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Douglas Hoven on Housing in 2025: Why Policy and Zoning May Matter More Than Rates

Douglas Hoven

The U.S. housing market enters 2025 in a period of recalibration. After pandemic-era bidding wars, a sharp run-up in interest rates, and a slowdown that gripped much of 2023 and 2024, conditions are beginning to stabilize. Mortgage rates have eased modestly from their peak, but affordability remains a pressing challenge. Beneath the headline focus on rates, another dynamic is quietly reshaping the market: zoning reform.

Zoning Reform as a Pressure Valve

While borrowing costs dominate most housing conversations, zoning policy may prove the more decisive lever in 2025. Across multiple states, legislatures are loosening restrictions on accessory dwelling units (ADUs), duplexes, and other forms of incremental density.

“These changes are less about skyscrapers and more about basements, backyard cottages, and secondary units,” says Douglas Hoven, a REALTOR® and housing market analyst who closely tracks regulatory trends. “By permitting ADUs or lot splits in built-out neighborhoods, states are creating space for new supply without fundamentally altering community character. It’s a pressure valve that expands opportunity for both households and small-scale investors.”

For first-time buyers priced out of single-family homes, these shifts may create new points of entry. For existing homeowners, they open pathways to generate supplemental income or accommodate multi-generational living.

A Market That is Thawing, Not Booming

The easing of mortgage rates offers some relief, but Hoven cautions against over-optimism. “Payments are still a stretch for many households. The difference in 2025 is that alternative housing models are becoming more viable in more places.”

Regional disparities remain stark. Fast-growth Sun Belt markets are cooling as supply catches up, while Midwestern and Northeastern metros with steadier job bases and more modest price appreciation show resilience.

Implications for Market Participants

Hoven offers a pragmatic framework for navigating the year ahead:

– Buyers should focus on monthly payment sustainability and evaluate properties with ADUs or flexible layouts.
– Sellers need to price realistically, aligning with current absorption rates rather than clinging to pandemic-era peaks.
– Investors must approach markets with local zoning expertise, since reforms are uneven and implementation varies widely by state and municipality.

Beyond Economics

The stakes extend beyond yield and pricing. “Zoning reform is not just an economic story,” Hoven emphasizes. “It’s about whether teachers, nurses, and younger households can afford to live in the communities they serve. The civic and social implications are as important as the market ones.”

A Transition Year

As affordability, demographic shifts, and climate resilience all bear down on housing, 2025 is less about exuberance than adaptation. Analysts and policymakers are increasingly looking beyond rates and prices to structural levers like zoning.

“Real estate is always local,” Hoven notes. “But this year, zoning reform may be the most universal force shaping how Americans live.”