Australia Housing in Australia’s major cities is among the least affordable in the world. Some organisations claim that "It is more than a housing crisis, it has become a full-scale national disaster." or that the crisis "isn't just a housing emergency — it’s a national emergency". As of 2025/2026, Sydney is the second most unaffordable housing market in the world.
Germany With only 46.7% in 2022 Germany
Homeownership in Germany is traditionally low compared to other countries due to high quantity of subsidized or rent regulated housing. The German government does not deduct mortgage interest payments from taxes. In the 2000s, Germany reduced government subsidies for homeownership. In more recent recent years though, also in Germany, the percentage of people living in overcrowded living arrangements, against EU averages, has steeply risen.
India According to a 2012 report by the
National Buildings Organisation (NBO), the shortage of housing units in urban areas was estimated to be 18.78 million. The shortfall is particularly acute for households belonging to the
Economically Weaker Section (total household income does not exceed 300,000 rupees), with a shortage of 10.55 million units, as well as the Lower Income Group (total household income is between 300,000 and 600,000 rupees), with a shortage of 7.41 million units. The Middle Income Group and above (households with a total annual income exceeding 600,000 rupees) face a shortfall of 0.82 million units.
The Netherlands The Netherlands is grappling with a long-standing and escalating housing crisis characterized by a persistent deficit in dwelling availability. As of mid-2025, the country faced a shortage of approximately 396,000 homes, representing around 4.8 percent of the total housing stock, down only slightly from the previous year’s figure of 401,000. If current trends continue, experts forecast that the housing shortfall could swell further to 453,000 homes by 2027, largely due to the rental income impact on housing associations from a social-housing rent freeze. The strain is most pronounced in urban centers such as Amsterdam, Utrecht, and Rotterdam, where demand fueled by population growth and tight planning regulations has outpaced new construction. Despite governmental targets of constructing 100,000 new homes annually, in 2024 only about 82,000 were added to the housing stock. The crisis carries profound societal implications. Young people, in particular, face significant hardship: more than 40 percent of those seeking housing have had to postpone life milestones such as moving in with a partner or starting a family due to housing constraints. Policymakers have attempted to inject relief through mechanisms like the Good Landlordship Act (enacted in 2023) and the Affordable Rent Act (introduced in 2024), which caps rents for mid-priced dwellings at around €1,123 per month and limits annual rent hikes. However, critics argue these measures may hinder housing associations’ ability to invest in new construction and maintenance, compounding the crisis rather than alleviating it. Auckland saw rents grow more slowly than in other parts of the country and more slowly than incomes since it started reforming its housing laws in 2013. As of July 2024, Ryan Greenaway-McGrevy estimated that rents were 28% lower than they would have been without the reforms. Building on Auckland's success, the national government passed a bipartisan upzoning of much of the country's largest cities to allow 3 units and 3 stories on all residential parcels in October 2021.
United Kingdom The United Kingdom faces regional shortages of housing, with undersupply and high demand in the south, relative to more abundant housing in economically depressed areas of the north. The
UK National Planning Policy Framework uses the "standard formula" to assess local housing need. The formula uses household growth projections, adjusted for affordability Critics of this method say that it does not account for the present backlog of housing. Households that live in poorly maintained or overcrowded accommodations would not be represented in the standard formula. A 2019 report estimates that 4.75 million households in Great Britain are in need of adequate affordable housing. In the
2019 general election, both major political parties identified the housing gap as an obstacle for the country, and pledged to increase housing supply. The Parliament has a stated target of 300,000 new homes a year by the mid-2020s.
United States See also == Financial crisis ==