Here’s How the New 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act Could Help Real Estate Investors

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Although the recently passed 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act is primarily aimed at first-time homebuyers, it also benefits investors when applied correctly. The changes might not be immediate, but when viewed through a wider lens, the introduction of small-dollar mortgages, new FHA limits, encouraging more “missing middle” construction, and limiting purchases of single-family homes by institutional investors could reshape the investor playing field over the next decade.

Tackling the Housing Shortage

The law’s core goal, according to Fortune, is to address the housing shortage, which currently ranges from 3.7 million homes (Freddie Mac) to at least 10 million homes (the White House), and to address more than a decade of underbuilding following the 2008 financial crash.

The new law tries to address this from multiple fronts: streamlining regulations, incentivizing local zoning reform, easing access to mortgages through community banks and FHA updates, and preventing large corporations from swallowing up large swaths of single-family homes. 

Why This Matters for Mom-and-Pop Investors

While average homebuyers have sat on the sidelines the past few years, investors have been busy buying homes, despite the uptick in interest rates, taking advantage of the lack of competition.

Realtor.com’s 2026 Investor Report found that investors purchased an estimated 534,000 homes in 2025, accounting for about 11.3% of all home sales—with the remaining ~89% going to owner-occupant buyers. Within that investor slice, the mix has shifted decisively toward the little guy: small investors made up roughly 63% of investor purchases, while mega-investors (those buying at scale) fell to just 7.5%, a decade-plus low.

That shift is enforced with the new law. Although institutional investors own only about 2% of single-family rental homes nationally, in some Sunbelt markets such as Atlanta, Jacksonville, and Charlotte, they own over 20% of the single-family housing stock.

The new legislation will broadly aim to increase supply and expand credit tools for buying houses, fostering an environment for go-to investment strategies such as house hacking, living in small multifamily homes, and focusing on long-term cash flow plays, even if cap rates won’t change immediately.

FHA, Small-Dollar Mortgages, and House-Hacking Plays

Immediately relevant for small investors is the new law’s focus on lower-value and FHA-backed mortgages, specifically, access to small dollar” FHA mortgages under $100,000, updates to FHA maximum loan limits for multifamily mortgages, and increased FHA loan limits for manufactured housing loans.

That is particularly helpful for new investors looking to house hack in a market where entry-level two-to-four-unit multifamily properties, as well as single-family homes with ADUs and basement units, trade below the national median price.

Conversely, the expansion of multifamily loan mortgages is helpful for more expensive markets where coming up with a down payment is preventing new investors from buying.

The law also includes provisions that relax certain regulatory requirements for community banks, which could make it easier for those lenders to extend mortgages, particularly in smaller markets where national lenders have a weaker presence.

These changes dovetail directly with classic house-hacking strategies, which are pivotal in jump-starting new buyers on their investment journey by offsetting the cost of a mortgage payment. Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) president and CEO Bob Broeksmit said in a statement quoted by Yahoo! Finance that the legislative package is “consequential.”

“The legislation preserves many of the hard-fought policy priorities that MBA has advocated for throughout this debate and will increase HUD’s multifamily loan limits for the first time since 2003, reduce barriers to development and increase housing supply, modernize federal housing programs, and expand access to affordable mortgage credit,” Broeksmit added.

Zoning Reform, Modular Housing and Long-Term Supply

Much of the Act’s potential impact for investors lies well in the future, forcing state and local governments to rethink zoning and embrace modular and manufactured housing over the next several years.

It introduces a program to incentivize state and local governments to overhaul restrictive zoning policies. HUD’s research office must publish guidelines and best practices for state and local zoning within three years, following a two-year public comment period, according to communityscale.com.

Yahoo! Finance points out that initiatives aimed at modular and manufactured housing, combined with higher FHA loan limits for these properties, are among the elements expected to have the most immediate impact on affordability, but the rollout could take years, something the bill’s orchestrators are keen to avoid.

“If you don’t build more housing, you should lose those incentives. And they should go to the places where you’re building more housing,” said the bill’s co-sponsor, Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., on the Senate floor ahead of the chamber vote, according to NPR.

Joel Berner, senior economist at Realtor.com, said that the impact of the reforms will not be immediate. “It could take years for a meaningful uptick in production to materialize and longer for it to have any impact on overall affordability,” he said.

Specific Measures in the New Housing Act Pertinent to Investors

  1. Federal caps on large corporate buyers will open more single-family opportunities to local investors.
  2. Expanded FHA and small-dollar mortgages make it easier to finance affordable two-to-four-family house hacks and entry-level rentals.
  3. Higher FHA multifamily and manufactured housing loan limits support creative small-multifamily and modular investment strategies.
  4. Regulatory relief for community banks can increase local lending, benefiting small investors in secondary and Midwestern and Southern markets.
  5. Incentives for zoning reform and “pattern book” designs encourage more missing-middle and infill projects that small investors can buy or develop.
  6. Streamlined environmental review reduces time and cost for small projects, improving returns on small development or BRRRR strategies.
  7. Lower manufactured housing costs create new opportunities for affordable rentals with stronger returns.
  8. The federal focus on homeownership and small-scale landlords supports longer-term demand for well-located small multifamilies or ADU-friendly properties.
  9. Grant programs tied to housing outcomes reward cities that add supply, creating investor upsides in pro-growth jurisdictions.

Overall, policy favors local, long-term small investors building portfolios, one property at a time.

Final Thoughts

There are many small wins for investors in the new housing act. The expansion of FHA laws, as well as smaller FHA loan amounts, will help more house hackers get a rung on the ladder. Meanwhile, making loans easier for community banks will help investors in all markets, not just rural ones, and smaller banks tend to offer more customized loans to local investors as opposed to national lenders.

The government is keen to stimulate real estate buying in any way it can. A savvy investor can dissect the new housing act and creatively apply its provisions to best suit their needs.

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