Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    TRENDING :
    • This common travel habit is now banned on American Airlines flights
    • Market Talk – April 29, 2026
    • Uber just expanded into hotels, AI, and ‘room service’ and it’s moving fast
    • Social media’s big tobacco moment is just a first step
    • Ghirardelli Chocolate products recalled over Salmonella fears. Avoid this list of 13 beverage mixes
    • Google, TikTok and Meta could be taxed by Australia to fund its newsrooms
    • MacKenzie Scott says we underestimate the impact of small acts of kindness. Science agrees
    • Trump says Iran ‘better get smart soon’ as economies deal with skyrocketing energy prices
    Compatriot Chronicle
    • Home
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    • Economy
    • Business
    • Headline News
    Compatriot Chronicle
    Home»Business»Housing affordability is so elusive that Beazer Homes is rewriting the playbook
    Business

    Housing affordability is so elusive that Beazer Homes is rewriting the playbook

    October 25, 20256 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Want more housing market stories from Lance Lambert’s ResiClub in your inbox? Subscribe to the ResiClub newsletter.

    Since mortgage rates spiked in 2022, many large homebuilders have tried to make homes more affordable by shrinking them, stripping them down, or pushing buyers farther out. Allan Merrill, CEO of Atlanta-based Beazer Homes—a publicly traded builder with a $710 million market capitalization and the 23rd-largest single-family homebuilder last year—believes that’s the wrong approach.

    “The way I think about it is, I don’t want to sell you a cheaper home,” Merrill told ResiClub last week. “I want to sell you a home that costs you less every month to live in—and one that will still hold its value five or ten years from now.”

    Beazer’s plan focuses on three key areas: lowering the cost to power, insure, and finance a home.

    “If you can take $150 or $200 a month out of your operating cost [monthly payment], that’s real affordability,” Merrill said. “We’re not trying to sell you less house—we’re trying to sell you a better, more efficient one.”

    Allan Merrill [Photo: Beazer Homes]

    Affordability lever #1: Cutting energy bills through design, not gimmicks

    The centerpiece of Beazer’s affordability push is its energy efficiency standard. Every Beazer home is built to the Energy Rated Value—a benchmark that exceeds building codes and emphasizes insulation, air filtration, and low humidity levels.

    “We pride ourselves on building beyond [local] energy codes so you are buying a home from the future today,” Merrill says. “You don’t want to buy a home that’s functionally obsolete the day you close.” Beazer sees this as more than a sustainability move—it’s a financial one. Lower energy bills directly reduce a homeowner’s monthly cost of living, which Merrill calls “material savings.”

    “It’s $100 a month, $200 a month on the margin,” he says. “The present value of that is in the thousands of dollars, but over the life of the loan could be over $30,000 [in savings].”

    Beazer says its homes are designed to feel tangibly different: quieter, better insulated, and healthier. “It feels different in here,” Merrill says. “It sounds different. It smells different. A home with double-filtered fresh air and low humidity literally feels different.”

    Merrill says this is all underscored in Beazers new campaign, “Enjoy the Great Indoors.”

    Affordability lever #2: Lowering insurance costs through an in-house agency

    The second affordability lever comes not from the home itself, but from the insurance that protects it. Beazer has its own insurance agency—and it gives away the profits.

    Beazer wanted to have an agency to organize the proposals from the different firms, Merrill explains, adding: “But that entity distributes its profits to our charitable foundation—and that’s actually what we do with title insurance as well.”

    The Beazer insurance agency operates in-house, handling the paperwork and logistics of homeowners’ and title insurance while keeping buyers’ costs competitive. Because it isn’t structured to make money for Beazer, it can pass along more savings to the buyer. It’s a small but symbolic move in a business where hidden transaction fees are common.

    “We don’t need to make money on every piece of the home purchase,” he says. “We’re trying to make homeownership more attainable.”

    Affordability lever #3: Reducing mortgage costs with an in-house competition platform

    The third pillar of Beazer’s affordability strategy is the company’s in-house mortgage platform, which hosts a marketplace of competing lenders. “In mortgage, there are literally no economics to us,” Merrill says. “We are not lenders, we are not brokers, we are in no way in the mortgage business. We have a platform where the banks can compete effectively, directly for the buyers.”

    Unlike some other builders, Beazer doesn’t have a captive finance arm that earns interest or fees, he says. Instead, the company uses its internal program to connect buyers directly to multiple banks—and takes no profit from the transaction. That competition, Merrill says, often drives rates below what buyers would find on their own.

    “Today, you’ll see permanent buydowns in the 4.99% range [in many markets], down from the low sixes,” he explains. “Every 25 basis points costs about a point—but we’re not adding a margin on top of that.” By building both the insurance and mortgage processes in-house—but running them as service models, not profit centers—Beazer is says it’s able to lower monthly payments for its homebuyers.

    Building forward, not backward

    What some other builders—those going smaller or cutting back on quality—are doing, Merrill argues, would be like Apple bringing back the iPhone 13 or 14 instead of rolling out the iPhone 18. “I don’t think that’s a great long-term strategy,” he says.

    Merrill said the company’s approach differs from many of its publicly traded peers, which have leaned on aggressive incentives or cheaper design packages to maintain volume in a high-rate environment. “In an attempt to reduce cost, what we see a lot in the industry is we’re effectively going backward.”

    Beazer, instead, is investing to make each home iteration better than the last—even as affordability pressures mount. “We have continued to innovate,” Merrill said. “I want to deliver the version [iPhone] 19 and version 20, and have their feature be your low cost of operation. Instead of saying, ‘Good news, you can buy something that was available five years ago.’”

    Beazer Homes: Policymakers could help out if they lowered building fees

    In Merrill’s view, the housing affordability strain isn’t just about interest rates—it’s about decades of underinvestment in infrastructure and an overreliance on permit and impact fees that push costs onto new homebuyers.

    “In Northern California, it’s $140,000 [spent by us] before we even break ground—just in [government] fees,” Merrill said. “Across the country, it’s $60,000 or $70,000. That number used to be under $10,000 [per home].”

    He compares having new builds shoulder a disproportionate share of government revenue through impact and permit fees to the way the U.S. runs budget deficits: “We’ve been living on credit, but instead of running up a big deficit, we’ve just shifted it to the next generation of homebuyers,” he said. “Then we complain about why they can’t buy homes.”

    Beazer Homes CEO Allan Merrill is among the speakers at ResiDay 2025. ResiClub is hosting the one-day conference on Friday, November 7, in New York City.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    This common travel habit is now banned on American Airlines flights

    April 29, 2026

    Uber just expanded into hotels, AI, and ‘room service’ and it’s moving fast

    April 29, 2026

    Social media’s big tobacco moment is just a first step

    April 29, 2026
    Top News

    ‘Skibidi’ and Other Slang Words Favored by Young Americans Find Their Way Into the Dictionary | The Gateway Pundit

    By Staff WriterAugust 24, 2025

    If Gen Z slang phrases go away you scratching your head, the Cambridge Dictionary has…

    These are the best (and worst) cities for women to live, work, and thrive

    September 23, 2025

    The most popular social media platform isn’t TikTok or X

    November 28, 2025

    Amazon Go is dead. Was grab-and-go retail a fantasy?

    January 30, 2026
    Top Trending

    This common travel habit is now banned on American Airlines flights

    By Staff WriterApril 29, 2026

    Passengers flying with low battery on their phones might be out of…

    Market Talk – April 29, 2026

    By Staff WriterApril 29, 2026

    ASIA: The major Asian stock markets had a mixed day today: •…

    Uber just expanded into hotels, AI, and ‘room service’ and it’s moving fast

    By Staff WriterApril 29, 2026

    Uber Technologies is doing everything it can to save its customers’ time,…

    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    About us

    The Populist Bulletin serves as a beacon for the populist movement, which champions the interests of ordinary citizens over the agendas of the powerful and entrenched elitists. Rooted in the belief that the voices of everyday workers, families, and communities are often drowned out by powerful people and institutions, it delivers straightforward, unfiltered, compelling, relatable stories that resonate with the values of the American public.

    The Populist Bulletin was founded with a fervent commitment to inform, inspire, empower and spark meaningful conversations about the economy, business, politics, inequality, government accountability and overreach, globalization, and the preservation of American cultural heritage.

    The site offers a dynamic mix of investigative journalism, opinion editorials, and viral content that amplify populist sentiments and deliver stories that echo the concerns of everyday Americans while boldly challenging mainstream narratives that serve the privileged few.

    Top Picks

    This common travel habit is now banned on American Airlines flights

    April 29, 2026

    Market Talk – April 29, 2026

    April 29, 2026

    Uber just expanded into hotels, AI, and ‘room service’ and it’s moving fast

    April 29, 2026
    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    Copyright © 2025 Populist Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.