Survey: More Gen Zers Than Millennials Will Own Homes

Even as Millennials age into their prime home-buying years, they’re still not keeping up with past generations, said Zillow Inc., Seattle. Furthermore, the analysis said, Gen Z could end up overwhelming Millennials in homeownership competition.

The Zillow/Pulsenonmics survey of 110 economists said the Millennial homeownership rate has already fallen from 66 percent to 60 percent. Meanwhile, the homeownership rate among this age group to increase by 2035, when the oldest Gen Z members will turn 40.

“The oldest Millennials, who will turn 40 in 2020, have lived through a turbulent decade of housing marked first by the initial recovery from the Great Recession, then the extraordinary home value growth of recent years,” Zillow said. “Due in large part to a variety of affordability challenges delaying all sorts of major life milestones, the homeownership rate among young people has fallen significantly over the decade. However, fifteen years from now, Gen Z will age into a more favorable market, according to a panel of economists and real estate experts.”

The quarterly survey noted the U.S. homeownership rate has climbed to 64.8%, matching highs from recent years after bottoming out at 62.9% in 2016, but a “far cry” from record highs near 70% last reached in 2004 when the housing bubble was in full swing.

“When home values were in their trough, younger would-be buyers were suffering from having graduated into a recession with record levels of student debt,” Zillow said. “Down payment assistance some of their parents may have otherwise offered by drawing from their home’s equity had been seriously eroded by crashing prices. Then as home values exploded over 2017 and 2018, this generation had trouble affording a down payment – especially buyers looking to get into their first home–and stayed in the rental market. Largely for these reasons, the homeownership rate for 35- to 44-year-olds has fallen from 66% to 60% in the past decade.”

Analysts surveyed by Zillow most often expect the homeownership rate among 35-44-year-olds to be somewhat higher in 2035–38% said so, while 31% said it will be somewhat lower than the current rate and 20% said it will be about the same. Only a small share of experts expects a dramatic swing in either direction–4% said the homeownership rate among this age group will be much lower 15 years from now, and 7% said it will be much higher.

Analysts tended to agree that the preference to own instead of rent and student loan burdens will be major factors in how the homeownership rate trends, but they disagree on the direction they will move. Of those who expect the homeownership rate to increase, more people preferring to own instead of rent and the home supply being less constrained were tied for the most-cited reason for the jump, closely followed by an expectation that student loan burdens will diminish. Those who predict the homeownership rate will decrease most often cited the opposite–a smaller share of households will want to own their home and student loan burdens will be greater.

“The uncertainty of housing experts is tied up in the fact that this past decade has been anything but normal,” said Zillow Director of Economic Research Skylar Olsen. “When experiencing unfamiliar dynamics, we must ask whether we will eventually revert to historic patterns or if pillars like preferences, affordability, policy and technology have shifted sufficiently to make this the new normal. Some of the reasons cited by experts as drivers of the future homeownership rate are big and exciting bets, including a belief by many that the home supply will be less constrained. Will more jurisdictions up-zone suburban neighborhoods to allow for smaller units and greater density? Will pre-fab construction take off? Will more big companies relocate headquarters or open satellites in more affordable metros? Time will ultimately have to tell. But in the meantime, it’s fun to speculate.”

Analysts surveyed project U.S. home prices to increase by an average of 2.8% during 2020, a slightly more optimistic outlook than the 2.5% rate the panel projected for 2020 both last quarter and one year ago, but lower than the 3.6% growth expected for 2019.

Analysts’ predictions for nationwide home prices in 2020 range from 7.4% growth to 3.0% contraction, and increased divergence in longer-run expectations also confirms that market conditions remain far from settled. “Our most optimistic group of experts expects 31.2% cumulative home value appreciation through 2024, while our most pessimistic group expects a cumulative gain of just 7.8% over the same period,” said Pulsenomics Director Terry Loebs. “In dollar terms, the difference between these equally plausible scenarios is almost $7 trillion in aggregate home equity value. We’ve been conducting this survey for more than 10 years, and this barometer of housing market malaise is now at a record-high level.”