For the past five years, Société immobilière Bélanger has built one of Quebec’s most stable multifamily portfolios: nearly 4,000 rental units with a vacancy rate below 1%. The company ...
'We Have a Real Problem With Housing Here,' Says Connecticut Builder as State Bucks National Market Slowdown




While much of the nation grapples with market uncertainty and growing inventory, Connecticut faces a persistent and intensifying housing shortage that shows no signs of easing, according to a veteran builder in the state.
“Here in Connecticut, we have kind of a unique situation. We continue to have record level shortage in housing here. So we’re kind of separate from the rest of the nation,” says Jason Helton, Sales Consultant at EG Group Realty, a Connecticut-based homebuilder.
Shifting Buyer Dynamics Amid Continued Scarcity
Despite economic headwinds affecting other regions, Connecticut’s housing scarcity continues driving steady demand, though the nature of that demand is evolving, Helton notes.
“The unique traffic that we have been seeing has declined just slightly. But I think it’s the less serious buyers that are not out in demand right now, and we’re kind of left with the more serious buyers,” Helton explains. “So the people that have been coming through our doors have been more quality over quantity.”
This shift toward more qualified and motivated buyers has helped maintain sales momentum even as other markets see pullbacks, according to Helton.
The Low-Maintenance Appeal
One factor driving sustained demand is the growing preference for move-in ready, low-maintenance properties across buyer demographics, Helton observes.
“Persons that are purchasing in our community here typically are looking for maintenance-free or low-maintenance lifestyle,” says Helton. This appeals not just to younger buyers but also to “downsizers…persons that are just sick and tired of mowing their three acres and picking up all the leaves.”
Growth Plans Despite Market Uncertainty
Rather than pulling back, EG Group Realty is pursuing ambitious expansion plans to address the persistent housing shortfall. “Over the next five years, we want to double the number of doors that we’re able to close and open for our communities here,” Helton says.
The company is exploring opportunities both within Connecticut and potentially beyond state lines to meet their growth targets, signaling confidence in sustained demand despite broader market uncertainty.
While Helton acknowledges the reality of economic headwinds, he argues Connecticut’s fundamental supply-demand imbalance creates a unique market dynamic that continues driving opportunity for builders willing to expand thoughtfully to meet the persistent need for new housing stock.
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
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