Itās hard to scroll online lately without seeing some version of this claim:
āBig investors are buying up all the homes.ā
And honestly, if youāre a homebuyer whoās lost out on a few offers, that idea probably sounds believable. When homes are expensive, and competition is tight, itās easy to assume that giant companies are scooping up everything behind the scenes.
But hereās the thing: what people assume is happening and what the data actually shows arenāt always the same.
Letās look at whatās really happening with large institutional investors in todayās housing market ā because the numbers tell a much different story than the headlines.
The Number Most People Wonāt See Online
Letās start with the most important stat. According toĀ John Burns Research & ConsultingĀ (JBREC),Ā large institutional investors ā those that own 100 or more homes ā made up justĀ 1.2%Ā of all home purchases in Q3 of 2025Ā (see graph below):

Thatās it.Ā Out of every 100 homes sold, only about 1 went to a large institutional investor.
And hereās an important point that often gets missed:Ā that level of investor activity is very much in line with historical norms. Itās not unusually high, and itās actually well below the recent peak of 3.1% back in 2022, which itself was still a small share of the overall market.
So, while it can feel like big investors are everywhere, nationally, theyāre a very small part of overall home sales.
Why Investor Activity Gets So Much Attention
There are two main reasons this topic gets so much attention:
- Investor activity isnāt spread evenly. Investors are more active in certain markets, which can make competition feel intense for homebuyers in those areas. As Lance Lambert, Co-Founder ofĀ ResiClub, explains:āOn a national level, ālarge investors’āthose owning at least 100 single-family homesāonly own around 1% of total single-family housing stock. That said, in a handful of regional housing markets, institutional and large single-family landlords have a much larger presence.ā
- Investor is a broad term.Part of what makes the share of purchases bought by investors sound so big is because many headlines lump large Wall Street institutions together with small, local investors (like your neighbor who owns one or two rental homes). But those are very different buyers.In reality,Ā most investors are small, local owners,Ā not massive corporations. And when all investors get grouped together in the headlines as a single stat, it inflates the number and makes it seem like big institutions are dominating the market (even though theyāre not).
Yes, big investors exist. Yes, they buy homes. But nationally, theyāre responsible for a very small share of total purchases ā far smaller than most people assume.
The bigger challenges around affordability have much more to do with supply, demand, and years of underbuildingĀ than with large institutions competing against everyday buyers.
Thatās why itās so important to separate noise from reality, especially if youāre trying to decide if now is the right time to move.
Bottom Line
If you want to talk through what investor activity actually looks like in our local market, and how it impacts your options (or doesnāt), give me a call…let’s connect.
Sometimes a little context makes all the difference.
