When Washington Tells Builders to “Build More,” St. Louis Tells a Different Story

Build More Houses

When a federal housing official publicly tells homebuilders to “build more,” it sounds simple enough. More homes should mean more supply, and more supply should ease affordability pressures.

That logic works at a national level. On the ground in the St. Louis region, the story is far more complicated.

Recently, **Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte called on builders to accelerate construction on lots they already control, arguing that housing affordability will not improve without increased production. The message was clear and widely shared.

What matters just as much is where that message runs into local reality.

City of Ballwin MO annexation Plans -

The assumption behind the headline

The national argument assumes there is a meaningful backlog of buildable, entitled, shovel-ready lots that builders are choosing not to develop.

In some fast-growth markets, that may be partially true.

In much of the St. Louis region, it is not.

Here, the constraint is rarely unused lots waiting on builders. It is far more often a combination of limited buildable land, zoning and density restrictions, infrastructure requirements, permitting timelines, and rising construction, labor, and financing costs.

Those factors shape what gets built, where it gets built, and whether it makes financial sense to build at all.

Why “just build more houses” is not so simple locally

In built-out communities like Kirkwood, there are very few vacant, ready-to-go residential lots. Most new construction comes from teardowns, assemblages, or infill development, each of which involves time, neighborhood input, regulatory review, and real financial risk.

Even when a builder owns land, it does not automatically mean they can or should build immediately. Market conditions, interest rates, labor availability, and municipal requirements all influence timing.

The presence of land does not equal the presence of feasibility.

Why the impact would vary across the St. Louis region

While national pressure on builders may resonate in fast-growth markets, its impact across the St. Louis region would be uneven. Established inner-ring communities like Kirkwood, Webster Groves, and Brentwood are largely built out, with development driven primarily by teardowns and infill. In those areas, housing supply is shaped far more by zoning, infrastructure, and neighborhood review than by whether builders are holding unused lots.

Any meaningful effect from federal pressure would be more likely felt in outer-ring suburbs and growth corridors, where larger tracts of subdividable land still exist and production-style building is more feasible. Even there, construction timelines remain constrained by financing, labor, and buyer affordability, not just land availability.

What this means for buyers hoping for relief

It is understandable that buyers hear calls like this and hope it will lead to a wave of new homes and lower prices.

Locally, meaningful relief from supply pressure is more likely to come from thoughtful infill and redevelopment, a mix of housing types rather than single-family homes alone, incremental increases in density where infrastructure supports it, and predictable, efficient permitting processes.

None of those are quick fixes. But they are the levers that actually move the needle in established communities.

What this means for sellers watching the market

For sellers, national headlines about “millions of empty lots” can feel disconnected from reality. In much of the St. Louis region, resale inventory remains constrained relative to demand. New construction is not flooding the market, and it is unlikely to do so in the near term.

That context matters when evaluating pricing, timing, and expectations.

The disconnect between federal pressure and local reality

Federal agencies can encourage, signal, and apply pressure. They cannot rezone neighborhoods, expand sewer capacity, widen roads, or shorten municipal review timelines.

Housing is built locally, under local rules, responding to local economics.

That does not make the national conversation wrong. It makes it incomplete without local context.

The real question worth asking

The better question for communities across the St. Louis region is not whether builders should simply build faster, but how cities can responsibly support the type of housing their residents actually need, in places where land is scarce and change is closely watched.

That is a harder conversation than a headline. It is also the one that actually shapes outcomes.

If you’re thinking about buying, selling, or exploring your options, I’m here to guide you with clarity and care.If you are trying to understand how national housing policy debates intersect with what is happening in your own neighborhood, your buying power, or your home’s value, local perspective matters. As a Kirkwood resident and real estate professional, I help clients make sense of how these big-picture conversations translate into very real, very personal decisions.

Karen Moeller
Karen Moeller
🌐 STLKaren.com
📧 Karen.McNeill@STLRE.com
📞 314.678.7866

About the Author:
Karen Moeller is a St. Louis area REALTOR® with MORE, REALTORS® and a regular contributor to St. Louis Real Estate News, helping clients make informed, data-driven decisions.


📬 Stay Ahead of the St Louis Market

Get local real estate updates, trends & insights — as soon as they publish.

Homeowners, buyers, investors & agents rely on us for what really matters in STL real estate.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

📬 Want St Louis real estate updates as they drop?

Comments are closed.

St Louis Real Estate Search®         St Louis Home Values

St. Louis Real Estate News        Contact Us

Copyright © 2026 Missouri Online Real Estate, Inc. - All Rights Reserved
St Louis Real Estate News is a Trademark of Missouri Online Real Estate, Inc.

Missouri Online Real Estate, Inc. 3636 South Geyer Road - Suite 100, St Louis, MO 63127 314-414-6000 - Licensed Real Estate Broker in Missouri

The owner and authors this site are providing the information on this web site for general informational purposes only and make no representations, warranties (expressed or implied) or guarantees of any kind whatsoever, as to the accuracy or completeness of any information on this site or of any information found by following any link on this site. Furthermore, the owner and authors of this site will not be liable in any manner whatsoever for any errors or omissions in information on this site, nor for the availability of this information. Additionally the owner and authors of this site will not be liable for for any losses, injuries or damages in any way from the display or use of this information or as the result of following external links displayed on this site, or by responding to advertisements displayed, or contained, on this site In using this site, users acknowledge and agree that the information on this site does not constitute the provision of legal advice, tax advice, accounting services, investment advice, or professional consulting of any kind nor should it be construed as such. The information provided herein should not be used as a substitute for consultation with professional tax, accounting, legal, or other competent advisers. Before making any decision or taking any action on this information, you should consult a qualified professional adviser to whom you have provided all of the facts applicable to your particular situation or question. None of the tax information on this web site is intended to be used nor can it be used by any taxpayer, for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be imposed on the taxpayer.
All of the information on this site is provided as is, with no assurance or guarantee of completeness, accuracy, or timeliness of the information, and without warranty of any kind, express or implied, including but not limited to warranties of performance, merchantability, and fitness for a particular purpose.
This site contains external links to other sites not owned or controlled by the owner of this site, therefore the owner of this site does not control or guarantee in any manner the accuracy or relevancy of any information obtained through following such links. Links contained on this site are for users convenience and users should exercise extreme caution when following links. Including a link on this site does not constitute an endorsement of the site linked to or any views or opinions expressed on the site, products or services offered on outside sites or the companies or organizations that own and operate outside sites.
This site may accept payment for advertising, for displaying advertisements, through affiliate relationships with companies or may receive referral fees or commissions from companies as a result of recommending or referring people to a website. This site may also accept free product samples, free services, gift cards or cash to review a product or service. All paid and sponsored content may not always be identified as such. Any product claim, quote or other representation about a product or service should be verified with the manufacturer or provider.