage rate increases from near-zero pandemic levels to elevated current ranges, which have dramatically reduced purchasing power for prospective homebuyers. Housing price appreciation has significantly outpaced income growth across most markets, creating affordability gaps that exclude increasing numbers of households from homeownership opportunities.

Demographic factors have also influenced ownership trends during this period, with millennials reaching prime homebuying age while facing unprecedented affordability constraints. Student loan burdens, delayed household formation patterns, and preference shifts toward urban rental living have reduced traditional homeownership demand among younger demographics. Additionally, institutional investor participation in single-family housing markets has increased competition for available properties, further constraining access for individual homebuyers. Construction industry challenges including labor shortages, material cost inflation, and regulatory constraints have limited new housing production needed to meet underlying demand, perpetuating supply-demand imbalances that support elevated prices and reduced ownership accessibility.

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5-Year Outlook – Homeownership rate

The homeownership rate is expected to decline further to 64.9% in 2026, as affordability constrai...

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