Real Estate Commentary
Editorial analysis of the U.S. housing market, the world's largest asset class and the primary wealth vehicle for most American families.
Real estate dipped slightly to $48.0T in Q3 2025 as home prices softened
The World's Largest Asset Class
Real estate is not merely the largest asset class in America (it is the largest asset class in the world. At $393.3 trillion globally, real estate exceeds the combined value of all stocks, bonds, and gold on the planet. U.S. household real estate assets alone stand at $48.04 trillion (FRED Q3 2025), with total housing market value estimated at $55.1 trillion by Zillow) representing roughly 14% of global real estate value.
For most American households, their home is their single largest asset. Unlike stocks or bonds, real estate serves a dual function: it is both an investment and a necessity. This duality creates unique dynamics in how wealth is built, preserved, and transferred across generations.
Mortgage-Free America
A remarkable and often overlooked fact: 40% of U.S. homes are mortgage-free. These homeowners (predominantly older Americans) hold their real estate as a fully owned asset with no monthly debt obligation. This segment represents an enormous concentration of housing wealth.
Meanwhile, among those who do carry mortgages, over half hold rates below 4%, locked in during the historically low rate environment of 2020–2021. This creates a powerful "lock-in effect": homeowners are reluctant to sell and give up their sub-4% mortgage, constraining supply and contributing to the affordability crisis.
The Aging Homebuyer
The median age of a homebuyer has risen to 49, up from just 31 in 1981. This four-decade shift reflects multiple structural changes: rising home prices, student loan burdens delaying purchases, tighter lending standards post-2008, and an economy that increasingly rewards those who already hold assets.
For younger Americans, homeownership (long considered the cornerstone of wealth building) is becoming a later-life achievement rather than an early-career milestone. The implications for intergenerational wealth are profound.
The Vacancy Paradox
The U.S. faces a housing deficit of approximately 2.4 million homes. At the same time, 15.1 million housing units sit vacant. This apparent contradiction reflects the geographic and economic mismatch at the heart of American housing: vacancy is concentrated in areas people are leaving, while shortage persists in areas people want to live.
Solving the housing supply crisis is not simply a matter of building more homes. It requires building the right homes in the right places, a challenge that intersects zoning policy, infrastructure investment, construction costs, and local politics.
Home Equity: A Quiet Reservoir
Owners' equity in real estate stands at $34.39 trillion (FRED Q3 2025), an enormous reservoir of potential economic activity. Home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) have seen growing origination volumes as homeowners seek to access this wealth without selling their homes or disrupting their favorable mortgage terms.
This equity represents both an opportunity and a risk. On one hand, it provides a financial cushion and source of capital for education, business investment, and retirement. On the other, increased borrowing against home equity can amplify household leverage and create vulnerability during housing downturns.
Looking Forward
Real estate's dominance in American wealth is not likely to diminish. With mortgage debt outstanding at $13.67 trillion and owners' equity at $34.39 trillion, American homeowners collectively hold roughly $2.52 in equity for every $1 of mortgage debt. As the Great Wealth Transfer moves $124 trillion across generations over the next 25 years, a significant portion will take the form of real property. Whether the next generation can maintain, grow, or be priced out of this asset class will be one of the defining economic questions of the coming decades.