A new statewide housing production tracker shows Massachusetts is about 15.6% of the way to reaching its goal of adding 222,000 housing units between 2025 and 2035.
This represents the clearest picture of home production progress Massachusetts has seen in decades as the state continues to grapple with a housing affordability crisis. According to the tracker, which the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities launched on Thursday, Massachusetts added 34,561 homes in 2025 — representing around 15.6% of the state’s 222,000 goal.
“Reliable data is essential to understanding where we are making progress and where more work remains,” Housing Secretary Juana Matias said. “This tracker will help us measure housing production across Massachusetts as we work to increase supply and lower costs, while also providing researchers, policymakers and residents with a transparent view of what’s happening in their communities.”
The tracker measures progress by city and town, and by region, and largely relies on data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Address Count Listing files, which housing officials dubbed the “best available source” and measures residential address counts by block — the smallest census geographic area. Housing officials added that because homes usually receive addresses as they are nearing the end of the development process, the data offers one of the best measures for housing that has been completed and is ready for occupancy.
The Census Bureau updates its Address Count Listing files twice a year. To create the tracker, the agency independently validated data from the address count listings and compared it with certificates of occupancy from municipalities.
The tracker comes almost a year after the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities embarked on the “first significant effort to track both ongoing production and unit completions comprehensively across the state,” according to an Aug. 19, 2025 memo. In February, an office spokesperson told State House News Service that Gov. Maura Healey’s administration was building a “single, comprehensive statewide system for tracking total housing production across all communities and housing types for the first time in state history.”
The Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities has relied on the address count files and the monthly Census Building Permits Survey to track housing production. While experts have acknowledged the Building Permits Survey can be useful, it’s flawed: data is incomplete as many cities and towns don’t respond to the survey, the results likely underestimate how many homes are in the pipeline, and information is scattered because some municipalities keep paper records of permits and others rely on electronic systems.
According to the executive office’s memo, around 71% of municipalities responded to the monthly survey from 2023 through June 2025, whereas 22% did not respond. The remaining 8% of cities and towns offered responses to some, but not all of the surveys.
Also in the memo, the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities said the address count files aren’t perfect: The lead time from listing an address to occupancy hasn’t been determined, meaning the address count could show some units that haven’t been completed. Also, the listing doesn’t account for converting units from year-round to seasonal use, which diminishes the number of units available to residents.
And while current figures show Massachusetts is on its way to reaching its production goal, the state is facing headwinds as high interest rates, labor shortages and rising costs of materials have been hindering developments.
“We know that we need to build more homes to lower costs across the state. This new data shows that we are making serious progress and helping more families, workers, seniors and young people afford homes in their communities,” Healey said in a statement. “But we know there is more work to do. It’s why we’re getting after it every day to increase housing production, help more people become first-time homebuyers, eliminate burdensome renters’ fees and make Massachusetts more affordable for everyone.”
The state housing office said “there are many ways to track housing production activity,” and that it estimated in August 2025 that about 90,400 homes had met one of three milestones — new projects proposed, funding awarded or building permits issued — since Healey’s administration began in January 2023.
There’s been chatter about lawmakers making another major run at housing policy changes this session, but with just a few weeks left for scheduled formal sessions, major bills have not cleared either branch.

