NAHB Opposes House Democrats’ Plan for $2 Trillion in New Taxes

Housing Affordability
Published

NAHB is sounding the alarm to lawmakers as House Democrats within the Ways and Means Committee begin consideration of a massive overhaul of the tax code which would generate over $2 trillion in additional tax revenue over the next 10 years.

While the legislation also includes critical and much-needed affordable housing investments, this is far outweighed by trillions of dollars in job-killing tax hikes — which risk broad harm to the still fragile economy — along with direct and indirect cost increases on housing.

These changes are being considered to fund part of the Democrats ambitious Build Back Better plan, which focuses on what the White House refers to as "human infrastructure."

The most concerning tax changes in the plan would:

  • Increase the marginal tax rates on individuals as well as corporations;
  • Reduce 1202 gains for certain small business investors;
  • Increase the capital gains rate;
  • Expand the application of the Net Investment Income Tax to active income;
  • Limit 199A deductions;
  • Alter the estate tax that may affect family-owned businesses; and
  • Otherwise limit business losses.

Many of these tax hikes will inevitably be passed along to new home buyers and renters and will result in a reduction of home building activity at a time when greater supply is urgently needed.

NAHB is fully engaged with Congress and working to blunt or roll back these proposed tax increases. If the Democrats remain unified, the procedural process being used by the Democrats allows them to move forward without Republican support, avoiding the filibuster in the Senate. This process has been used various times by both parties to enact many policy priorities, including by Republicans to enact tax reform in 2017 and Democrats to overhaul the health care system in 2010.

Read NAHB’s letter to the House Ways and Means Committee.

Subscribe to NAHBNow

Log in or create account to subscribe to notifications of new posts.

Log in to subscribe

Latest from NAHBNow

Workforce Development

Jan 20, 2026

Plan Early for Summer Internship Season with NAHB Resources

The most effective internship programs don’t come together at the last minute. To help, NAHB offers the Internship Program Development Guide and Appendices to the Internship Program Development Guide.

Sponsored Content

Jan 20, 2026

Smart Sourcing, Smarter Basis: How AI Is Changing Land Acquisition

For decades, the process of screening off-market sites has remained painfully slow. But a shift is happening as top-tier land teams are moving away from manual data aggregation and toward AI-driven workflows to eliminate non-viable sites in minutes.

View all

Latest Economic News

Economics

Jan 20, 2026

New Single-Family Home Size Trends: Third Quarter 2025

New single-family home size has been generally falling since 2015 as a response to declining affordability conditions. An exception occurred when new home size increased in 2021 as interest rates reached historic lows. However, as interest rates increased in 2022 and 2023, and housing affordability worsened, the demand for home size has trended lower.

Economics

Jan 20, 2026

Third Quarter 2025 Multifamily Construction Data

According to NAHB analysis of quarterly Census data, the count of multifamily, for-rent housing starts increased during the third quarter of 2025. For the quarter, 119,000 multifamily residences started construction. Of this total, 114,000 were built-for-rent.

Economics

Jan 19, 2026

Soft Conditions for Single-Family Built-for-Rent

Single-family built-for-rent construction fell back in the third quarter of 2025, as a higher cost of financing and increased multifamily supply crowded out development.