3 Stocks Built for America's Affordable Housing Reality

By Chris Markoch | January 17, 2026, 8:21 AM

Manufactured home with housing models outside reflects housing stocks rallying on demand and affordability trends.

Affordability is the key issue in 2026, which, to many Americans' chagrin, is another election year. Housing is front and center in this debate. Home prices remain stubbornly high, and mortgage rates, though easing slightly, are still challenging for first-time buyers.  

The larger issue comes down to supply and demand. Millions of Americans are effectively priced out of conventional single-family homes, and the search for affordable housing has become urgent.

But it’s not as simple as just building more homes. Traditional homebuilders are struggling to keep up with demand due to labor shortages, zoning restrictions, and rising material costs.

One area that may provide a compelling solution is manufactured housing. These are factory-built homes that can be placed in communities. These homes cost 30–50% less per square foot than site-built houses, can be built much faster, and provide an ownership pathway for households otherwise stuck renting.

They also generate strong recurring income for investors when placed in well-managed communities, where homeowners own their units but rent the land, creating “sticky” occupancy and reliable cash flows.

For investors, this combination of rising demand, limited supply, and predictable revenue streams creates an attractive opportunity. Sun Communities Inc. (NYSE: SUI)Champion Homes (NYSE: SKY), and UMH Properties Inc. (NYSE: UMH) represent three distinct ways to invest in this market. Each offers a different investment theme: community operators with scale, manufacturers benefiting from volume growth, and smaller operators focused on yield and organic expansion.

Key Risks to the Manufactured Home Growth

While manufactured housing has strong structural tailwinds, investors should weigh several risks. First, regulatory pressure is rising, particularly in states and municipalities scrutinizing rent increases in manufactured home communities. Any widespread implementation of rent controls could limit revenue growth for community operators.

Second, interest-rate sensitivity affects both manufacturers and buyers. Many manufactured home purchasers rely on specialized chattel loans, which carry higher rates than traditional mortgages. Rising rates could reduce demand for new homes, affecting companies like Champion Homes most directly.

Finally, zoning and local resistance remain persistent challenges. Even as demand grows, building new communities can be delayed or blocked in certain regions, limiting growth opportunities for smaller operators like UMH Properties. These risks do not negate the opportunity but highlight the importance of selecting companies with scale, operational efficiency, and diversified geographic exposure.

Sun Communities: A Defensive Play on the Housing Shortage

Sun Communities is a real estate investment trust (REIT) that is one of the largest owners and operators of manufactured housing communities in North America. The company benefits from a structural advantage: residents who own their homes but rent the land rarely move, creating sticky occupancy and dependable cash flow.

SUI’s national footprint also allows it to acquire and professionalize smaller, fragmented properties, boosting efficiency and net operating income over time. The company’s presence in high-growth Sun Belt markets further supports demand as population inflows continue to pressure local housing supply.

While political scrutiny over rent increases is a real risk, the company's scale, operating discipline, and diversified portfolio position it to navigate regulatory challenges better than smaller peers.

For investors seeking a defensive way to benefit from the affordability crisis, Sun Communities offers steady income with long-term growth potential. Analysts give SUI stock a consensus price target of $136.69, but the latest analyst ratings have had price targets between 3% and 4% higher. Plus SUI stock pays a dividend with an attractive 3.3% yield and has increased the dividend by an average of 4.6% in the last three years. 

Champion Homes: The Picks-and-Shovels Play on Manufactured Housing

Champion Homes approaches the manufactured housing opportunity from the other side of the equation: production. As one of the largest manufacturers of factory-built homes in the U.S., the company stands to benefit directly from rising demand for lower-cost housing options.

Manufactured homes can be built faster and at significantly lower cost per square foot than traditional site-built houses, making them increasingly attractive to first-time buyers, retirees, and workforce households.

The appeal of SKY is operating leverage. As shipments rise, incremental volume can translate into outsized gains in margins and earnings. In addition, government and municipal initiatives aimed at expanding affordable housing could support long-term demand for factory-built homes.

The tradeoff is cyclicality. Manufactured home purchases often rely on specialized financing, which can tighten when interest rates are high or economic conditions weaken.

Having said that, SKY stock is expensive at 24x earnings, and the company’s backlog is down year-over-year. But it’s not that expensive to the sector average for construction stocks, and it could be more rewarding if affordability pressures continue to shift buyers toward manufactured housing at scale.

UMH Properties: A High-Yield Play on Affordable Housing Demand

UMH Properties offers a hybrid of income and growth within the manufactured housing space. The company is a self-administered REIT that owns and operates communities primarily in the Midwest and Northeast. These are two regions where zoning restrictions and limited new construction have created persistent housing shortages.

Unlike many peers, UMH has focused on organic growth by filling vacant sites within existing communities, improving returns without heavy acquisition spending. This “infill” strategy allows UMH to increase occupancy and rental revenue while keeping capital expenditures relatively modest.

The company also stands out for its higher dividend yield (5.67% as of this writing), appealing to investors seeking current income alongside long-term appreciation. To that end, UMH stock has a consensus price target of $18, giving it the highest upside of the stocks on this list.

However, UMH is smaller and more leveraged than larger competitors, which can magnify risk during periods of higher interest rates or tighter credit markets. Still, in under-supplied regions where demand for affordable housing remains strong, UMH’s disciplined growth approach could translate into improving cash flow and shareholder returns over time.

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The article "3 Stocks Built for America’s Affordable Housing Reality" first appeared on MarketBeat.

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