A long-awaited federal crackdown on corporate homebuying has finally become law, but many in Georgia are already warning lawmakers not to celebrate too soon.
Sen. Raphael Warnock’s provision blocking large private equity firms from purchasing additional single-family homes took effect after the broader 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act became law without President Donald Trump’s signature.
The measure has been hailed as a major step toward limiting institutional control of America’s housing supply. In metro Atlanta, where large corporate investors reportedly own more than 72,000 single-family rental homes, the issue has become especially urgent.
But reaction in Georgia’s Reddit community was less victory lap and more demand for a second round.
One of the thread’s most popular comments summed up the mood bluntly: “Excellent! Now finish the job. Make them sell every property over the 350 limit.”
That is the glaring weakness frustrating Georgia locals. The law may prevent covered firms controlling at least 350 single-family homes from buying more, but it does not appear to force them to unload the massive portfolios they already own.
For residents watching homes disappear into corporate rental portfolios, freezing the problem in place is not the same as fixing it.
Georgians Want Homes Returned to the Market
Several commenters argued that 350 homes remains an absurdly generous ceiling.
“Let’s set the limit lower. No more than 100. Sell the rest,” one user wrote.
Another went further, insisting the limit should eventually reach zero and that companies should be given time to sell properties without crashing local markets.
Others worried that corporations would attempt to sidestep the restriction through shell companies and related LLCs. The law reportedly includes language covering homes controlled indirectly or through affiliated entities, but skepticism remains high.
“Everything is a bandage to a gunshot wound,” one commenter said.
That suspicion is understandable. Corporate landlords have already planted deep roots across Atlanta’s suburbs, buying thousands of properties that might otherwise have gone to families, first-time buyers or local landlords.
Warnock deserves credit for getting meaningful restrictions into federal law. The housing package also includes provisions aimed at increasing supply, reforming appraisals, supporting rural housing and funding repairs.
Still, Georgia locals are making one thing clear: stopping the next purchase does nothing to return the homes already swallowed up. The public wanted a crackdown, but it’s received a ceiling.
Now Georgia lawmakers face the harder question. Will they force corporate giants to sell everything above that 350-home limit, or allow them to keep collecting rent from neighborhoods they already consumed? For many locals, this law is not the finish line. It is barely the opening move.







