The Bermuda government has acknowledged mounting pressures on its housing system as official data reveals a significant increase in households awaiting public housing assistance. According to recent statistics from the Bermuda Housing Corporation (BHC), the waiting list expanded from 333 to 357 households between November and December 2025, highlighting growing challenges for vulnerable community members.
Deputy Premier and Minister of Housing and Municipalities Zane Desilva presented concerning trends during a press briefing, noting that while urgent cases continue to dominate applications, the most rapid growth now occurs among regular applicants. This category predominantly includes working individuals and families increasingly unable to afford market-rate rentals. Nearly 60% of applicants sought studio or one-bedroom units, reflecting particular pressures on seniors with fixed incomes, single-person households, and smaller family units.
The government is responding with a comprehensive Affordable Housing Strategy for 2025-2035, designed as a long-term framework to address Bermuda’s housing gap. The multipronged approach focuses on expanding and diversifying housing supply, rehabilitating derelict properties, improving affordability, modernizing regulations, and strengthening governance across the housing system.
Desilva emphasized that housing represents a whole-of-government responsibility requiring inter-ministerial collaboration. Initial consultations with government ministries have concluded, with technical departments now engaged in the process. A public consultation draft is anticipated for release in February 2026.
A technical advisory team comprising representatives from BHC and Bermuda Land Management Corporation is exploring alternative construction methods including precast concrete, modular, and prefabricated systems. These innovations aim to reduce construction costs, accelerate delivery timelines, and maintain local contractor involvement.
Looking toward the 2026-27 financial year, officials have identified over 30 sites across the island for potential development, all already under government ownership. Current projects in progress promise 37 new affordable housing units, with most expected to become available within coming months.
