The Dallas housing shift: How H-1b visa curbs and tech layoffs in US are cooling the market
A combination of tighter H-1B visa rules and widespread layoffs in the technology sector is contributing to a housing slowdown in parts of North Texas, according to a Bloomberg report. Areas such as Frisco, Prosper and Celina, which saw rapid growth driven by an influx of Indian technology professionals over the past decade, are now witnessing softer demand and falling home prices. The shift comes as the Trump administration tightened rules governing the H-1b visa programme, including higher salary requirements, additional fees and stricter enforcement measures. The administration has also barred non-permanent residents, including many H-1B visa holders, from accessing FHA-insured mortgages. At the same time, the technology industry has seen significant job losses, with more than 123,000 jobs reportedly eliminated by early summer 2026. Workers on H-1b visas who lose their jobs face pressure to quickly secure new employment or risk losing their immigration status, affecting their ability to purchase or retain homes.
Influence on housing market?
According to the report, the Dallas region received nearly 32,000 new H-1b approvals during the Biden administration, more than several traditional technology hubs including Silicon Valley and Seattle. Many of those workers settled in suburban communities north of Dallas, helping drive population growth and housing demand. Builders increasingly catered to South Asian buyers, who in some cases accounted for a majority of new-home sales. However, industry representatives now report a sharp decline in that buyer segment amid visa restrictions and layoffs. The impact is becoming visible in housing data. Home prices in Collin County fell nearly 9 per cent year-on-year, compared with a roughly 4 per cent decline across the broader Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area, according to data cited in the report.
Could the trend spread beyond Texas?
Analysts cited in the report say other technology-focused housing markets with large H-1b populations could face similar pressures if hiring remains weak and visa approvals continue to slow. States including California, Washington, Virginia, New York and New Jersey are considered among the most exposed to such changes. The development has intensified debate over the broader economic impact of immigration policy, with supporters arguing that reduced demand could improve housing affordability, while critics warn of wider consequences for local economies and housing markets
