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Texas has a housing affordability crisis. Here鈥檚 how state lawmakers may tackle it in 2025

Texas lawmakers are expected to debate how to curb rising home costs this year as the state continues to grow. Celina in North Texas is one of the fastest growing in the United States.
Shelby Tauber
/
The Texas Tribune
Texas lawmakers are expected to debate how to curb rising home costs this year as the state continues to grow. Celina in North Texas is one of the fastest growing in the United States.

DALLAS 鈥 Buying or renting a home in Texas used to be relatively cheap. Amid the state鈥檚 economic boom, its once-celebrated housing affordability has slipped.

Texas renters now spend more . As home prices have vastly outpaced incomes, homeownership has become a .

The state鈥檚 high housing costs have 鈥 who worry that Texas could lose its competitive edge with other states if it doesn鈥檛 get a handle on home prices and rents.

Here鈥檚 how Texas lawmakers may address housing costs when the Texas Legislature returns to Austin later this month 鈥 and how the debate could unfold.

Tackling the state鈥檚 housing shortage

Texas needs about 320,000 more homes than it has, . That deep shortage, housing advocates argue, drove up home prices and rents as the state鈥檚 economy boomed and competition increased for a limited supply of homes 鈥 even though Texas builds more homes than any other state.

State lawmakers must find ways to address that shortage, real estate experts and housing advocates warn, if they want to keep housing costs in check as the state grows.

鈥淥ur population is going to continue to increase in the next 30, 40 years,鈥 said Scott Norman, Texas Association of Builders CEO. 鈥淎ll of those people have to live somewhere.鈥

State lawmakers, backed by a coalition of outside groups that span the political spectrum, will likely look for ways to build more homes and put a dent in the shortage. One avenue they may go down: addressing local regulations that critics say prevent the state from adding enough homes to meet demand.

Cities restrict what kinds of homes can be built and where using rules called zoning regulations. Research shows those rules 鈥 and relaxing them can help cities add more homes and contain housing costs.

Texas lawmakers considered ways in 2023 to relax cities鈥 zoning rules, . Some are certain to make a comeback.

鈥淭he starting point is to make sure that we don't have obstacles like regulatory issues and local government that are making things worse,鈥 said state Sen. , a Houston-area Republican.

Lawmakers could make it easier for homeowners to build accessory dwelling units 鈥 also known as ADUs, granny flats, mother-in-law suites or casitas 鈥 in the backyard of single-family homes, considered a . Texas House lawmakers shot down a bill during the 2023 regular session that would have overridden any city bans on ADUs or regulations that researchers have found . Out of , most allowed ADUs but also had rules that hindered development.

State Sen. , a Mineola Republican, and state Rep. , an Angleton Republican, have that essentially revive the ADU proposal that died during the last regular session.

Lawmakers also may consider reducing how much land cities require single-family homes to be built on. Those rules, known as minimum lot-size requirements, drive up the final cost of a home by encouraging larger, pricier homes and leaving less land behind to build other homes. The most common minimum lot-size requirements among major Texas cities the Tribune last year is between 5,000 and 7,500 square feet.

Vasut鈥檚 bill would also  to 2,500 square feet 鈥 though it would only apply to cities with more than 85,000 residents or those that sit in counties with at least 1 million residents.

Whether the Legislature should force cities to reduce their lot-size rules across the board, including in existing neighborhoods, will likely be a major point of discussion. Advocates have said state lawmakers should at least encourage smaller lot sizes in new developments outside of existing neighborhoods.

Another idea would allow homes to be built in places that now only allow commercial businesses 鈥 a practice not allowed in Texas鈥 largest cities. And as Texas鈥 urban areas , housing advocates are also crafting ways to encourage developers to .

Both ideas hold some appeal for homeowners who may not welcome other types of housing in their neighborhoods 鈥 .

A fight over single-family neighborhoods, local control

A likely point of contention is whether statewide changes to boost the housing stock will apply to neighborhoods that only allow single-family homes 鈥 and mostly don鈥檛 allow other kinds of housing.

Texas cities tend to allow standalone single-family homes to be built nearly anywhere dwellings are allowed. But it鈥檚 usually 鈥 like townhomes, duplexes and smaller apartment buildings 鈥 in many of those places.

Proposals to allow more kinds of homes in existing single-family neighborhoods can draw stiff resistance from existing homeowners and neighborhood groups. Doing so, they often argue, will upset their neighborhood鈥檚 character.

A bill filed by state Rep. , a Lubbock Republican, seeks to from attempts by cities to allow more housing in those places. The bill is in direct response, Tepper said, to a measure passed by the Austin City Council in 2023 that . If passed, the bill would reverse the Austin reform and effectively give homeowners across the state greater authority to resist such changes.

鈥淭he problem we have is that many of these homeowners put their life savings into these homes with the expectation that they would be single-family neighborhoods,鈥 Tepper said. 鈥淚 think it's really an overreach of the cities to allow a major sea change to these neighborhoods that would completely change the face and the intent and the design of those neighborhoods.鈥

The idea baffled Austin City Council Member Jos茅 鈥淐hito鈥 Vela, a strong proponent of the three-unit reform. Austin鈥檚 high home prices and rents have been a core if not dominant theme in recent city elections 鈥 in which the capital city鈥檚 voters elected a supermajority of members to .

鈥淭here's just no reason for the Texas Legislature to step in and try to undo any of this,鈥 Vela said.

Proponents of changes to allow more housing hope the severity of the state鈥檚 housing crisis will push lawmakers to overcome 鈥渘ot-in-my-backyard鈥 sentiments and enact laws that will meaningfully address the state鈥檚 high housing costs.

鈥淚 don't think 1,000 NIMBYs showing up at a hearing [at the Texas Capitol] will get a sympathetic ear,鈥 said Jay Blazek Crossley, executive director of the nonprofit Farm & City, an urban planning advocacy group.

Another likely flashpoint: how much state lawmakers may override cities鈥 zoning regulations in order to allow more homes to be built.

Republican lawmakers over the last decade have aggressively sapped authority from the state鈥檚 bluer urban areas, culminating in a . Democrats in the Legislature have been on guard against any attempts to further erode cities鈥 authority 鈥 which propelled a majority of House Democrats to lead the charge to defeat the ADUs bill.

Texas Democrats have since shown openness to allowing zoning reform at some level 鈥 that calls for rolling back local zoning regulations that get in the way of adding more homes. But it鈥檚 unclear to what extent Democrats in the Legislature will embrace those ideas 鈥 and skepticism toward state intervention remains.

鈥淚f we're going to try to create a blanket law for the entire state, can we craft something that fits everyone's needs and fits everyone's community?鈥 said state Rep. , a Houston Democrat who leads the Texas House Democratic Caucus. 鈥淚 don't know the answer to that.鈥

One reform floated by advocates may please enough people on both sides of the local control argument: making it harder for neighbors to object to new housing.

An obscure state law gives landowners the power to make it harder for cities to move forward with proposed developments near them. If a proposed development requires a rezoning and 20% of neighboring landowners object, the city council needs a supermajority to advance the new building. A group of Austin homeowners aimed at allowing more homes to be built.

The law saw renewed attention this year when neighbors near a proposed affordable housing development in San Antonio 鈥 which then failed to get enough votes on the City Council to move forward.

That vote has fueled a new push to defang the law, creating unlikely alliances. The Texas Municipal League, an interest group that lobbies on behalf of cities, and the Texas Public Policy Foundation, the highly influential conservative think tank, are among those who want lawmakers to raise the petition threshold to 50% of neighboring landowners and reduce the required council vote to approve the project as a result of the petition to a simple majority.

What else is on the table?

Tweaking cities鈥 zoning rules isn鈥檛 a silver bullet for the state鈥檚 housing woes, housing advocates and experts caution. And lawmakers will likely look at other ways to reduce housing costs.

After enacting in 2023, tax-cut hawks in the Legislature have eyed the state鈥檚 projected $21.2 billion surplus to deliver a new round of cuts. The skyrocketing cost of homeowners鈥 insurance also will likely get lawmakers鈥 attention.

Lawmakers have also filed proposals aimed at speeding up cities鈥 building permitting processes so homes can hit the market more quickly.

Gov. and Lt. Gov. have indicated they鈥檙e concerned that so-called institutional investors 鈥 or investors and corporations that buy single-family homes to rent them out 鈥 may be crowding would-be homebuyers out of the state鈥檚 home-buying market.

Institutional homebuyers own a small slice of the country鈥檚 overall housing stock, estimates show, though their buying activity noticeably ticked up during the COVID-19 pandemic. Economists and housing experts have shown skepticism that laws curtailing investors鈥 home purchases would give first-time homebuyers a better shot at finding a home and improve housing affordability.

Texas has a dire shortage of housing affordable for the state鈥檚 poorest families 鈥 and the state spends little on housing for low-income families, housing advocates note. That鈥檚 unlikely to change in the GOP-dominated Legislature, they acknowledge, even with the state surplus.

Still, state Sen. and state Sen. , both Dallas Democrats, have intended to of housing specifically for poorer families. Another West bill would to identify land they own that could be suitable for affordable housing development.