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European Parliament Passes Landmark Housing Rights Resolution
MEPs adopt an ambitious resolution calling housing a fundamental right and demanding concrete EU action on affordability.
A Home for Everyone: The EU Declares Housing a Fundamental Right
The European Parliament adopted, with a substantial majority, a resolution declaring decent housing a fundamental right and demanding that the European Commission translate that declaration into concrete legislative and financial measures capable of making a material difference to the affordability crisis that is reshaping European societies. The vote, following an emotionally charged plenary debate in Brussels in March 2026, represents the strongest statement the Parliament has ever made on housing policy and reflects a sea change in political attention to an issue that had long been treated as primarily a matter of national competence beyond Brussels's reach.
The debate that preceded the vote featured testimony from young Europeans across the continent who described the practical impossibility of accessing decent housing in the cities where their careers and social lives are centred. Students in Dublin paying €1,500 per month for shared rooms. Families in Amsterdam living in social housing for twenty years waiting for transfers. Young professionals in Barcelona spending 60 percent of their income on rent while their parents bought comparable properties for a tenth of today's price a generation ago. MEPs across the political spectrum acknowledged that housing had become a question of social justice and intergenerational fairness that their constituents were demanding be addressed at the highest political level.
The resolution calls for a European Housing Directive establishing minimum standards for affordability and tenant protection, a dedicated European Housing Investment Programme channelling structural funds toward social and affordable housing construction, reforms to the EU's state aid rules to make it easier for member state governments to invest in social housing without triggering competition law constraints, and a comprehensive review of the tax treatment of property investment to reduce incentives for speculative buying that depletes housing stock available for residential occupation.