---
title: "Bozeman shows what happens when wealth arrives faster than housing"
description: "Bozeman's population has grown about 20 percent since the pandemic and local realtors say home values jumped 40 percent in two years. A rent strike at two mobile home parks marks the point where the last affordable tier of housing starts to give way."
category: "Economy"
category_url: https://boursel.com/category/economy
author: "Hannah Blackwood"
published: 2026-07-19T02:05:00.000Z
updated: 2026-07-19T02:05:00.000Z
canonical: https://boursel.com/article/bozeman-shows-what-happens-when-wealth-arrives-faster-than-housing
tags: ["housing", "montana", "amenity-migration", "remote-work", "affordability"]
---
# Bozeman shows what happens when wealth arrives faster than housing

Bozeman's population has grown about 20 percent since the pandemic and local realtors say home values jumped 40 percent in two years. A rent strike at two mobile home parks marks the point where the last affordable tier of housing starts to give way.

Bozeman, Montana is a case study in a problem that has become common across the
mountain west and in resort economies worldwide: what happens when money
arrives somewhere faster than housing can be built for the people who already
live there.

Since the pandemic, Bozeman's population has grown by about 20 percent, a very
large increase for a town that had fewer than 50,000 residents in 2019,
[according to the BBC](https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckg92d8d40yo). Mark
Corner, president of Southwest Montana Realtors, told the broadcaster that
buyers arrived in numbers as people began "fleeing the Covid mess … on the East
Coast and West Coast," and that local home values "jumped 40% in two years."

## The mechanics of an amenity boom

The economics here are not mysterious, and they are not really about Montana.

When people who earn their income remotely can live anywhere, they bid for
housing in places chosen for scenery and quality of life. Their wages are set
by a national or global labor market; local housing supply is set by local
constraints. The result is that incomes and house prices decouple, because the
marginal buyer of a Bozeman house is no longer someone earning a Bozeman wage.

Montana added a second attraction on top of the landscape. The state has for
years drawn people who value its emphasis on self-reliance, and it levies no
sales tax, no luxury tax and no inheritance tax. Jeff Michael, director of the
Bureau of Business and Economic Research at the University of Montana, also
pointed to the pull of the television drama Yellowstone, saying that people in
the state believe the show "had an impact on the housing market." That is a
claim about perception rather than a measured effect, but the underlying
mechanism, places becoming desirable faster than they can expand, is well
documented.

Supply cannot respond quickly. Buildable private land in mountain valleys is
limited, with much of the surrounding terrain federal or under conservation
easement. Construction costs are high and the season is short. And where
development is possible, builders face an obvious incentive: land that can
support expensive houses will be used for expensive houses.

## The squeeze on the people who staff the town

The distributional consequence is what makes this an economic story rather than
a real estate one.

Bozeman Mayor Joey Morrison, elected at 28 on a platform focused on affordable
housing, described watching rents "double or triple in the span of a year or
two," and a town where "every coffee shop is full of people coding on their
computer or working for an organisation that has never stepped foot in the
state of Montana."

A resort or amenity economy runs on labor that is paid local wages: hospitality,
retail, health care, construction, schools. When housing costs are set by
outside incomes, those workers are pushed into long commutes or out of the area,
and employers face persistent shortages in exactly the jobs the local economy
depends on. The businesses serving newcomers become harder to staff because of
the newcomers.

The physical fabric changes with it. Downtown small businesses in Bozeman have
given way to steakhouses, high-end retail chains and shops selling custom cowboy
hats to tourists, and the town's first Whole Foods opened in 2023.

## Mobile homes are the last rung

The most consequential detail is the one in the BBC's headline: a recent rent
strike by residents of two mobile home parks.

Mobile home parks occupy a specific and fragile position in the housing market.
They are typically the cheapest non-subsidized housing available, and their
residents are in an unusual bind: they often own the home but rent the land
beneath it. That inverts the normal protections of ownership. When the ground
rent rises, a homeowner cannot simply move, because relocating a mobile home is
expensive and frequently impossible if no other park has a vacancy. The asset
they own is immobile in practice while the cost they cannot control keeps
rising.

Sara Folger, who works part-time at that Whole Foods, has lived in the Mountain
Meadows park for 17 years and remembers a Bozeman of "back-to-the-land hippies,
college students, cowboys and ski bums." Her situation is an illustration
rather than a statistic, but the structural point generalizes: when land under
a park becomes more valuable for redevelopment than as park land, the economics
push toward sale, and the residents have the least ability to absorb the
result.

## Why this matters beyond Montana

The pattern recurs wherever a place becomes desirable faster than it can build:
in ski and coastal towns across the United States and Europe, and in cities
that attract high earners into constrained housing stock.

It also produces a genuine policy dilemma rather than an obvious villain. Rising
property values represent real wealth for existing owners and a growing tax base
for local government, while simultaneously pricing out renters and burdening
longtime owners on fixed incomes with higher assessments. Growth is not the
problem, and neither is investment. The problem is that the housing supply
cannot move at the speed of the money, and the people with the least capacity to
wait are the ones the local economy needs most.

## Sources

- [Private jets flock to Montana - but locals can't afford the trailer park](https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckg92d8d40yo)

