Trump's Proposed Ban on Institutional Investors Owning Single-Family Homes Would Make No One Better Off
While owning a very small percentage of single-family homes, large investors provide renters with more options and increase home construction rates.
In the latest development in horseshoe theory, President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that his administration would ban large institutional investors from owning single-family homes.
"People live in homes, not corporations," said Trump in a Truth Social post. He promised his administration would unilaterally ban large investors from buying homes and ask Congress to codify the restriction.
????President Trump will immediately take steps to ban big institutional investors from buying more single family homes and he will be calling on Congress to codify it. pic.twitter.com/Rq77lfs8Vi
— James Blair (@JamesBlairUSA) January 7, 2026
The notion that the president could enact such a ban on his own authority seems dubious in the extreme. Still, the proposal is popular with wings of both the Republican and Democratic parties, and Trump is likely to find several allies in Congress who would support passing such a law.
Large institutional investors have gone from buying effectively zero single-family homes before the Great Recession to being responsible for a small but non-negligible percentage of home purchasers in recent years.
As investors' activity has grown, so too have complaints from politicians of both parties that they are outbidding would-be owner-occupier families, who are then condemned to a life of perpetual renting.
Democrats in Congress have repeatedly introduced legislation that would levy prohibitively high excise taxes on single-family homes owned in excess of 100 by investors.
Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott and New York Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul have both criticized institutional home investors. One of the few things that J.D. Vance and Tim Walz were able to agree on in the 2024 vice presidential debate was the need to stop Wall Street from buying single-family homes.
Mostly Democratic state legislators from California to Nebraska have proposed complete bans on single-family home purchases by large investors and out-of-state corporations, although none of the most far-reaching proposals have become law.
While Trump offered no details on his proposed ban, these proposals provide hints at what a federal crackdown might look like in practice.
Whatever the specifics, any real federal effort to squeeze institutional investors out of the single-family housing market is bound to make shelter more expensive and less plentiful.
For all the political attention paid to larger institutional investors, they make up a small percentage of home purchasers and own an even smaller share of the country's single-family homes.
According to The Wall Street Journal's parsing of the data, investors were responsible for about 25 percent of single-family home purchases in the first quarter of 2024. That is up from 20 percent in 2016, and the increase is almost totally driven by larger investors who own upward of 100 homes.
Over the past few years, companies owning 1,000 or more homes have accounted for only about 1 percent of all single-family purchases, but in 2024, their purchases appear to have dropped to effectively zero.
Purchases by entities that own more than 10 homes have ranged from 2 percent to 6 percent in recent years. That means that the 20 percent or so of homes being bought by investors are predominantly being sold to smaller landlords who own 10 or fewer homes.
And the bulk of home sales (some 75–80 percent) continue to be owner-occupiers.
These numbers look even more lopsided when one considers the ownership statistics on the overall stock of housing.
The Census Bureau estimates that in 2023 there were some 99 million single-family homes in the United States, of which between 14 million and 15 million were rental units.
Meanwhile, the Urban Institute found that institutional investors, defined as owning 100 or more homes, owned 574,000 single-family rentals in 2022. Based on these numbers, institutional investors own about 3 percent of single-family rentals and .5 percent of all single-family homes.
They've hardly cornered the market. Additionally, the overall number of single-family rentals hit a peak in the immediate aftermath of the Great Recession and has been in steady decline since.
Commercial real estate firm CBRE reported in an October 2024 research brief that single-family rental inventory had declined by 1.7 million units since 2016. Contrary to the dominant political narrative, owner-occupying homeowners are outbidding investors and landlords for more and more of the country's homes each year.
This is to be expected, says Kevin Erdmann, an affiliated scholar at George Mason University's Mercatus Center.
"A homeowner is the renter's favorite landlord and the landlord's favorite renter, and they always agree with everything they want to do on the property," he says, meaning that when individuals own their own homes, they reduce many of the conflicts, risks, and inefficiencies inherent in the landlord-tenant relationship.
An owner-occupier doesn't need to argue with a landlord about replacing an old appliance. They don't need to worry about a tenant not paying rent, damaging the property, or moving and leaving them with a vacancy to fill.
As such, owner-occupiers are willing to pay a higher purchase price for a home. Landlords who do have to absorb all the risks and costs of their business demand a higher offsetting yield from owning a home, says Erdmann, which means demanding a lower purchase price.
This is why owner-occupiers have dominated the market for single-family home purchases for decades, and continue to do so. The post-Great Recession period, when credit was constrained and prices had collapsed, was an extreme exception to the rule.
To the degree investors did pile into the single-family market after the Great Recession, the results are positive.
Research finds that their post-Recession single-family investments did reduce the homeownership rate, but also helped to stabilize the housing market, improve housing quality, increase construction employment, and decrease housing vacancy.
Likewise, research on the Dutch city of Rotterdam's ban on buy-to-rent arrangements in certain neighborhoods found that affected neighborhoods had higher homeownership rates, but also higher housing costs and fewer renters.
Another 2022 study found that institutional investment in real estate increases neighborhood diversity by opening up more affordable rental housing options. That study did find that these investors were raising home prices overall.
Banning institutional investors from the single-family market would reduce the accessibility they provide to renters who can't qualify for mortgages. It would also help to crush a growing source of new housing supply: build-to-rent developments.
While the stock of single-family rentals has been declining for years, new developments of single-family subdivisions purpose-built as rentals and financed by large institutional investors have been increasing precipitously.
Estimates vary, but the U.S. has gone from building a few thousand build-to-rent homes each year to around 30,000 as of 2023. CBRE, the commercial real estate firm, estimates that they are as high as 5 percent of new single-family home construction.
And as new apartment construction in the United States has risen considerably in recent years, annual production rates are roughly at the limit of what's allowed by existing zoning codes, says Erdmann. New single-family homes built to sell are also near the limits created by federal restrictions on mortgage credit, he argues.
The only growth in home production to be squeezed is from expanding build-to-rent construction. While politicians are interpreting this activity as homes taken from homeowners, they are, in fact new supply that would go away under any ban on institutional investors.
Build-to-rent development "is no different from a local developer coming in and saying 'there's this chunk of land. I'm going to cut in this little subdivision.' Why would we say if you're a company, you can't do it?" says Norbert Michael of the Cato Institute. "That doesn't get more supply, it gets us less supply."
Trump has a habit of tweeting out bold policy proposals that end up going nowhere. The 50-year mortgage thus far appears to be one of them. Perhaps a ban on institutional investor-owned housing will be too.
Given the bipartisan agitation against housing investors, as well as the general rise in "Republican socialism", it would seem foolish to discount the idea that some sort of crackdown could come to pass.
If it does, the U.S. housing market will continue to be dominated by single-family homes being built for and bought by owner-occupiers, and developer built rental apartment buildings.
But renters looking for a single-family home in which to live will have fewer options, and the U.S. homebuilding rate will be pushed down by regulation once again.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please to post comments
Will it do any good? Not really.
Deporting people en masse will do so.
But Trump has to show he is doing "something". Democrats are claiming he is not doing anything, as opposed to them who are actively seeking to make the problem dramatically worse.
In addition to the illegals, we should also deport radical Marxist democrats. That will also help. California could become a livable place again.
For years, this housing problem was in the top 5 being talked about. And now doing something about it isn’t going to help?
I'm so surprised to see Britches coming down on the side of "you will own nothing and you will be happy"
It's insane - and totally predictable - that Reason makes a case that institutional investors have done anything positive re single family housing. Why its almost like housing was completely unaffordable before the Wall St bailouts - and those bailouts have rendered housing totally affordable.
What a fucking piece of shit Reason 'economics' is. Bunch of 10 cent whores.
It is stunning that this author can write an article about institutional investors buying single family without mentioning that they receive tax advantages that owner-occupiers do not - meaning government DISTORTIONS.
But hey - govt distortions are totally ok as long as the author is a lazy piece of shit and Wall St is the beneficiary.
Owner occupiers get to write off the entire mortgage interest. No one in this article is defending any tax distortions one way or the other.
Supporting the free market means neither being pro-investor nor pro-owner-occupier. It's simply pro-free market. Trumps proposal will make the market for housing significantly less free, and it should not surprise the readers and commentors of a "free minds and free markets" magazine that the writers are thus against it.
If you think that the author's failure to bring up each and every of the thousands of other ways that the market could be improved somehow disqualifies their opinion, then I'm afraid you will never be satisfied on the internet. You are going to need books.
Doesn't realize very few non blue state owners write off interest due to increases in personal deductions lol.
He really puts the ‘tard’ in Rothtard.
8% of homeowners deduct interest now. And I was talking more about the tax breaks for REIT's, property tax rates for residential instead of commercial zones, the ability of Wall St to get free money and pass their losses on to govt, and the slew of other distortions.
While I disagree with the government getting involved, there is an issue here. Florida had all single family homes recieve a cash offer given on 30% of marketed houses. This is an issue.
Now the proper response is get government out of the way of regulations to allow more home building. This will increase supply.
One of the rare times I can agree with Jesse on something.
I also don't think it's the best positive market force to have hedge funds buying single-family homes, but I'm not sure what the best way is to go about preventing them from doing so.
Maybe it is to just increase the supply so much by lowering regulations that it's not as lucrative, as you suggest.
Another 2022 study found that institutional investment in real estate increases neighborhood diversity by opening up more affordable rental housing options. That study did find that these investors were raising home prices overall.
*spit-take*
Yeah, how is this good? "Raising diversity" is neutral at best. Raising prices is bad.
Home ownership is white supremacy. White people need to embrace the warmth of socialism.
Trust me bro, they have.
Dumb idea.
How so?
As a general rule, the government, particularly the federal government, shouldn't be dictating who gets to own which single-family houses. There are probably specific exceptions to be made for very specific cases, such as people owning houses right next to a nuclear missile or something, but as a general rule, it's a bad idea. What do you think?
That’s better
Socialism is good when Trump does it.
Poor sarc.
Which commenter said this?
Poor stupid sarcbot.
Did he have too much or too little liquor when he wrote that?
I've got a 1200 word comment in the chamber to describe the fundamental differences between populist right (gop socialism) and populist left (socialism).
Stay tuned.
It is pretty impressive that Reason can be so horribly wrong so consistently.
I've been a regular reader and contributor here for 20+ years, and if I stop in once a week now, that's often. Pity.
I can't afford the auto I'd really like to buy. So why do we tolerate corporations that make more than 100 cars and sell them for prices above what a lot of us want to pay? Economy of scale perhaps? Wouldn't that apply, too, to an owner of 100s of housing units?
"Large institutional investors have gone from buying effectively zero single-family homes before the Great Recession to being responsible for a small but non-negligible percentage of home purchasers in recent years."
Sure, BlackRock or whoever isn't buying singlewides to rent to Hispanic laborers and their families in rural farm country. The news today reported institutional investors own 25% of the rental homes down here in the ATL
They also are outbidding private buyers by large margins. This prices people out of owning the home and being pushed into renting. Instead of gaining equity on a home people feed the profits of a giant corporation. Own nothing and be happy. Socialism through capitalistic means.
We just sold my deceased mother in law's house. Received a few offers from individual buyers, but then received a cash offer from an investment company that was $50k higher. I thank them for paying for my daughter's wedding.
"Own nothing and be happy"... I see at least some commentators keep their memory proteins active.
Effectively, the Black Rock (let's remind everyone that at the time of initiation, Black Rock was led by the ex economic adviser of Obama) and friends of Obama/Wall Street and attempted a new model on social integration, of social engineering, and apparently it hit the wall.
One of the critical constraining factor is/was the presence of dispersed renting units in traditionally owner-occupied single family subdivisions.
Rapidly, owners found out that owner "commitment" is a key factor not only in terms of economic perspective but in terms of designing the social profile of a neighborhood.
Housing Renters and single family Owners are a different breed, and this experience showed it clearly.
Naturally, they are also plenty of other factors at play which are mostly economic.
As for Trump's big show, Trump often knows his big statements won't turn into laws of Congress, but he is signaling to the interested, giving guidance to his believers, who will act in accordance.
"Uncle Slayton's got his Texan pride
Back in the thickets with his Asian bride
He's cut that corner pasture into acre lots
He sells 'em owner-financed strictly to them
That's got no kind of credit 'cause he knows they're slackers
And they'll miss that payment, then he takes it back"
Good business model
This is just playing with the strings of the actual curse in Gov-Ran Mortgage programs (i.e. [Na]tional So[zi]al[ism]).
all homes have exploded in price after the covid currency devaluation
private equity typically plays in the lower-priced, entry level home market
they do keep homes from falling into disrepair, which benefits property values of lower income people
they also purchase homes from lower income people
which benefits property values of lower income people
Which harms the property acquisition prospects of lower income people who don't already own property.
Constitutional basis?
Whatever the specifics, any real federal effort to squeeze institutional investors out of the single-family housing market is bound to make shelter more expensive and less plentiful.
Huh? How will preventing corporate investors from decreasing the supply of housing make housing more expensive? Does not follow. I truly hope Trump can get this accomplished and do it with Congress. I've always wondered how cities can rationalize allowing people to run commercial businesses (STR) in residential zoned areas. Isn't the purpose of residential zoning to house residents?
Isn't the purpose of residential zoning to house residents?
Paying rent doesn’t change that.
But running a house like a hotel does.
You're right. Here's the housing completions for single family units from 1968 to now
It's very obvious that institutional ownership did nothing to increase construction of those units for the entire free money period. Nothing to increase supply. If anything it ensured that the construction of new single family homes were strangled for a decade and are now back to where we were in the 1980's. Only increased prices. As is the most obvious thing that was predictable the moment this stuff started happening.
With the exception of really, really stupid people, (i.e the author), smart people are painfully aware of how cornering the market will drive up prices. And intelligent people, (again, not the author), can see how this can affect "affordability" in the run up to the mid-terms.
"Institutional investors", aka Democrats, don't give a shlt that they would be harming young folks trying to buy a house.
And once Democrats have power, these "institutional investors" will dump their holdings, driving prices down and creating another 2008-like fiasco.
Rent vs buy. Here or somewhere else?
That conundrum has been around for the entire history of western civilization.
"who are then condemned to a life of perpetual renting". No, no they're not. That's just realtor talk to try and get you to buy.