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Mixed-density housing keeps expanding as affordability reaches a breaking point

Housing affordability – and its impact on Americans’ quality of life – is becoming a market- and generation-defining issue. Higher interest rates, constrained inventory, rising land costs, and slower wage growth have combined to push homeownership further out of reach for many, especially first-time buyers, middle-income households, and those seeking new construction.

At the same time, the industry is increasingly focused on a related but distinct challenge: housing attainability. While affordability measures whether a buyer can afford a home at today’s prices and interest rates, attainability reflects whether the market offers a realistic path to ownership at all – through available housing types, entry-level price points, and the way communities are designed.

As affordability remains constrained by broader economic forces, attainability is becoming a more practical lever for builders, planners, and municipalities. By expanding the range of housing options within a single community, mixed-density development is emerging as a key strategy to preserve access to homeownership. In 2026, this approach is expected to play a much larger role in how housing is delivered.

Planning density for quality of life

Housing attainability cannot be solved through pricing strategies alone. Land constraints, zoning limitations, and outdated density assumptions inflate costs long before construction begins.

Decades of large-lot, single-use zoning have unintentionally locked in inefficiencies that limit supply and drive prices higher. As affordability tightens, municipalities and developers are increasingly recognizing that smarter land use must be part of the solution.

Mixed-density planning expands access by creating multiple entry points, offering buyers lower-priced options while allowing them to remain in the same community as their needs evolve. However, density without intent is not the answer. Without adequate infrastructure and strong design standards, increased density can strain communities and erode public trust.

The communities that will succeed now and in the future are those that pair thoughtful density with coordinated public-private collaboration – delivering efficient land use without congestion, and housing options that meet real-world needs without sacrificing quality or driving sprawl.

Attainability through thoughtful design

Once density is introduced, design determines whether it succeeds.

Buyers increasingly expect neighborhoods to function as ecosystems. Walkability, access to green space, and nearby services are no longer secondary considerations; they shape how residents move through their lives and how connected they feel to their community.

This shift is influencing zoning conversations at the municipal level. Local governments are recognizing that people-centered design supports economic vitality, sustainability, and long-term resilience. Zoning frameworks are to allow more homes and encourage mixed-use activity, shorter trips, and shared amenities.

In well-designed master-planned communities, density is reinforced by elements that prioritize connection – networks of sidewalks and trails, small parks, and shared spaces.

First-time buyers are entering later

Today’s first-time buyers are entering the market later than previous generations, often in their mid-to-late 30s. Despite being older, many are less financially secure, balancing student debt, slower career mobility, later-in-life family planning, and caregiving responsibilities simultaneously.

These realities are reshaping housing demand in ways traditional community models can’t accommodate. Buyers are prioritizing livability and flexibility over square footage. Proximity to work, schools, and daily services matters more, while long commutes and car-dependent layouts are increasingly incompatible with modern lifestyles.

Mixed-density communities respond directly to these evolving needs, offering townhomes, duplexes, and smaller single-family homes that provide attainable entry points without sacrificing design quality, location, or long-term value. This structure allows buyers to enter the market at more realistic price points and stay rooted in the same community as their needs change.

This is attainability in action: not just affordability on paper, but real-world access to homeownership in the places people want to live.

Homeownership’s future depends on how we build

As affordability pressures intensify and buyer expectations evolve, the housing industry is being challenged to rethink not just what we build, but how – and where – we build it. 

The future of attainable housing isn’t about pushing smaller homes farther to the fringe. It is about building smarter, more connected neighborhoods at the center of everyday life. Mixed-density, walkable, master-planned communities must move beyond being viewed as progressive experiments and instead become the standard for how well-designed housing is delivered.

Because the next era of homeownership will be defined not by compromise, but by intentional design and lasting livability.

Matt Childers is the Regional Vice President of Land Operations, Dream Finders Homes.
This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of HousingWire’s editorial department and its owners. To contact the editor responsible for this piece: zeb@hwmedia.com.

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