H.R. 6644
The Housing Crisis in Brief
America faces a housing affordability crisis decades in the making. A shortage exceeding four million homes has pushed prices beyond the reach of millions of families, driven by restrictive zoning, rising construction costs, regulatory delays, and financing barriers.
THE HOUSING CRISIS IN BRIEF
For many Americans, rental housing serves as a critical bridge while they prepare to tackle all of the costs associated with owning a home.
It provides stability, flexibility, and time to save for a down payment. But even this bridge is under strain as over 40% of renters already spend more than 30% of their income on housing.
In short:
Supply is too low
Costs are too high
The pipeline from renting to owning
is under serious strain.
↓
The big issue?
The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act would
make it all worse.
-
While the broader legislation is framed as a solution to affordability, the bill, as currently written, threatens to do the exact opposite. Specifically, Section 901 in the Senate bill (“Homes Are for People, Not Corporations”), will fundamentally restrict market participation rather than expand access to housing.
By targeting a politically appealing but ineffective solution, the bill and its policies, like Section 901, divert attention from what would actually improve affordability: building more homes and removing barriers to supply.
-
Targets the Wrong Problem
Institutional investors are not the primary driver of the housing crisis. They account for roughly 1% of home purchases and a small fraction of total housing stock. Focusing on them distracts from the real issue: a persistent lack of supply.
-
Discourages Investment in Housing
By introducing new constraints and uncertainty, the bill risks reducing investment from builders, developers, and housing providers. Less investment means fewer homes are built.
-
Reduces Rental Housing Availability
Institutional investment helps expand single-family rental supply. Limiting it reduces options for families who rely on renting for flexibility and stability.
-
Could Drive Housing Costs Higher
Reducing housing supply increases competition for available homes, putting upward pressure on rents and prices for consumers.
-
Creates Market Instability
Institutional capital has historically helped stabilize housing markets, particularly during downturns.
Removing that capital introduces risk by:
Reducing liquidity
Limiting the market’s ability to absorb shocks
Increasing volatility during future downturns
What This Means for American Families
By placing new pressures on housing availability without increasing supply, H.R. 6644 risks:
Fewer housing options for renters and buyers
Higher costs due to continued supply shortages
Reduced pathways to homeownership
At a time when affordability is already strained, policies that limit access to housing can deepen the challenges families face.
THE PATH FORWARD
The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, including Section 901, looks good on paper but will only make America’s housing woes WORSE!
As the bill is currently written, lawmakers must vote NO on this well-intended but misguided legislation.
Instead, our elected officials should address the housing affordability crisis with policies that focus on expanding supply and improving access.
This includes:
Encouraging new housing development across all housing types
Reducing regulatory and permitting barriers that delay construction
Supporting investments that increase housing availability
Preserving access to rental housing as a pathway to homeownership
Adopting a smarter definition of “banned purchase” that gives individual buyers a first look in the market while protecting home values, preserving build-to-rent supply, and reducing regulatory risk from future administrations
Federal policy should focus on removing obstacles, not introducing new constraints that limit America’s housing.
↓
WHAT THE EXPERTS ARE SAYING
Everyone from the editorial boards of the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal to America’s leading think tanks warn of the dangers of this proposal.
-

A Constitutional Triple Threat, from the 43rd Solicitor General of the United States
“The Act’s purchase prohibition and forced-sale provision are a triple threat to the existing constitutional order. The Act takes private property without providing just compensation or furthering an adequate public purpose; it discriminates as to fundamental incidents of property ownership; and it upends the traditional federal-state balance and intrudes deeply into an area of traditional state and local control. The prudent course is for Congress to excise those provisions from the Act before a court is forced to declare them unconstitutional.” - Paul D. Clement, 43rd Solicitor General of the United States
Read the full analysis: The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act: A Triple Threat to the Constitution – Clement & Murphy, PLLC
-

A More Effective and Efficient Way, CNBC Make IT
“Institutional investors are just not the main market movers. It's mainly a supply issue. If you actually want to bring housing costs down, you have to deal with the barriers that make it harder and more expensive to build. That includes things like tariffs that raise construction costs and immigration restrictions that limit the construction workforce.” - Scott Lincicome, VP of General Economics, Cato Institute
Read the full story: Trump wants to ban institutional investors in housing, but would it lower costs? Experts are skeptical – CNBC Make It
-

The Path to Real Affordable Housing, CBS News
“Constraining large investors' ability to purchase homes is not going to have much of an impact — if any — on making homes more affordable. A more effective proposal would reduce land costs, allow homes to be built on smaller parcels, and lower construction costs. A ban could also have unintended consequences by discouraging such players from selling their existing properties.” - Edward Pinto, Co-Director, AEI Housing Center, American Enterprise Institute
Read the full story: Trump renews his call to ban institutional homebuyers as Democrats offer a competing crackdown – CBS News
-

The Shortcomings of Federal Meddling in Local Markets, Forbes
“Among the bill’s egregious shortcomings are provisions that vastly extend Washington’s powers in local housing markets. Under the guise of promoting “best local government practices,” the federal government, when someday controlled by Democrats, could impose rent controls and a moratorium on evictions. There’s also a grant program to encourage dense development.” – Steve Forbes, Chairman and Editor-in-Chief of Forbes Media.
Read the full story: https://www.forbes.com/sites/steveforbes/2026/03/17/tim-scott-and-elizabeth-warrens-housing-bill-shouldnt-pass-the-house/?ctpv=searchpage
-

Are Institutional Owners the Villain? CNN Business
“This is not going to move the needle as far as affordability goes. Although these large institutional landlords are certainly a villain in the headlines, they're a red herring when it comes to the actual shortages and the affordability issues that we've been seeing in the US for the last decade-plus.” - Jake Krimmel, Senior Economist, Realtor.com
Read the full story: Trump’s housing plan casts Wall Street as the villain. He’s got the wrong guy - CNN Business