How Trump’s Executive Order on Removing Regulatory Barriers Could Impact the Housing Market
How Trump’s Executive Order on Removing Regulatory Barriers Could Impact the Housing Market
The American dream of homeownership feels increasingly out of reach for many families. With a national housing supply gap estimated at over 4 million units as of 2025, high construction costs, and persistent affordability challenges, policymakers on both sides have struggled to find effective solutions.
On March 13, 2026, President Trump signed Executive Order 14394, titled “Removing Regulatory Barriers to Affordable Home Construction.” The order targets what it describes as “layers of unnecessary regulatory barriers, slow permitting processes, and onerous mandates” at all levels of government that delay building and drive up costs.
Here’s a realistic look at what the order does—and what it might (and might not) mean for the U.S. housing market.
What the Executive Order Actually Does
The order does not instantly repeal laws or override all regulations. Instead, it directs federal agencies to review and revise specific rules “as appropriate and consistent with applicable law.” Key areas include:
- Environmental and Water-Related Permitting: The EPA and Army Corps of Engineers must review stormwater discharge permits, Total Maximum Daily Loads, Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System requirements, and Clean Water Act Section 404 wetlands permits. The goal is to reduce construction and ownership costs, streamline approvals, lower property tax burdens in some cases, and improve insurability.
- Energy and Efficiency Standards: Agencies including HUD, USDA, Energy, and FHFA are told to reform or eliminate unduly burdensome energy-efficiency, water-use, and alternative-energy requirements for housing—especially manufactured homes.
- Broader Federal Rules: Reviews of programs from the Department of Commerce, Transportation, and FHFA that may constrain single-family and suburban/exurban development, including manufactured housing lending incentives.
- Permitting Streamlining: Guidance to expand categorical exclusions under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and reduce burdens under the National Historic Preservation Act for housing and related infrastructure.
- State and Local “Best Practices”: Within 60 days, HUD must issue recommendations encouraging faster permitting (e.g., timeline caps and fee limits), by-right development for single-family homes, fewer costly mandates (including some green-energy rules), greater acceptance of manufactured/modular housing, and removal of arbitrary growth boundaries.
- Opportunity Zones: Better alignment of tax incentives with single-family home construction.
The order emphasizes single-family homes, suburban/exurban areas, and manufactured housing while stressing responsible stewardship of taxpayer dollars.
Short-Term Effects: Incremental and Uneven Progress
Expect modest movement rather than immediate transformation. Agency reviews, new guidance, proposed rule changes, and public comment periods take time—often months or years. Legal challenges from environmental groups, who have already criticized similar efforts as pretexts for broader Clean Water Act rollbacks, are likely.
In regions with significant federal involvement (wetlands-heavy areas, projects needing Army Corps permits, or those tied to federal funding), builders could see faster approvals and lower soft costs for stormwater management or mitigation. Manufactured housing might become slightly cheaper and easier to site in more places.
However, most zoning, building codes, and permitting authority remains at the state and local level. Some pro-development states and localities may quickly adopt HUD’s forthcoming best practices. Others—particularly in high-regulation coastal or progressive areas—may resist, ignore them, or face political backlash. Any use of federal grants or technical assistance as incentives could spark preemption fights or funding disputes.
Industry groups like the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and National Association of Realtors (NAR) have welcomed the order, viewing it as a step toward addressing supply constraints and reducing red tape that can add tens of thousands of dollars per home.
Medium- to Long-Term Outlook: A Helpful Nudge, Not a Cure-All
If implemented aggressively and paired with genuine local reforms, the order could contribute to:
- Modest increases in housing starts, particularly for single-family and factory-built homes in Sun Belt and exurban markets.
- Lower upfront costs in targeted segments, potentially helping moderate-income buyers and easing pressure in high-growth areas.
- Greater use of modular construction where labor shortages persist.
Yet realism is essential. The housing shortage is structural—decades in the making—and driven by more than just federal rules. Local zoning and NIMBY opposition often pose the biggest barriers. Construction labor shortages, material costs, land prices, and interest rates remain major factors. Even optimistic analyses suggest regulatory relief helps incrementally but won’t close a multi-million-unit gap overnight.
Potential downsides include trade-offs in environmental protections (e.g., flood resilience or water quality in some communities) and questions about long-term homeowner costs if energy standards are significantly relaxed. Effects will likely be strongest in pro-growth regions and weaker where local resistance is high.
Paired with the companion order on mortgage credit access, this represents a supply-and-demand-side push, but broader solutions—such as sustained local zoning reform and workforce development—will still be needed.
Bottom Line
Executive Order 14394 is a targeted, supply-focused effort to chip away at federal regulatory costs and delays that contribute to housing unaffordability. It won’t revolutionize the market immediately, but it could deliver meaningful relief for builders and buyers in receptive areas over the next several years—provided agencies act decisively and enough states/localities follow through.
Housing abundance requires coordinated action across government levels. This order is one piece of the puzzle.
What do you think?
Will this executive order make a noticeable difference in your local housing market? Share your thoughts in the comments below, or contact your state and local representatives to discuss adopting pro-housing best practices. If you’re a builder, real estate professional, or potential homebuyer interested in staying updated on implementation, subscribe to this blog for ongoing analysis.
Full text of the order is available on the White House website. Stay informed and engaged—affordable housing starts with informed citizens pushing for practical solutions.

Lynchburg’s trusted REALTOR® (and a local resident since 2006), Nathan is the President of Haefer Homes, loving husband, father of four children, and a local nonprofit volunteer.