As the country marks the anniversary of D-Day, we remember one of history’s great acts of mobilization and sacrifice. But what we often forget is that when World War II ended, America faced another test of mobilization—this time at home.
Millions of veterans returned expecting to begin the lives they had fought to protect. Instead, they were greeted by a country that could not house them.
By one contemporary federal estimate, the country needed more than 2.5 million new housing units in 1946 for veterans and their families alone. At the time, the U.S. population of 151 million was less than half today’s 331 million, and the housing shortage was so steep that many were forced to make do in ramshackle trailers, even tents.
A protest slogan from the time captured the bitter irony: “From foxholes to shacks!! We had more room in the foxholes.”
That crisis would eventually set off a national building boom that reshaped American life. It helped popularize the starter home, modernize mortgage finance, fuel the rise of the middle class, and turn homeownership into the central symbol of the American dream.
Today, many of those symbols are under strain. The starter home has crossed the $1 million mark in more than half of the country, the typical first-time homebuyer is now 40 years old, and the nation is still short 4.03 million homes.
And while it’s tempting to mourn what feels like a fading American dream, the postwar story reminds us that the dream itself was born from crisis—and from a national response ambitious enough to meet it.
Lesson 1: Housing is an economic imperative
Even before the war was over, President Franklin D. Roosevelt had begun to define victory in part by what it promised at home. In his 1944 State of the Union, he called for a “Second Bill of Rights” that included “the right of every family to a decent home.”
But housing was also central to the health of the postwar economy. As the country moved from wartime production to civilian life, policymakers feared what would happen if too few houses led to too few jobs and too little consumer demand.
In 1947, President Harry Truman’s midyear economic report warned that housing construction still “lags far behind the real needs of our people for homes” and that “a much higher volume of housing output” would be needed to help sustain maximum employment.
The building boom that followed reflects that sense of urgency. Housing starts rose from just 326,000 units in 1945 to more than 1 million annually after the war, peaking at roughly 2 million in 1950, according to housing historian Alexander von Hoffman.
It’s a potent lesson for today. Housing has again become a flashpoint for voters and politicians, but it is still often framed as an individual or cost-of-living problem. Perhaps that’s why the building response has not yet met the moment with urgency—in 2025, new-construction permits fell 3.6% compared to the prior year.
But the economic stakes are just as high today as they were in the postwar era. Over a 50-year period ending in 2009, housing restrictions in high-productivity metros (think New York City and San Francisco) lowered aggregate U.S. economic growth by a staggering 36%.
Lesson 2: Financing solutions have to come with supply
But the postwar housing boom really began with credit.
The GI Bill and federal mortgage guarantees helped turn millions of returning veterans into buyers by lowering the financing barriers to ownership. Veterans’ benefits alone explain over 7% of the overall increase in homeownership from 1940 to 1960.
Today’s crisis is also one of financing. The ultralow mortgage rates of the early COVID-19 pandemic era helped millions of households buy or refinance into historically cheap debt. But they also created golden handcuffs, locking a wide swath of owners into homes they might otherwise sell.
President Donald Trump has floated ideas such as 50-year mortgages and portable mortgages, both aimed at lowering monthly payments or helping owners move without giving up favorable loan terms. And through the lens of a postwar recovery, any tool to expand credit access might seem like a good idea.
But this is also where the post-WWII lesson gets complicated.
Cheaper credit, lower mortgage rates, or other forms of homebuyer assistance can help individual households cross the threshold into ownership. But if that new purchasing power runs into a market short of supply, it can also make buyers compete harder for the same scarce inventory.
That imbalance is part of what happened during the pandemic. Cheap debt unleashed demand into a market with too few homes, helping push prices sharply higher. As a result, nearly 2 million young would-be households remain missing, as affordability headwinds and other structural hurdles delay the move into independent adulthood.
Any modern equivalent of the GI Bill, then, will have to pair purchasing power with production. Otherwise, the country risks mistaking access to financing for access to housing itself.
Lesson 3: Innovations in building lead to booms
But here again is a useful lesson from the past. Behind one of the most famous symbols of the postwar housing boom—the starter home—is a method of mass production.
Levittown on Long Island became shorthand for the suburban promise because it changed not only what Americans bought, but also how those homes were built.
For the first time, homes were standardized, allowing for construction to be broken into specialized tasks. Crews moved from house to house with the efficiency of an assembly line, turning out modest homes at speed and scale.
At peak production, a new house could be completed every 16 minutes.



Today, echoes of that idea are showing up in 3D-printed homes, accessory dwelling units, denser zoning, modular construction, and factory-built housing. But one of the clearest modern parallels may be manufactured housing.
These homes are built around standardization and the efficiency that comes with it. As a result, they can be built from start to finish in a factory setting in as little as 6 to 12 weeks, compared with the six months to a year it takes to complete many site-built homes.
Still, manufactured homes carry a stigma that has long kept them outside the mainstream housing conversation, even as they offer a more affordable path to ownership.
“The usual narrative seems to be ‘Don’t buy a mobile home, it will lose value,’ to which we are saying, ‘Not necessarily,'” says Joel Berner, senior economist at Realtor.com®.
His research has shown that between 2019 and 2026, manufactured homes sold with land appreciated 70.1%, outpacing the 58.6% gain for single-family homes, according to the report. Manufactured homes sold without land appreciated, too, though less sharply, at 51.6%.
That’s not to suggest that manufactured housing can fix the current shortage by itself. But it shows that if America wants more affordable options, it may need to accept homes that are more standardized and less tied to old ideas of what housing should look like.
Lesson 4: Build for all
Even as the postwar housing boom built a ladder to homeownership and generational wealth for many, it didn’t build enough rungs for everyone. The same system that helped many white families buy into appreciating suburbs also shut many Black families, renters, and lower-income households out of the wealth-building machine.
Discriminatory lending practices and local implementation of federal programs systematically excluded nonwhite households from the postwar expansion in homeownership, and we’re still living the consequences today. The homeownership gap between Black and white households remains 20 percentage points wide.

Because homeownership remains the primary way many Americans build wealth, that gap compounds over generations. Across all demographics, homeowners have roughly 38 times the net worth of renters.
Yet renters are often left at the margins of the conversation. The housing crisis is frequently framed around restoring the path to ownership, but millions of households need any affordable, stable place to live.
The National Low Income Housing Coalition’s 2026 Gap report found a shortage of 7.2 million affordable and available rental homes for extremely low-income renters. For every 100 extremely low-income renter households, only 35 affordable and available homes exist.
Any modern mobilization will have to go beyond cheaper mortgages, more starter homes, or a revived dream of ownership. It will have to reckon with the households the postwar boom left at the margins—and the ones today’s market still does not reach.

Allaire Conte is a senior advice writer covering real estate and personal finance trends. She previously served as deputy editor of home services at CNN Underscored Money and was a lead writer at Orchard, where she simplified complex real estate topics for everyday readers. She holds an MFA in Nonfiction Writing from Columbia University and a BFA in Writing, Literature, and Publishing from Emerson College. When she’s not writing about homeownership hurdles and housing market shifts, she’s biking around Brooklyn or baking cakes for her friends.
