Global Housing Crisis 2026: 3.4 Billion People Trapped in the Affordability Trap
The World Cities Report 2026, released by UN-Habitat during the World Urban Forum in Baku, highlights a rapidly worsening global housing crisis affecting billions of people worldwide.
According to the report, nearly 40% of the global population, around 3.4 billion people, currently face housing-related challenges, including unaffordable homes, poor living conditions, overcrowding, and inadequate access to basic services such as clean water and sanitation. The report describes housing as one of the most urgent urban challenges of the 21st century.
The report states that the housing crisis is not limited to developing nations alone. Both developed and emerging economies are struggling with rising housing costs, declining affordability, and growing inequality in urban areas.
One of the most alarming findings is the widening gap between housing prices and household incomes across the world.
This means middle- and low-income families are finding it increasingly difficult to purchase homes in urban areas.
The report notes that housing costs are consuming a major share of household income globally.
Rising rents are leaving families with less income for healthcare, education, nutrition, and savings.
The report highlights growing homelessness in several countries.
| Country | Homelessness Rate |
|---|---|
| India | 13 |
| United States | 20 |
| China | 21 |
The data shows that even large economies continue to struggle with housing insecurity and inadequate shelter access.
Cities across the world are expected to absorb an additional 2 billion people by 2050.
This rapid urban growth will significantly increase pressure on:
Without major policy reforms and investments, the urban housing shortage is expected to worsen dramatically.
The report gives special attention to India’s urban housing challenges and highlights both concerns and positive developments.
The report identifies major affordability stress in India’s metro cities.
| City | Ratio |
|---|---|
| Mumbai | 14.3 |
| Delhi | 10.1 |
These figures indicate that home ownership is increasingly out of reach for households earning median incomes.
In India’s eight largest cities:
This shift has reduced the supply of low-cost homes for economically weaker sections and middle-income families.
The report acknowledges the contribution of Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana in improving housing access.
Key achievements include:
The scheme has helped improve housing inclusion, especially among vulnerable populations.
The report praises the Ahmedabad Slum Networking Project as a successful model of community-led urban improvement.
The project demonstrated that:
Mass migration toward cities and fast population growth are increasing housing demand far beyond current supply levels.
Housing prices are increasing much faster than wages and household incomes, reducing affordability for middle- and low-income families.
Real estate developers are increasingly prioritising luxury and high-margin projects instead of affordable housing.
Escalating land prices and higher construction material costs are making low-cost housing projects economically difficult.
Many low-income households lack access to formal banking systems and affordable mortgage finance, limiting home ownership opportunities.
Climate disasters are causing large-scale destruction of homes and infrastructure.
Housing shortages and unaffordable rents are increasing homelessness across urban areas.
Many vulnerable populations are forced to live in slums and informal settlements due to lack of affordable formal housing.
Unequal access to housing is widening socio-economic divisions within cities.
High housing costs reduce disposable income and increase household debt burdens.
The expansion of unplanned settlements puts enormous stress on:
Despite the crisis, the report highlights the strong economic benefits of investment in housing.
In India:
The report notes that housing construction has significant potential to stimulate employment and economic growth.
The report stresses that governments must take the lead role in ensuring affordable and adequate housing, as market-driven systems alone cannot solve the crisis.
States should play a central role in planning, financing, and regulating housing systems.
The report recommends stronger cooperation among:
The report suggests adopting models such as:
These models can improve affordability for low-income households.
The report calls for increasing non-profit affordable rental housing, especially for:
Governments and financial institutions should expand access to formal housing finance and reduce dependence on informal borrowing systems.
The report supports:
These approaches are considered more cost-effective and socially inclusive.
The report emphasises integrating climate resilience into housing and city planning to reduce vulnerability to disasters and climate risks.
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