This suggests that homeowners were able to save more after paying for housing costs than renters were.
Less savings can also lead to differences in financial wealth, differences that also increased during the pandemic. Between 2019 and 2022, homeowners’ median financial wealth increased from $60,000 to $85,000, while the overall median financial wealth for renters remained almost the same (around $960). Since 1989, renters’ median financial wealth has ranged from $400 to $1,200, suggesting that most renters do not actively invest in financial markets.
Potentially further fueling the trend, homeowners have the option to refinance and lower their housing costs when interest rates decline. The refinance volume surged during 2020 and 2021 when the mortgage rate hovered around 3 percent, giving homeowners another chance to decrease monthly housing expenses and invest their savings that renters don’t have.
More housing supply is needed to mitigate the growing wealth gap
Without increasing both the owner-occupied and rental housing supply, the growing wealth disparities between homeowners and renters are likely to persist.
A recent Redfin survey finds that more than a third of young homebuyers plan to use a cash gift from family to fund down payments, suggesting that intergenerational wealth may fuel gaps among the next cohort of homebuyers. In other words, if the housing supply fails to keep up with demand, households with financial resources will continue to build wealth with almost no effort. Meanwhile, households with limited ability to build wealth—who are most likely to be households with lower incomes and households of color—will remain renters and face higher housing costs that further restrain their ability to save for future homeownership.
To solve this problem, we need a comprehensive approach to increase supply, while providing financial support for renters to enhance access to homeownership
To increase affordable housing, more states could end statewide single-family zoning. Cities could also eliminate single-family zoning districts and legalize infill housing (e.g., two-to-four-unit buildings and accessory dwelling units) in single-family lots.
Though zoning and land-use regulations are local policies, the federal government can encourage these changes. The Biden administration recently proposed rewarding grants to local and state governments that work to reduce or eliminate zoning barriers to building housing. The federal government can also improve financing access and encourage jurisdictions to ease zoning restrictions for manufactured homes, which could add a meaningful supply of affordable housing.
But increasing the housing supply will take time. In the interim, the federal government can reduce rental cost burdens, especially for renters with low incomes, by expanding housing choice vouchers, to increase savings for down payments or financial investments. It can also provide targeted down payment assistance for first-generation homebuyers, who lack generational wealth.
Improving the financial security of renting and expanding homeownership opportunities—while boosting housing supply—will help realize more equitable futures for all.