Zillow Research

Highlights From Research on Rents and Homelessness

Nationally, at least 550,000 people experienced homelessness for at least one night in 2016. That figure is based on local counts compiled by the U.S. Department of Urban Housing and Development. The counts are estimates, particularly in places like Los Angeles where many people who experience homelessness sleep outside rather than in shelters, making them harder to count. One study found that as few as 59 percent of unsheltered homeless people are included in a count.

In our research, we used statistical modeling to improve those estimates, then created a framework for investigating how changes in rent would affect the size of the homeless population. Given that logistics and expenses prevent metros from conducting more counts of homeless populations each year, this research also offers a statistical way to generate hypothetical additional counts every year.

Key points regarding homeless counts

Key points regarding rising rents and homelessness

Additional information

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