Where Homes Get Approved
Shade the country by supply rate - housing units authorized per 1,000 residents, not raw count - and a diagonal appears. A dark band of permitting runs from the Mountain West down through the Carolinas and Florida. The palest states are the coastal Northeast and the industrial Midwest: large, established populations clearing remarkably few new homes. Raw counts would hide this; per capita is the lens that makes a big slow state and a small fast one comparable.
- < 3.0
- 3.0 - 4.5
- 4.5 - 6.0
- 6.0 - 8.0
- 8.0 +
Fig. A-01 · Choropleth, 51 jurisdictions, single-hue mauve density ramp. Hover a state for its rate and unit count; the ranked table below carries every value so the reading never rests on colour alone. Illustrative stand-in figures.
All 51 jurisdictions, ranked (data table)
| State | Per 1,000 | Units | Multifamily | Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Utah | 9.8 | 34,000 | 42% | |
| Idaho | 9.2 | 18,000 | 28% | |
| South Carolina | 8.6 | 45,000 | 30% | |
| Texas | 8.4 | 255,000 | 40% | |
| Florida | 8.1 | 185,000 | 38% | |
| North Carolina | 7.0 | 76,000 | 34% | |
| Arizona | 6.8 | 51,000 | 35% | |
| Tennessee | 6.6 | 47,000 | 36% | |
| Delaware | 6.4 | 6,500 | 25% | |
| Georgia | 6.2 | 68,000 | 37% | |
| Montana | 6.1 | 6,800 | 28% | |
| Nevada | 6.0 | 19,000 | 30% | |
| Colorado | 5.9 | 35,000 | 45% | |
| South Dakota | 5.6 | 5,100 | 35% | |
| Washington | 5.0 | 39,000 | 44% | |
| North Dakota | 5.0 | 3,900 | 40% | |
| Alabama | 4.8 | 24,000 | 26% | |
| Virginia | 4.7 | 41,000 | 34% | |
| Oklahoma | 4.6 | 18,500 | 28% | |
| Nebraska | 4.5 | 9,000 | 33% | |
| Minnesota | 4.4 | 25,000 | 45% | |
| Oregon | 4.3 | 18,000 | 42% | |
| District of Columbia | 4.2 | 2,900 | 90% | |
| New Hampshire | 4.1 | 5,800 | 32% | |
| Arkansas | 4.0 | 12,000 | 27% | |
| Indiana | 3.9 | 27,000 | 30% | |
| Kansas | 3.8 | 11,000 | 30% | |
| Iowa | 3.6 | 11,500 | 34% | |
| Missouri | 3.6 | 22,000 | 35% | |
| Wisconsin | 3.5 | 21,000 | 36% | |
| Maine | 3.5 | 4,900 | 25% | |
| Kentucky | 3.4 | 15,500 | 28% | |
| New Mexico | 3.3 | 7,000 | 25% | |
| Louisiana | 3.2 | 14,500 | 24% | |
| Maryland | 3.1 | 19,000 | 38% | |
| Wyoming | 3.1 | 1,800 | 22% | |
| Vermont | 3.0 | 1,950 | 30% | |
| Mississippi | 2.9 | 8,500 | 20% | |
| California | 2.8 | 110,000 | 55% | |
| Massachusetts | 2.7 | 19,000 | 55% | |
| Ohio | 2.7 | 32,000 | 34% | |
| New Jersey | 2.6 | 24,000 | 52% | |
| Michigan | 2.5 | 25,000 | 34% | |
| Hawaii | 2.4 | 3,400 | 45% | |
| Pennsylvania | 2.2 | 28,000 | 40% | |
| Connecticut | 2.1 | 7,600 | 48% | |
| Rhode Island | 2.0 | 2,200 | 40% | |
| Alaska | 1.9 | 1,400 | 30% | |
| New York | 1.9 | 37,000 | 62% | |
| Illinois | 1.8 | 22,000 | 42% | |
| West Virginia | 1.5 | 2,700 | 20% |
A Country That Clusters Low
Line the 51 jurisdictions up by how many homes each permits per resident and the shape is lopsided: a thick stack of below-average states, then a thinning above-average tail of fast builders. 31 of 51 sit under the U.S. average; the median jurisdiction (Indiana) permits about 3.9 per 1,000. The country's housing supply is decided by a small number of outliers.
- Below U.S. average
- At or above average
Fig. A-02 · Each column counts the states whose supply rate falls in that unit-wide band. Bar caps are direct-labelled with the state count. Illustrative stand-in figures.
The Metro Leaderboard
The same 25 metros, ranked by units permitted per 1,000 residents, each bar split into single-family and multifamily (5+ units) so rank and building shape read at once. The order is the whole argument: the leaders are mid-size Sun Belt and Mountain West metros, and the biggest, costliest coastal names sink to the bottom. Rank runs opposite to price.
- 01 Myrtle Beach, SC 14.4
- 02 Provo-Orem, UT 11.1
- 03 Boise City, ID 10.5
- 04 Raleigh-Cary, NC 10.1
- 05 Austin-Round Rock, TX 9.9
- 06 Jacksonville, FL 9.1
- 07 Nashville-Davidson, TN 9.0
- 08 Charlotte-Concord, NC 8.6
- 09 Orlando-Kissimmee, FL 8.5
- 10 Phoenix-Mesa, AZ 8.0
- 11 Houston-The Woodlands, TX 7.7
- 12 Dallas-Fort Worth, TX 7.7
- 13 Tampa-St. Petersburg, FL 7.6
- 14 Atlanta-Sandy Springs, GA 6.7
- 15 Denver-Aurora, CO 6.4
- 16 Seattle-Tacoma, WA 6.0
- 17 Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN 4.9
- 18 Miami-Fort Lauderdale, FL 4.6
- 19 Washington-Arlington, DC 3.3
- 20 Boston-Cambridge, MA 2.7
- 21 New York-Newark, NY 2.2
- 22 Philadelphia-Camden, PA 2.2
- 23 San Francisco-Oakland, CA 2.0
- 24 Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA 1.7
- 25 Chicago-Naperville, IL 1.5
Fig. A-03 · Bar length is the supply rate; the mauve share is multifamily. Full counts in the table below. Illustrative stand-in figures.
Full metro table (units, single, multifamily)
| Metro | Per 1,000 | Total units | Single-fam | Multifamily | Multi % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Myrtle Beach, SC | 14.4 | 7,500 | 5,500 | 1,700 | 23% |
| Provo-Orem, UT | 11.1 | 8,000 | 4,200 | 3,500 | 44% |
| Boise City, ID | 10.5 | 8,500 | 5,000 | 3,000 | 35% |
| Raleigh-Cary, NC | 10.1 | 15,000 | 8,500 | 6,000 | 40% |
| Austin-Round Rock, TX | 9.9 | 24,000 | 12,000 | 11,000 | 46% |
| Jacksonville, FL | 9.1 | 15,500 | 9,500 | 5,500 | 35% |
| Nashville-Davidson, TN | 9.0 | 19,000 | 10,000 | 8,500 | 45% |
| Charlotte-Concord, NC | 8.6 | 24,000 | 14,000 | 9,500 | 40% |
| Orlando-Kissimmee, FL | 8.5 | 24,000 | 13,500 | 10,000 | 42% |
| Phoenix-Mesa, AZ | 8.0 | 40,000 | 26,000 | 13,000 | 33% |
| Houston-The Woodlands, TX | 7.7 | 58,000 | 40,000 | 16,000 | 28% |
| Dallas-Fort Worth, TX | 7.7 | 62,000 | 38,000 | 22,000 | 35% |
| Tampa-St. Petersburg, FL | 7.6 | 25,000 | 15,000 | 9,000 | 36% |
| Atlanta-Sandy Springs, GA | 6.7 | 42,000 | 26,000 | 15,000 | 36% |
| Denver-Aurora, CO | 6.4 | 19,000 | 9,000 | 9,500 | 50% |
| Seattle-Tacoma, WA | 6.0 | 24,000 | 8,000 | 15,000 | 63% |
| Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN | 4.9 | 18,000 | 7,000 | 10,000 | 56% |
| Miami-Fort Lauderdale, FL | 4.6 | 28,000 | 7,000 | 20,000 | 71% |
| Washington-Arlington, DC | 3.3 | 21,000 | 8,500 | 11,500 | 55% |
| Boston-Cambridge, MA | 2.7 | 13,000 | 4,000 | 8,500 | 65% |
| New York-Newark, NY | 2.2 | 42,000 | 9,000 | 31,000 | 74% |
| Philadelphia-Camden, PA | 2.2 | 13,500 | 6,500 | 6,000 | 44% |
| San Francisco-Oakland, CA | 2.0 | 9,000 | 2,200 | 6,500 | 72% |
| Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA | 1.7 | 22,000 | 5,000 | 16,000 | 73% |
| Chicago-Naperville, IL | 1.5 | 14,000 | 6,000 | 7,000 | 50% |
Bigger Metros Build Less
Plot every metro by population and by supply rate and the dots drift down as they drift right: the largest metros - the New Yorks and Los Angeleses where housing is scarcest and dearest - sit along the floor, while the fastest permitting happens in the smaller Sun Belt boomtowns up the left side. Size is not the constraint. The places with the most people and the most demand authorize the fewest homes per resident.
- Sun Belt boomtown
- Steady
- Supply-frozen
Fig. A-04 · One mark per metro; shape and colour both encode archetype, so the groups read under colour-blindness and in greyscale. Extremes direct-labelled; hover any dot for its figures. Illustrative stand-in figures.
Houses or Apartments
Now hold volume constant and ask only about shape. Each bar is one metro's permitted units normalized to 100% and split into single-family, the 2 to 4 unit "missing middle", and multifamily (5+), sorted from most detached at the top to most apartment at the bottom. Sun Belt sprawl and Texas subdivisions anchor one end; the supply-frozen coasts, where almost every new unit is an apartment, anchor the other. Two different housing economies, drawn to the same width.
Bars normalized to 100%. Small segments omit their label; the middle band is the 2 to 4 unit class.
Fifteen Years of Supply
National housing units authorized each year, stacked by building type. The recovery from the 2008 collapse was carried by multifamily nearly as much as single-family - the apartment share crested around 2022, at roughly 40% of all new units. The 2-to-4-unit "missing middle" stayed a rounding error the entire stretch, the housing type America stopped building.
- Single-family (1 unit)
- 2 to 4 units
- Multifamily (5+ units)
Fig. A-06 · Thousands of units authorized nationwide; segment heights are the three building classes. 2024 totalled 1,506k. Illustrative stand-in figures.
Three Tempos of Building
Group the metros by archetype and index each group to its own 2010 level, and the gap becomes a matter of slope. Sun Belt boomtowns roughly doubled their pace and shrugged off the 2022 rate shock; the steady middle climbed at half that grade; the supply-frozen coasts end fifteen years almost exactly where they began. Same country, three completely different responses to the same demand.
Doubled their pace in a decade, barely flinched at the 2022 rate shock.
A gradual climb, half the boomtown slope, no dramatic swings.
Fifteen years, essentially flat: 2024 sits about where 2010 did.
Fig. A-08 · Each panel indexes one cohort's total permits to 2010 = 100; the two grey lines repeat the other cohorts for scale. Illustrative stand-in figures.
The Supply Gap
Here is the whole argument on one axis. Each bar is a metro's distance from the national average of 4.5 units per 1,000 residents - above to the right, below to the left. The fast-permitting Sun Belt and Mountain West metros authorize about 4.5x as many homes per resident as the big coastal metros where demand and prices are highest. Where housing costs the most, the least gets built.
- Above U.S. average
- Below U.S. average
Fig. A-09 · Bars measure each metro's supply rate against the national average; length is the size of the gap, direction is its sign. Illustrative stand-in figures.
Every metro vs the U.S. average (data table)
| Metro | Per 1,000 | vs U.S. avg | Total units |
|---|---|---|---|
| Myrtle Beach, SC | 14.4 | +9.9 | 7,500 |
| Provo-Orem, UT | 11.1 | +6.6 | 8,000 |
| Boise City, ID | 10.5 | +6.0 | 8,500 |
| Raleigh-Cary, NC | 10.1 | +5.6 | 15,000 |
| Austin-Round Rock, TX | 9.9 | +5.4 | 24,000 |
| Jacksonville, FL | 9.1 | +4.6 | 15,500 |
| Nashville-Davidson, TN | 9.0 | +4.5 | 19,000 |
| Charlotte-Concord, NC | 8.6 | +4.1 | 24,000 |
| Orlando-Kissimmee, FL | 8.5 | +4.0 | 24,000 |
| Phoenix-Mesa, AZ | 8.0 | +3.5 | 40,000 |
| Houston-The Woodlands, TX | 7.7 | +3.2 | 58,000 |
| Dallas-Fort Worth, TX | 7.7 | +3.2 | 62,000 |
| Tampa-St. Petersburg, FL | 7.6 | +3.1 | 25,000 |
| Atlanta-Sandy Springs, GA | 6.7 | +2.2 | 42,000 |
| Denver-Aurora, CO | 6.4 | +1.9 | 19,000 |
| Seattle-Tacoma, WA | 6.0 | +1.5 | 24,000 |
| Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN | 4.9 | +0.4 | 18,000 |
| Miami-Fort Lauderdale, FL | 4.6 | +0.1 | 28,000 |
| Washington-Arlington, DC | 3.3 | -1.2 | 21,000 |
| Boston-Cambridge, MA | 2.7 | -1.8 | 13,000 |
| New York-Newark, NY | 2.2 | -2.3 | 42,000 |
| Philadelphia-Camden, PA | 2.2 | -2.3 | 13,500 |
| San Francisco-Oakland, CA | 2.0 | -2.5 | 9,000 |
| Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA | 1.7 | -2.8 | 22,000 |
| Chicago-Naperville, IL | 1.5 | -3.0 | 14,000 |