
3. Rent and Shelter Costs: The Most Persistent Financial Strain
Housing continues to be the most stubborn and consequential driver of financial stress for American households. According to the BLS, the shelter index—which includes rent and owners’ equivalent rent—has risen by over 3% in the past year. This may be lower than the extreme increases seen during peak inflation, but it still means that millions of renters are facing another round of lease increases in 2025.
For homeowners, rising shelter costs show up in the form of higher property taxes, insurance premiums, and maintenance expenses. For renters, the problem is more direct: higher monthly payments with little relief.
Housing analysts consistently point to supply shortages as a primary cause. In many urban and high-growth suburban areas, vacancy rates remain low, giving landlords significant pricing power. While new construction has increased in some regions, it has not been enough to fully close the gap between supply and demand.
The Hill reported that housing remains one of the toughest inflation categories to tame, even as overall price growth has moderated. Shelter costs alone account for a substantial share of the Consumer Price Index, making them both an economic and political issue.
Under Trump’s second term, housing has not yet experienced the kind of price relief many voters hoped for. For many families, rent increases continue to absorb any savings they may gain from lower gasoline prices or modest wage growth.
Young adults are particularly affected. Higher rents delay homeownership, family formation, and long-term wealth building. Older Americans on fixed incomes also struggle as rent rises faster than Social Security adjustments.
Until housing supply increases meaningfully or demand softens, shelter costs are likely to remain one of the greatest financial burdens facing Americans.