Congress just passed the most significant housing legislation in more than three decades. For Austin and Texas homebuyers — long squeezed by tight supply and one of the highest rates of institutional investor activity in the nation — the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act could reshape who gets to compete for a single-family home. Here's what's in the bill, where it stands, and what it could mean for the local market.
On June 22, 2026, the U.S. Senate passed the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act by a vote of 85-5. The next day, the House followed with a 358-32 vote. Those lopsided bipartisan margins are rare in today's Congress, and they signal just how urgent housing affordability has become as a national priority. The last time lawmakers passed a housing package of this scale was 1990.
As of late June 2026, the bill has cleared both chambers but has not been signed by the president. A planned signing ceremony was canceled, with the White House tying its support to separate election legislation. Under the Constitution, a bill presented to the president can still become law automatically if he does not sign or veto it within the allotted window while Congress remains in session. In short: the policy is real and close, but its final status is still in motion. Everything below describes what would take effect if it becomes law.
The bill is sprawling — it folds in provisions from more than 60 separate pieces of legislation across 12 titles. But two themes matter most for everyday Austin buyers: dramatically expanding housing supply, and curbing the ability of large institutional investors to buy up single-family homes that families want to live in.
The supply problem is the root of Austin's affordability squeeze. Since the 2008 financial crisis, homebuilding nationally has lagged demand, and Austin felt that acutely during the pandemic-era boom when prices spiked as remote workers and tech employees flooded the city. The bill attacks supply from several angles at once.
One section of the bill — Title 10, informally "Homes Are for People, Not Corporations" — restricts large institutional investors that own at least 350 single-family homes from buying additional existing single-family homes, while preserving an exemption for build-to-rent construction.
This provision is written for markets exactly like Texas. The state has consistently ranked at or near the top nationally for institutional purchases of single-family homes.
In the Dallas-Fort Worth area, some counties have seen close to half of available properties purchased by investors in peak periods. A federal study found that between 2018 and 2024, Dallas added at least 16,000 investor-owned homes — a 177% increase. That concentration is precisely the dynamic the bill's authors say they want to interrupt.
Institutional investors don't own a large percentage of all the single-family homes in the United States, but it's concentrated in certain communities throughout the country, and that's the concern.
Dennis Shea, Bipartisan Policy CenterIt's worth keeping perspective: nationally, large institutional investors own only a low single-digit percentage of all single-family homes. The impact is real but localized — and Texas metros are among the most affected localities. That's why a national policy can land harder here than the headline numbers suggest.
Austin's situation is more nuanced than Dallas or Houston. By early 2026, one snapshot placed the Austin metro's institutional investor share of purchases at roughly 6.6% — lower than several other major Texas metros. Austin has also been normalizing on its own: inventory has improved, price growth has moderated, and the median single-family home now sits in the range of roughly $525,000 to $565,000, with buyers holding more negotiating power than they've had in years.
So the bill wouldn't trigger a dramatic shift in Austin overnight. Instead, the likely effects are subtler and, for owner-occupant buyers, generally favorable:
The bill specifically exempts institutional investors building new single-family homes for the rental market. Build-to-rent communities have been a major driver of institutional capital in Austin's suburbs. The practical takeaway: investor money isn't being pushed out of Texas real estate — it's being redirected away from competing with families for existing homes and toward adding new rental inventory. For owner-occupant buyers chasing resale homes, that redirection is the point.
Affordability is the throughline. National data shows a family now needs an income of roughly $117,000 to afford a typical home on the market — nearly $30,000 more than most U.S. households earn. The ROAD to Housing Act is designed to chip away at that gap on the supply side rather than simply expanding buyer purchasing power, which can push prices higher without adding inventory.
For Austin, where the market is already shifting toward equilibrium, a federal tailwind on supply and a check on investor concentration could accelerate the move toward a healthier, more buyer-friendly market — particularly for first-time and move-up buyers in the suburbs.
Not as of late June 2026. It passed both the Senate (85-5) and House (358-32), but it has not been signed. A signing ceremony was canceled amid a dispute over unrelated election legislation. It could still become law through presidential signature or, under certain conditions, without one (see below).
Under the U.S. Constitution, there are three paths after a bill passes both chambers of Congress and is sent to the president:
There is one important exception. If Congress adjourns during that 10-day window and the president has not signed, the bill does not become law — this is called a "pocket veto." So whether inaction results in a new law or a dead bill depends entirely on whether Congress is still in session. Given the overwhelming bipartisan margins this bill received, a veto override would also be within reach if it came to that.
It would restrict investors owning 350 or more single-family homes from purchasing additional existing single-family homes, while still allowing them to build new homes for rent. Because Texas has one of the highest concentrations of institutional ownership in the country, the provision is especially relevant here — though Austin's investor share is lower than Dallas or Houston.
Not directly or immediately. Reduced investor competition tends to improve negotiating conditions for buyers rather than cause prices to fall. Price drops typically require supply to exceed demand. The more likely near-term effect is fewer bidding wars and more buyer leverage in investor-heavy submarkets.
It streamlines federal environmental reviews, funds zoning and permitting reform through a competitive Innovation Fund, supports pre-approved home designs and accessory dwelling units, encourages converting vacant commercial buildings into housing, and reduces regulatory barriers on manufactured homes.
National policy shifts like this one ripple into local inventory, negotiation, and timing in ways that vary block by block across the Austin metro. The Adam Timothy Group tracks these dynamics closely so you can make decisions based on your situation — not headlines. Let's talk through what it means for your move.
Book a 30-Minute ConsultationExplore more local insight in our Austin neighborhood guides or browse current featured properties across the metro.
This article is for general informational purposes and reflects legislation that, as of publication, had passed Congress but was not yet signed into law. It is not legal or financial advice. Bill provisions and status may change.
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