Housing

New study sets regional housing production targets for 2030 and 2050

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

New regional housing targets, Housing Data Dashboard help set roadmap for addressing housing shortage

Montpelier, Vt. – The Vermont Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD), in collaboration with the Vermont Association of Planning and Development Agencies (VAPDA) and the Vermont Housing Finance Agency (VHFA), is announcing the release of new regional targets for housing production across the state and a new tool that allows DHCD to track progress towards those regional housing goals in near real time.

The Statewide and Regional Housing Targets report was required as part of the HOME Act of 2023 and ACT 181 of 2024. DHCD and VAPDA coordinated to produce the housing production targets and VHFA was contracted to support the development of the targets.  The report examined the depths of Vermont’s housing shortage and developed a methodology to create regional housing targets for 2030 and 2050 that will enable the state to stabilize housing prices, normalize vacancy rates, help grow its current workforce, and attract new residents.  The regional areas are based on Vermont’s eleven Regional Planning Commission boundaries.

The new Regional Housing Target assessment finds:

  • By 2030, for Vermont to address its demographic challenge it needs to add 41,000 new rental and owner-occupied residences. That’s translates to 8,200 housing units per year for the next five years.
  • By 2050, the projected need is 172,000 new homes. That translates to an average of 7,000 new homes annually over the next 25 years.
  • In 2023, building permits were issued for 2,456 homes statewide. That’s an improvement over the historic low of 1,300 permits set in 2011, but well below the peak of 4,800 in 1988.

The Scott Administration is using this new data to inform its housing policy objectives which Governor Scott plans to outline during his press conference at the Vermont State House on Tuesday, January 21 at 12:00.

“Every community in Vermont needs more homes now,” says Governor Scott. “My team will continue to be committed to make structural changes that will help communities, ease regulation, and incentivize housing in all parts of the state, so more Vermonters can find an affordable place to live.”

“We have got to pick up the pace,” says DHCD Commissioner Alex Farrell. “These targets reinforce what we already know: we are not adding new homes fast enough to meet current demand, let alone even modest growth. At DHCD, we are working on innovative ideas to help boost housing production, including building out water and sewer infrastructure to encourage construction. We hope the legislature will support these efforts.”

“As regional planners, we recognize that these statewide and regional numbers may be a lot for some municipalities to absorb,” said Devon Neary, Executive Director of the Rutland Regional Planning Commission and current VAPDA Chair. “We are committed to work with local cities and towns to help break the numbers down to achievable goals overtime.  These targets represent aspirational goals for the state to reverse our housing and demographic trends.”

As a part of ACT 181, DHCD will be required to report to the legislature on progress being made towards these targets annually.  No such tool for measuring housing development in the state existed, so DHCD partnered with the Vermont Center for Geographic Information (VCGI) to create a new data dashboard. The Housing Development Dashboard utilizes data from a variety of sources, including E911 sites across the state to determine where new housing units are being developed. 

“This dashboard is a first of its kind. It’s as close to a real time look at where housing units are being generated in Vermont as we have ever had before,” said John Adams, Director of the Vermont Center for Geographic Information. “While we’ve pulled together a variety of data sources to determine where and when housing is being built, the dashboard is a work in progress, and we will continue to work with partners to dial in accuracy going forward.”

The first report out of the dashboard and progress towards regional housing targets will be in 2026. In the interim, the dashboard has taken the average of homes built annually between 2021 and 2024 and compared that to the targets to give DHCD a current statewide look at housing production progress.  Currently we are only building 27% of the homes we need annually to meet our 2030 targets.

To read the full Housing Needs Assessment including this new annex of regional housing targets, visit the DHCD website.  To find Housing Development Dashboard including all housing data the state tracks, please visit Housingdata.org.


Discover more from Vermont Daily Chronicle

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

6 replies »

  1. Why are we setting goals along the lines of the New World Order, Davos, etc. for more homes than we currently need? Why does it have to be “planned”. Why can’t we just relax any permit requirements for homes under 1400 sq ft. Tell every town, make 24 new homes in the next year under $250k in cost or we’ll tax the town a million dollars. No Act 250 for affordable homes, regardless.

    Let people build when and what they want. We didn’t need planners for this, for our first 200 years, we don’t need this now either.

    Marxist love to control everything for sure.

    Boarding homes by right across the state, easy simple gets people a modest place to stay, no taxpayer money spent or needed, great retirement income for older people.

  2. normalize vacancy rates, help grow its current workforce, and attract new residents…

    This is about importing workers from out of state/country, to Vermont and providing rental housing at tax payer expense…….prove me wrong.

    We need decoder rings for press releases.

    You will own nothing and be happy, that’s the stated plan, coming to Vermont!

    Funny how building was a nasty word in Vermont for decades, now suddenly we need a 25% increase in population? What gives? It’s their idea, need to import workers. What about Vermonters??????

  3. According to Governor Scott, we need 7,000 new homes this year alone ??

    Who’s are these new home for, as most new buildings are $350-$500k per, with
    interest rates high, jobs in VT are middle to low pay at best, Vermont has taxed itself out of any new hires, so again who are these homes for ???????

    As Joe would say ” come-on man “

  4. There is no such thing as regional government or regional housing. This is a communist top down form of government run by non elected personal.

  5. Our progressive government is already bending to the United Nations goals of 30% land conservation by 2030 and 50% land conservation by 2050. How is 41K homes by 2030 and 172K home by 2050 going to conflict with those goals? Want a home with a yard? Forget it, you’ll be squeezed into a 15-minute town/city, and you like it or else.