- Congress passed the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act 358-32 in the House (after an 85-5 Senate vote), the most ambitious housing legislation since 1986 — Trump is expected to sign it as soon as Wednesday.
- The bill speeds federal environmental reviews, eases manufactured-home restrictions, bans large investors from buying homes, and ties cities’ federal funding to housing production — but contains zero new spending for affordable housing projects.
- Home builders are largely unimpressed: Congress cannot override the local zoning rules and building codes that actually determine what gets built, and elevated mortgage rates plus materials costs continue to crimp new construction.
- The bill’s passage follows the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit in 1986 as only the second major federal housing action in 40 years; Trump also expanded the LIHTC program through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
What Happened?
Congress passed the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act with overwhelming bipartisan support — 85-5 in the Senate and 358-32 in the House — representing the most sweeping federal housing legislation in four decades. Led by Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Tim Scott, the package bundles more than 50 provisions covering federal environmental review streamlining, manufactured home deregulation (potentially saving ~$10,000 per unit by eliminating the metal-frame chassis requirement), community development investment flexibility for banks, and a ban on large investors buying single-family homes. Trump is expected to sign it Wednesday. Notably, the bill contains no new spending — a deliberate choice to secure bipartisan backing in a divided Congress.
Why It Matters?
The housing affordability crisis is severe: existing-home prices are nearly five times median income, the worst ratio since at least the 1990s. Existing-home sales are mired in their worst slump in decades. Congress clearly wants to show voters it’s acting. But the bill’s structural limitation is fundamental: federal law cannot override the local zoning regulations and building codes that actually govern what gets built in America. Those rules — exclusionary zoning, setback requirements, parking mandates, lengthy permitting timelines — are what have suppressed housing supply for decades, and they sit entirely outside Congress’s jurisdiction. As one developer put it: “This is like ordering an appetizer. It’s not going to fill you up.”
What’s Next?
Housing economists will watch closely how cities and towns respond to the bill’s mix of carrots and sticks. Some states — Montana, California, New York — are already ahead of Congress with state-level zoning reforms, and advocates hope the federal signal spurs more action. But builders remain skeptical that implementation will be smooth given years of local bottlenecks. The real economic headwinds — elevated mortgage rates and higher materials costs — are untouched by this bill. The key near-term driver of housing supply will likely be whether the Fed cuts rates, which the bill cannot influence.
Source: The Wall Street Journal












