Hey there, bargain hunter.
This one does not require any forecast. It requires a census.
The oldest Baby Boomers turned 80 this year. That is the average age at which Americans move into assisted living and senior care facilities. More than 10,000 Americans turn 65 every single day. The 80-and-older population in the U.S. is projected to grow 48% between 2025 and 2030 — adding millions of age-qualified households at a rate this sector has never seen.
And new construction completions for senior housing are currently down roughly 73% from their 2021 peak.
That is the setup in four sentences. Now here is the data.
Senior housing occupancy reached 89.9% in primary markets and 90% in secondary markets as of Q4 2025 — nineteen consecutive quarters of positive absorption since the pandemic. The National Investment Center for Seniors Housing projects occupancy will breach 90% by year-end 2026, potentially the highest level recorded in the 20 years NIC MAP has tracked the data. Rents have grown 28.8% above pre-COVID levels to an average of $5,479 per month as of Q4 2025. Annual rent growth of more than 5% is forecast by CBRE for the next 36 months.
This is what tightening supply against structurally locked demand looks like.
Transaction volume in the sector reached $24 billion on a rolling four-quarter basis by year-end 2025 — the highest level since Q2 2015. And 86% of institutional survey respondents told JLL they plan to expand their seniors housing portfolios in 2026. Only 4% are reducing exposure. Cap rate compression is underway, with 85% of survey respondents expecting further compression over the next 12 months.
Private capital accounted for 50% of transactions by volume in 2025. REITs and public buyers took 32%, up from 24% the year before. Institutional conviction here is not theoretical. It’s moving.
The part people skip: this is not a cyclical real estate trade. It is demographic and it extends well past 2030. Every person who will be 80 in 2030 is already alive today. The demand is not a forecast. It is a census.
The publicly traded names worth following include Welltower (WELL), Ventas (VTR), and Sabra Health Care REIT (SBRA) on the REIT side. For those looking at operators, Brookdale Senior Living (BKD) has been restructuring through exactly this demand inflection. None of these are guaranteed winners — labor costs, insurance, and affordability of the middle-market renter are real risks. But the structural backdrop is as clean as anything in commercial real estate right now.
When supply is at a 17-year low and demand is at an all-time high, you do not need a complicated thesis. You need to decide whether to act before the trade becomes consensus.
It is getting there.
