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America’s housing crisis has changed the tune of how people perceive affordable housing, according to a new survey.
The poll of 1,000 U.S. adults found more than half believe what they pay monthly for their home is more than it should be — the average person stating they spend 42% of their annual income on housing-related costs.
More than four in 10 (42%) parents polled in the survey said they either don’t believe or “aren’t sure” their children would be able to afford living in the same neighborhood they’re growing up in, due to climbing housing costs.
And many who said they pay more than they should blame the surrounding environment: 45% cite their neighborhood’s cost of living is higher than average, and another 33% noted that where they live is “notorious” for high housing costs.
All of this has led people to consider affordable housing as the possible solution.
Commissioned by Built (https://getbuilt.com) and conducted by Talker Research, the study found 63% view “affordable housing,” as a term positively.
In fact, more people viewed affordable housing positively than other forms of multi-family housing (83%, compared to townhomes (76%), apartments (70%) and mobile or pre-fabricated homes (64%)).
While people believe affordable housing is defined as being extremely low-cost (38%), synonymous with public housing (33%) or is exclusively for people living under the poverty line (23%), one in three Americans believe affordable housing is meant for anyone and everyone.
Others believe it’s intended for low-income people (44%), retirees and seniors (29%), veterans (22%) and first-time buyers/renters (19%).
Two-thirds said they’d be willing to live in or next to a home labeled “affordable housing” and another 53% would react positively if the house or building next to them was converted to affordable housing.
“Affordability challenges have gone mainstream,” said Chase Gilbert, CEO of Built. “More people are realizing affordable housing isn’t about charity — it’s about keeping the American dream within reach. Homeownership has always been a cornerstone of that dream, and for too many, that path is getting harder to find.”
The study also found 73% of Americans believe it’s important where they live to have plenty of available housing options, and a similar 74% believe all housing costs should be completely stabilized.
But 41% believe their local city doesn’t have enough housing to meet people’s needs.
Two in three (65%) said they’d likely support new housing being built in their neighborhood, and many believe it’s the responsibility of state governments (45%), local governments (44%) and the federal government (36%) to solve their city’s housing crisis.
When asked what housing-related policies they support, respondents were most in favor of converting surplus buildings like offices or warehouses into housing (45%), new developments should be required to include a certain amount of affordable units (42%) and that tax incentives should be given for neighborhoods that add more housing (34%).
“Policy decisions are definitely a part of the equation, but there’s more to it than that,” explained Gilbert. “Even if funding for new buildings is unlocked, it must flow into real projects for construction to begin. Capital that doesn’t move is no different than capital that was never there.”
Survey methodology
Talker Research surveyed 1,000 Americans, split equally by political alignment and split by age along national representation; the survey was commissioned by Built and administered and conducted online by Talker Research between July 24 and July 28, 2025.
Read more about our methodology.
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