The Reasons Behind the Decline in Younger Generation Home Purchases in China’s Real Estate Crisis

Go to college, find a job, buy a house, get married: For decades, homeownership has been seen as an essential part of life in China. Based on that long-standing truth, analysts are forecasting optimistic outcomes for China’s housing market. However, all this may come to an end if China’s younger generation ceases to acquire residential properties.

From 2010 to 2020, the proportion of Chinese adults aged 25 to 34 who own homes fell from over 70 percent to 50 percent, with major cities seeing nearly 30 percent of young adults renting their homes, compared to just 11 percent of those aged 45 to 54

This change has been years in the making. Between skyrocketing home prices, the housing market debt default crisis, and a shifting culture, China’s younger generation is facing a vastly different housing market than their parents

In cities like Shanghai, and Beijing, the price-to-income ratio – the cost of housing relative to annual wages – has reached staggering heights. And it’s not those mega-cities alone. Shenzhen, for instance, also boasts one of the world’s most unaffordable property markets, where the average home costs 43 times the median annual income. In similar metropolises like London or New York, the ratio hovers around 15-20.

China’s housing bubble began forming in the early 2000s, driven by rapid urbanization and speculative investment. The government chose to encourage property purchases to generate economic growth, which led to a cultural mindset that investment in real estate was a sure-fire path to wealth. Developers raced to meet demand, creating entire “ghost cities” filled with vacant but purchased units – symbols of speculative overreach.

This speculative frenzy has placed extraordinary pressure on younger buyers. A 2023 survey found that the majority of first-time buyers rely on family wealth for down payments, with over 70 percent of homebuyers receiving financial assistance from their parents. But many more are locked out of the housing market without parents’ support.

Even as prices soar, the risks of purchasing a home are growing. The collapse of major developers like Evergrande in 2021 made national headlines, serving as a cautionary tale for China’s overheated property sector. Once a symbol of the country’s rapid urbanization and economic growth, Evergrande’s staggering $300 billion debt exposed systemic vulnerabilities within the housing market. Construction projects were left unfinished, homebuyers were stranded with mortgages on non-existent properties, and investor confidence plummeted.

Evergrande’s default crisis was not an isolated case. Other developers, including Sunac and Country Garden, have also struggled to repay mounting debts amid tightening government regulations and slowing demand. Concerns over the financial health of property developers have crippled buyer trust in the housing market.

And it doesn’t help that the government isn’t providing compensation for the damage done to current buyers. Pre-paid homes are left half-built, with no water or electricity, leaving their buyers with a shattered future and debts that they are obligated to pay for 20 or even 30 years.

The common perception of property as a safe investment has been shattered. Housing, once considered a pillar of financial security, is now viewed by many as a risky gamble, forcing younger generations to reconsider before betting their future on an unstable market.

China’s housing market faces a pivotal moment. If prices continue to rise unchecked while economic growth slows, the disconnect between wages and housing costs will widen further, threatening both social stability and consumer confidence.

But for now, China’s younger generation remains caught between tradition and reality. The dream of owning a home still holds powerful cultural sway, but for many, the pursuit is giving way to pragmatism. If systemic changes – such as meaningful price corrections or improved housing policies – do not materialize, China’s youth may reshape the country’s relationship with homeownership entirely.

As Zhang Li, a 27-year-old freelance designer, put it: “Our parents saw a house as the foundation for their lives. But for us, it feels more like a burden than a blessing.”