When the National Association of REALTORS® celebrated “21 Real Estate Wins in Government Spending Package” back in late 2022, many of the victories sounded technical, bureaucratic, or simply procedural at the time. Funding extensions. Infrastructure appropriations. Housing vouchers. Flood insurance renewals. Rural broadband investments.
But as the housing market moved through the volatility of 2023, the commission lawsuits and industry restructuring of 2024, and the affordability crisis that continued into 2025 and 2026, those spending priorities now look far more significant in hindsight.
What once appeared to be routine government funding measures may ultimately shape how housing affordability, development, lending, and community growth evolve by 2027.
The Foundation Was About Stability
Looking back, one of the biggest themes of the 2022 package was market stability.
At a time when inflation was surging and mortgage rates were beginning their rapid climb, Congress preserved and funded many of the programs that quietly keep the housing market functioning behind the scenes. The extension of the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), continued FHA lending support, Ginnie Mae guarantees, and rural housing investments all helped prevent additional shocks to an already fragile market.
Without those protections, housing transactions in flood-prone and lower-income areas could have slowed dramatically. NAR later warned that even temporary lapses in flood insurance authorization could impact over 1,000 home sales per day nationwide.
By 2027, this emphasis on stabilization may prove even more important as climate risks, insurance availability, and infrastructure resilience become central real estate issues across the country.
Affordable Housing Was Quietly Becoming the Main Event
At the time, much of the media attention focused on inflation and rising interest rates. But buried within the spending package were billions directed toward affordable housing production, community development grants, manufactured housing preservation, and rental assistance programs.
In hindsight, this may have marked the beginning of a broader federal recognition that America’s housing shortage could no longer be treated as a local problem alone.
Fast forward toward 2027, and many housing economists now expect affordability initiatives to dominate both state and federal housing conversations. Programs tied to zoning reform, first-time buyer assistance, adaptive reuse projects, and workforce housing development are likely to expand as inventory shortages continue pressuring both buyers and renters.
NAR itself has increasingly pushed bipartisan legislation focused on increasing housing supply, including support for measures like the Neighborhood Homes Investment Act and the Revitalizing Downtowns and Main Streets Act.
The groundwork for many of those future conversations can be traced back to the priorities funded years earlier.
Infrastructure and Broadband Could Reshape Secondary Markets
One of the more overlooked pieces of the spending package was federal investment in broadband expansion and infrastructure improvements. At the time, these investments were often discussed through the lens of remote work and pandemic recovery.
But moving into 2027, their long-term impact may be much larger.
As affordability challenges continue pushing buyers beyond major metropolitan areas, secondary and tertiary markets are increasingly positioned for growth. Reliable broadband, transportation access, and upgraded infrastructure could make smaller suburban and rural communities more competitive than ever before.
For real estate professionals, this may fundamentally reshape where demand emerges over the next several years. Communities once considered too remote for sustained growth could become highly desirable alternatives for hybrid workers and young families seeking affordability and quality of life.
The Industry Changed Faster Than Anyone Expected
Of course, no one reading that 2022 spending package could have fully predicted the massive changes the real estate industry itself would undergo by 2024 and beyond.
The NAR commission settlement and subsequent rule changes forced the industry into one of its most significant structural shifts in decades. Consumers became more commission-conscious, agents faced increased transparency requirements, and debates around affordability intensified nationwide.
At the same time, public scrutiny of NAR’s lobbying influence and advocacy priorities grew substantially. Some industry professionals defended NAR’s policy wins as essential protections for housing and homeownership, while critics argued the organization’s influence had contributed to affordability and competition issues.
By 2027, the industry may look far more consumer-driven, data-transparent, and policy-focused than it did even five years earlier.
What Happens Next?
Looking ahead, the housing market of 2027 will likely be shaped less by short-term interest rate movements and more by long-term structural questions:
- Can the U.S. build enough housing inventory?
- Will climate resilience become a major pricing factor?
- Can insurance markets remain stable in vulnerable regions?
- Will suburban growth continue shifting outward?
- How much will federal policy influence affordability and development incentives?
The 2022 government spending package did not solve these issues overnight. But looking back now, it may represent an early blueprint for how federal housing policy began adapting to a rapidly changing real estate landscape.
And by 2027, many of those “wins” may be remembered not as isolated funding provisions — but as the starting point of a much larger transformation in American housing.
Source: REALTOR® Magazine
“21 Real Estate Wins in Government Spending Package”
National Association of REALTORS®
