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The First Baby Boomers Turn 80 This Year. Senior Housing REITs Are Jumping In

Published Apr 21, 2026
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Summary:
  • Senior housing occupancy hit 89.1% and is on track to cross 90% in 2026.
  • New construction completions are down 73% since 2021.
  • Welltower invested $14 billion in new senior housing in 2025 alone.

Demographics never surprise anybody. They just arrive slowly, and then all at once.

The first Baby Boomers turn 80 this year. Senior housing occupancy just hit 89.1%, a record. Completions of new senior housing properties are down 73% from their 2021 peak. And the sector's operating margins have climbed past 25% for the first time since 2018.

That's the setup senior housing REITs have been waiting 15 years for.

Why The Supply Side Broke

Senior housing construction has essentially stopped. Interest rates, labour costs, and construction material prices all moved the wrong way at once starting in 2022. Developers walked away. Banks pulled financing.

That means the buildings that already exist are the only ones that will exist for the next three to five years. When demand rises and supply can't, pricing power follows.

It's the same dynamic that happened to apartments after the 2008 housing bust. Builders stopped building for seven years. Then rents went up for 10.

Which REITs Are Positioned

Welltower poured $14 billion into senior housing in 2025. It owns more than 2,000 communities across the US, UK, and Canada.

LTC Properties committed $108 million to a new senior housing operating portfolio investment. CareTrust picked up three senior living communities for $40 million. Even traditional triple-net healthcare REITs, which usually avoid operator risk, are putting skin in the operating model.

The big listed players: Welltower, Ventas, Healthpeak, National Health Investors, LTC Properties, and CareTrust. Collectively they control most of the publicly-traded senior housing exposure in the US.

The Dark Side Worth Naming

NPR reported over the weekend on private equity landlords buying up nursing homes and cutting staff. That's a real, documented pattern. Resident outcomes suffer when the operating model is squeezed for margin.

REITs are landlords, not operators, but the line is thinner than investors sometimes assume. Regulatory pressure on skilled nursing facilities is a real risk that could clip returns on a subset of the portfolios.

How Investors Can Play This

The public REITs with the clearest senior housing exposure are Welltower, Ventas, Healthpeak, National Health Investors, LTC Properties, and CareTrust. Welltower is the biggest, with more than 2,000 communities globally and a $14 billion investment run in 2025 alone.

There's an ETF route for investors who don't want to pick names. Healthcare REIT ETFs like the iShares Residential and Multisector Real Estate ETF hold most of the senior housing majors in one wrapper, which smooths out the single-operator risk.

Inside the sector, the split is between income and growth. The triple-net names like NHI and LTC pay higher dividends but have slower growth. The operator-model names like Welltower and CareTrust reinvest cash flow into the same buildings and target capital appreciation on top of the yield.

Worth Noting

The Silver Tsunami line has been a slide in pitch decks for 20 years. It's not a prediction anymore. By 2034, US Census data says people 65 and over will outnumber people under 18 for the first time ever.

The REITs that own the right buildings just crossed the starting line.

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