KEY POINTS
  • With more seniors than ever aging in place and choosing not to sell the family home, an estimated 1.6 million fewer properties are now available in a market already experiencing a critical shortage, according to Freddie Mac.
  • That is about the same number of new single-family and multifamily housing units built each year.
  • That stay-put trend is crashing into the rising demand for housing from the huge millennial generation: fewer homes for sale will continue to put upward pressure on already overheated home prices.
  • "There's a stalemate," said Jane Fairweather, a longtime real estate agent in Bethesda, Maryland. "We can't get enough housing for the couples who want to put their kids in good public school systems."

With more seniors than ever aging in place and choosing not to sell the family home, an estimated 1.6 million fewer properties are now available in a market already experiencing a critical shortage, according to Freddie Mac.

To put it in perspective, that is about the same number of new single-family and multifamily housing units built each year.