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Protect
Rental Choice

Renters are Counting on Us to Get This Right

A win for renters is within reach. Help us get it done. 

Build to Rent (BTR) homes meet many American families where they are. They play an important role in our housing ecosystem by expanding supply, lowering costs and broadening choice. 

 

House Republicans have circulated amended draft text that would remove the damaging language that would have required BTR investors to divest single-family homes within seven years, effectively ending BTR development in America. This is major progress. Now we need Congress to act.

Image by Nathan Dumlao

What is Build-to-Rent?

A BTR home is a newly constructed, purpose-built multifamily unit in a community that is simply built horizontally and takes the form of a house. Like garden-style or high-rise apartments, BTR units are also constructed, as well as underwritten and financed, specifically to be rented as part of a larger community. BTR communities are traditionally approved as one single entity, so each individual unit is not on its own lot, as in other single-family structures. BTR homes offer a larger space for households who may want to live in suburbs and want to rent and either do not want to or are not in a financial position to purchase a home. This can also include seniors who no longer want the maintenance and expense of homeownership but still want to live in a house.

 

BTR is a gateway to affordability and choice.

Image by CDC

Why the BTR Fix Matters

The 7-year disposition would have effectively shut down the BTR market. As BTR developments consist of multiple homes and require significant capital, firms engaged in this business benefit from economies of scale and often operate more than 350 units. These firms would not invest if they were generally forced to dispose of their investment after 7 years. 

 

This would have reduced housing production and supply—exactly the opposite of what needs to be done to address our housing affordability crisis. It is also noteworthy that, today, the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit is used to build housing in BTR communities.

Myths vs. Facts About Build-to-Rent Housing

The build-to-rent debate is missing the mark—and renters will pay the price.

Support Rental Housing Choice

House Republicans have circulated amended draft text that would remove damaging language in the Senate's provision that would have required Build-to-Rent investors to divest single-family homes within seven years, effectively ending BTR development in America. 

This is major progress and now we need Congress to act. Contact your representatives directly and urge them to pass the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act with the BTR fix in place. 

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