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A. Draft resolution
(open)
Report | Doc. 16244 | 09 September 2025
Analysis and guidelines to guarantee the right to housing
Committee on Social Affairs, Health and Sustainable Development
A. Draft resolution 
(open)1. The right to adequate housing
is a universal human right recognised in the international human
rights law, including the European Social Charter (revised) (ETS
No. 163). It stems from everyone’s right to an adequate standard
of living and is key for the enjoyment of all economic, social and
cultural rights within the international human rights framework,
on a similar footing with civil and political rights. Adequate housing means
the right to live somewhere in security, peace and dignity – in
a home that is safe, healthy, affordable, accessible and adapted
to needs, with safe drinking water, sanitation and energy facilities.
Ensuring the right to housing for all is not only a legal obligation
but a cornerstone of social justice and human development, and thereby
of democratic stability.
2. As human rights are universal, indivisible, interdependent
and interrelated, a violation of the right to adequate housing may
affect the enjoyment of a wide range of other human rights. At the
same time, the right to adequate housing may also be affected by
the extent to which other human rights are guaranteed. While the right
to adequate housing is central to human well-being, it remains a
broken promise for more than one billion people worldwide who are
not adequately housed. In Europe, over 1.3 million people were homeless
in 2023, including 400 000 children, and about 19.2 million experienced
severe housing precariousness.
3. Wars and armed conflicts escalate the housing problem for
the population affected such as in Ukraine where about 13% of housing
is severely damaged or destroyed. The Parliamentary Assembly notes
that in the light of deliberate mass destruction of homes in war
zones, notably the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza where
92% of all residential buildings are destroyed or damaged, the United
Nations Special Rapporteur on the right to adequate housing has
called for the establishment of a new crime – domicide – at international level.
4. The Assembly deplores the financialisation of housing which
is treated as a commodity rather than a human right and a social
good. It is concerned that the lack of housing supply in many cities,
rising income inequalities and unemployment, the cost-of-living
crisis, high interest rates, as well as soaring rents and housing
shortages caused by secondary residences and short-term rentals,
are putting access to adequate housing under pressure across Europe.
In this context, certain categories of the population – such as
low-income and single-parent households, migrants, including refugees,
and internally displaced persons, Roma, the unemployed and precarious
workers, persons leaving institutional care, students and young
people, families and older persons – are particularly vulnerable
and require special protection.
5. The Assembly underlines the obligation for member States to
ensure the effective implementation of the right to housing in line
with the requirements of international human rights law, notably
the European Social Charter (revised) (Articles 31, 30 and 16),
emphasising the prevention of homelessness and providing for holistic
short-, medium- and long-term measures. It highlights the need to
adapt existing and new housing to the modern requirements of sustainable
development and increased resilience to the effects of climate change and
natural disasters.
6. The Assembly is concerned about rising income and housing
inequalities in member States, while the social housing sector has
been outsourced to the private sector and underfinanced in many
of them. It acknowledges the pressing need to counter the financialisation
of and speculation in housing markets, promote affordability and
prevent homelessness. It calls on Council of Europe member States
to:
6.1. treat housing as a human
right, not as a commodity;
6.2. increase public investment in social and affordable housing,
in particular at local authorities’ level;
6.3. adopt long-term, rights-based housing strategies focused
on prevention of homelessness;
6.4. ensure legal safeguards against forced evictions and homelessness,
as well as balanced protection for both owners and tenants;
6.5. improve housing benefit systems, income support mechanisms
and the transmission of housing between generations;
6.6. regulate short-term rentals and vacant properties to increase
housing supply;
6.7. implement stronger regulations to curb real estate speculation.
7. Recognising good practices in selected member States and cities,
the Assembly highlights the effectiveness of long-term public investment,
mixed-income housing, integrated social services and sustainable
construction. It invites member States to:
7.1. introduce rent regulation in urban areas with high demand
for housing and link rent increases to regional average income rather
than inflation;
7.2. promote housing cooperatives and limited-profit housing
schemes;
7.3. support young people’s access to affordable housing through
co-housing, student accommodation, targeted subsidies and intergenerational
housing facilities;
7.4. ensure access to decent housing for low-income and single-parent
households, migrants, including refugees, Roma, persons with disabilities,
the elderly, women leaving violent relationships and persons leaving
institutions;
7.5. provide education on housing rights and financial literacy
for tenants.
8. The Assembly considers that the right to housing viewed through
the sustainability prism blends the ecological perspective (resources-saving,
climate-resilient design, low environmental footprint) with social justice
(protection of the vulnerable population groups, non-discrimination,
equal opportunities for all), public health (“One health” approach
to balance and optimise the health of people, animals and ecosystems)
and economic rationale (quality growth, shared prosperity, smart
investment and long-term gains). Considering that action is less
costly than inaction, the Assembly urges member States to:
8.1. prioritise large-scale renovation
of ageing housing stock, notably under the European Green Deal and
Renovation Wave where appropriate;
8.2. mainstream energy-efficient, climate-resilient and low-carbon
housing models;
8.3. invest in sustainable public infrastructure and spatial
planning that integrate environmental, economic and social objectives;
8.4. facilitate access to the financing of environmentally
friendly housing for vulnerable households.
9. The Assembly reminds member States of their obligations under
Articles 16, 30 and 31 of the European Social Charter (revised)
and recommends:
9.1. accepting Articles
16, 30 and 31 and ratifying, accepting or approving the Additional
Protocol Providing for a System of Collective Complaints (ETS No.
158), if they have not yet done so;
9.2. strengthening the enforcement of socio-economic rights
based on guidance of the European Committee of Social Rights (ECSR),
and extending the implementation of social rights enshrined in the European
Social Charter (revised) to all persons residing on their territory;
9.3. collecting disaggregated housing data to identify and
address systemic inequalities.
10. The Assembly strongly supports the work of the Council of
Europe Development Bank in helping member States deliver more sustainable,
inclusive and affordable housing for the vulnerable population, particularly
in reconstruction efforts in Ukraine and in addressing structural
housing deficits in disadvantaged urban and rural areas.
11. Finally, the Assembly invites national parliaments of member
States to:
11.1. monitor the implementation
of the right to housing at national and local level;
11.2. ensure meaningful participation of youth and vulnerable
communities in housing policy design;
11.3. work towards the recognition of domicide and the establishment
of it as a crime at international level.
B. Explanatory memorandum by Ms Aurora Floridia, rapporteur
(open)1. Introduction
1. The human right to adequate
housing – safe, healthy, affordable and accessible, with water,
sanitation and energy facilities – is a universal right. It is recognised
and codified through international law, including European treaties
such as the European Social Charter (revised) (ETS No. 163). Despite
this right being central to human well-being, more than one billion
people worldwide are not adequately housed.
In
Europe, over 1,3 million people were homeless in 2023, including
400 000 children.
According to Eurostat’s estimates, 4.3%
of the European population or more than 19.2 million persons experienced
“severe housing precariousness” in 2020. Moreover, since the end
of February 2022 when the military aggression against Ukraine started,
over 4.5 million Ukrainian refugees moved to the European Union
(EU) member States, while about 13% of housing in Ukraine has been
severely damaged or destroyed. 



2. Lack of supply in many cities, rising income inequalities
and unemployment, the cost-of-living crisis and high interest rates,
as well as soaring rents, short-term rentals, secondary residences
and vacant housing are putting access to adequate housing under
pressure. Certain categories of the population – such as low-income and
single-parent households, migrants and refugees, Roma, the unemployed
and precarious workers, students and young people, families and
women leaving violent relationships – are particularly vulnerable
and require special protection. States have undertaken to respect,
protect and fulfil the right to housing enshrined in various international
treaties. However, too many people in Council of Europe member States
live in conditions which are not compatible with dignity and human
rights, in large part due to the financialisation of housing which
is treated as a commodity rather than a human right and a social
good. If in the short term, States should take immediate steps to
address the most pressing needs of people experiencing the housing
crisis, the medium- to long-term commitment is needed to provide
holistic and sustainable solutions, emphasising prevention of homelessness
and ensuring adequate housing for all.
3. The motion for a resolution “Analysis and guidelines to guarantee
the right to housing and to decent housing” (Doc. 15566), tabled by Mr Antón Gómez-Reino (Spain, UEL) and others,
was referred to the Committee on Social Affairs, Health and Sustainable
Development for report, and I was appointed rapporteur on 12 October
2023 in succession to Ms Selin Sayek Böke.
4. The motion expresses deep concern that one in four Europeans
faces “serious difficulties” to pay for housing, with more than
half of young people (aged 18 to 34 years) in many European countries
being unable to live autonomously. It refers notably to a report
of 2020 by the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights which
stresses the problem of access to stable housing and calls on governments
to adopt “decisive measures” to improve the situation. Moreover,
the motion underlines that bearing in mind problems in the field of
housing and the “absence of public policies to guarantee the right
to [adequate] housing”, the Council of Europe and its member States
should commit to drafting a set of general guidelines of good practices
on “access to decent housing”.
5. In the framework of its work on this report, the committee
held a series of public hearings and exchanges of views, and carried
out several field visits in Marrakech and Ben Guerir (Morocco)
, Paris (France)
and Lisbon (Portugal)
.
As rapporteur, I have also carried out a fact-finding visit to explore
Vienna’s housing model (21-22 November 2024),
participated in the Conference on “Addressing
homelessness through social investment” (3 December 2024, Strasbourg)
and the event on “Social Rights: Building Social Justice and Democratic
Stability” (Brussels, 5 June 2025), held an online meeting with
the President of the European Committee of Social Rights (ECSR)
and had consultations with youth representatives in my capacity
as youth rapporteur of the committee.




6. I would like to thank all the experts for their valuable contributions
which I incorporated into this report aiming to identify and highlight
good national practice in the field of housing policies for the
attention of decision makers in our member States. To this end,
I would also like to underline the obligation for member States
to ensure the effective implementation of the right to housing and
the need to adapt the existing and new housing to modern requirements
of sustainable development and increased resilience to the effects
of the climate change and natural disasters.
2. Housing rights: the international legal framework
7. The right to adequate housing
is a human right recognised in international human rights law and
derives from the right to an adequate standard of living. It is
viewed as an integral part of the enjoyment of all economic, social
and cultural rights within international human rights instruments,
on a similar footing with civil and political rights.
The right to adequate housing was
recognised as part of the right to an adequate standard of living
in Article 25 (1) of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and in Article 11 (1) of the 1966 International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR). Adequacy of housing refers
to the security of tenure, availability of key services (such as
water, energy, sanitation), affordability, habitability, accessibility, proper
location and respect for cultural identity.

8. A number of other international human rights treaties contain
provisions relating to the right to housing. Some are of general
application while others cover the human rights of specific (and
often vulnerable) groups, such as refugees, migrant workers, children,
women, indigenous peoples, persons with disabilities and people who
are discriminated against on the basis of racial background. The
1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees was, in fact,
the first-ever legally binding instrument which contained a provision
on the right to housing.
9. Moreover, international human rights law protects the right
to adequate housing during armed conflicts. It follows from Article
8 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court that extensive
destruction and appropriation of property that is not justified
by military necessity and carried out unlawfully and wantonly is
a war crime. In certain circumstances, arbitrary demolition of housing,
forced evictions and forced displacement, attacks on civilian dwellings
and buildings may amount to a crime against humanity or to a war
crime under international criminal law.
With regard to deliberate mass destruction
of homes in war zones, such as Gaza where 92% of all residential
buildings have been destroyed or damaged, the United Nations (UN)
Special Rapporteur on the right to adequate housing, Balakrishnan
Rajagopal, has called for the establishment of a new crime – domicide
– at international level. 


10. The United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights has clarified the scope of the provision on right to adequate
housing in General Comment no. 4 on the right to adequate housing
and in General Comment no. 7 on forced evictions. General Comment
no. 4 clarifies that the right to housing shall be fulfilled without
any grounds for discrimination based on age, economic status, group
or other affiliations, and that the right to housing must be understood
as a right to live somewhere in security, peace and dignity. General
Comment no. 7 deems forced evictions incompatible with the requirements
of the ICESCR, unless they are undertaken in a manner that strictly
complies with human rights law and the principles of reasonableness
and proportionality, thus ensuring that no other alternative was
feasible in the situation at hand. The Committee on the Rights of
the Child has elaborated on the child-specific right to adequate
housing, deriving from Article 27 of the Convention on the Rights
of the Child, in General Comment No. 21 (1997). At national level,
some European countries protect the right to housing through their
constitutions (including Belgium, Finland, Greece, the Netherlands,
Italy, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland). 

11. At the regional level, the European Social Charter (revised)
(ETS No. 163, 1996) establishes the right to housing in Article
31, asking the contracting Parties to undertake measures designed
“to promote access to housing of an adequate standard”, “to prevent
and reduce homelessness with a view to its gradual elimination”, and
“to make the price of housing accessible to those without adequate
resources”. I believe that all Council of Europe member States who
have not yet done so, should accept to be bound by this article.
Moreover, various
provisions of the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5)
are relevant regarding action against homelessness and housing exclusion:
Article 2 (right to life), Article 3 (prohibition of torture or
inhuman or degrading treatment), Article 6 (right to a fair trial),
Article 8 (right to respect for private and family life), Article 13
(right to an effective remedy), Article 14 (prohibition of discrimination)
and Article 1 of the Additional Protocol (ETS No. 9) (protection
of property).

12. Article 30 of the European Social Charter (revised) promotes
the right to protection against poverty and social exclusion, and
Article 16 spells out the right of the family to social, legal and
economic protection: they contain specific provisions on the responsibility
of the State to provide family housing or effective access to housing
through framework policies and social support. For States to be
in compliance with these provisions, they must take the necessary
steps to ensure that persons who live or are at risk of living in
poverty or social exclusion and families can enjoy effective access
to, inter alia, housing. The
Charter also guarantees the protection of rights of vulnerable or
disadvantaged population groups such as children and young persons (Articles
7 and 17), persons with disabilities (Article 15), migrant workers
(Article 19), elderly (Article 23), Roma and other minority groups,
as well as children and adults unlawfully present on the territory
of States Parties.
13. In addition, the collective complaints procedure, which applies
to 16 Parties to the Charter under the 1995 Additional Protocol
to the European Social Charter Providing for a System of Collective
Complaints (ETS No. 158), enables national and international trade
unions, employers’ organisations or non-governmental organisations
to file complaints about violations of the Charter, including as
regards access to housing, with respect to those States that have
accepted the provision in question. The ECSR examines collective complaints
and also issues national reports to assess compliance of States
Parties with the Charter towards the realisation of socio-economic
rights enshrined in the Charter through legislation, policies and
practice at national level.
14. The Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights regularly
publishes comments on the protection of vulnerable groups, including
in relation to housing. Recently the Commissioner pointed to the
challenges of access to adequate housing and related essential services
for the Roma communities in Greece, urging the implementation of
the National Strategy and Action Plan for the Social inclusion of
Roma 2021-2030. 

2.1. Examples of the case law of the European Committee of Social Rights
15. For example, in its decision
on the collective complaint by the European Federation of National Organisations
working with the Homeless (FEANTSA) v. the Czech Republic (Complaint
No. 191/2020) published on 24 January 2025, the ECSR ruled that
there was a violation of Article 16 of the 1961 European Social
Charter (right of the family to social, legal and economic protection)
regarding access to and exclusion from housing of vulnerable groups,
notably the Roma, in the light of new housing legislation and policy
in the country. The ECSR considered that legislation permitting
evictions in Czechia does not ensure the sufficient safeguards for
the vulnerable, that the supply of social housing is inadequate
and remedies are not effective, and that access to relevant housing
benefits for the disadvantaged groups is hampered, with discriminatory practices
disproportionally affecting the Roma minority.
16. The ECSR also found violations of several articles of the
revised Charter (notably Articles 30, 31(1), 16, 11(1), 11(3), 17(1)
and (2), 23 and 15(3) in complaint No. 206/2022 v. Spain
concerning, amongst other, the rights
to housing and to protection against poverty and social exclusion
for vulnerable population groups (notably children, the elderly,
persons with disabilities, Roma minority) as a result of the power
cuts which have had a serious impact on the lives of about 4 500
inhabitants, including 1 800 children, leading to medical problems
and the worsening of health conditions. This case, where inhabitants
of the shantytown live without electricity since October 2020, illustrates
the situation of extreme energy poverty.
The ECSR decision points out that for people to enjoy their rights to
housing, health and education, they need “stable, consistent and
safe access to […] energy”. Another complaint No. 203/2021
by FEANTSA v. Belgium has raised
the problem of the Flemish housing policy which fails to improve
the difficult housing situation of many families, in particular homeless
families with children, migrant workers and Travellers, in violation
of several provisions of the Charter (Articles 11, 30, 19(4.c),
17 and E).



17. In 2018, with regard to the complaint of the European Committee
for Home-Based Priority Action for the Child and the Family (EUROCEF)
v. France (No. 114/2015) the ECSR found several violations to the
right of unaccompanied foreign minors to social, legal and economic
protection in France (Article 17(1) of the Charter) on grounds of
shortcomings identified in the national shelter, assessment and
allocation system of unaccompanied foreign minors; the detention
of unaccompanied foreign minors in waiting areas and in hotels; inappropriate
accommodation of minors and their exposure to life on the street
(violation of Article 7(10) of the Charter); and lack of provision
of a shelter (violation of Article 31(2) of the Charter).
2.2. Indivisibility of rights
18. As human rights are universal,
indivisible, interdependent and interrelated, a violation of the
right to adequate housing may affect the enjoyment of a wide range
of other human rights. At the same time, the right to adequate housing
may also be affected by the extent to which other human rights are
guaranteed. Although States have frequently reaffirmed the importance
of full respect for the right to adequate housing, there remains a
disturbingly large gap between the standards set in international
treaties, most notably Article 11 (1) of the ICESCR and Articles
16, 30 and 31 of the (revised) European Social Charter, and the
situation prevailing in many parts of the world, including in Council
of Europe member States. This is in part due to housing rarely being
treated as a human right at the domestic level. 

3. Inadequate housing and homelessness: challenges in Council of Europe member States
19. Across Europe and beyond, rapidly
rising housing costs, adverse labour market conditions and shrinking social
safety nets, tough migration policies and poverty are pushing vulnerable
population, low-income groups, and increasingly large parts of the
middle-class, out of the cities, or into cramped living conditions
that do not meet standards for decent housing. Moreover, some systemic
failures lead to housing uncertainty for persons leaving institutional
settings (such as foster care, hospitals or mental health care facilities,
prisons, immigration detention facilities). Increasingly, climate
change, natural disasters and armed conflicts threaten the enjoyment of
the right to adequate housing. So-called “digital nomads”, remote
workers from higher earning countries, secondary residences and
short-term rentals for tourists to the detriment of the locals price
out local communities in many European capitals,
but also in some suburban areas.

20. In a worrying development, housing has become an increasingly
attractive investment object for private actors and companies on
the global market, and on a much larger scale than that previously
observed. Financialisation of housing has resulted in housing prices
soaring, way beyond the increase in salary of the average worker.
Thus, middle- and lower-income households now have to spend a high
share of their disposal income on housing. Frequently, this results
in a so-called housing cost overburden, which arises when more than
40% of one’s disposable income is spent on housing. In Europe, over
17% of the population lives in overcrowded housing and more than
10% spend over 40% of their income on housing.
In
2023, the share of housing costs for poor households represented
some 62% of their income in Greece, 57% in Denmark, 49% in Luxembourg,
48% in Sweden and 46.7% in Czechia, while rental price index rose
by 40% in Slovenia, 36.5% in Lithuania, 34 % in Poland and 29% in
Estonia in just two years from 2021 to 2023 compared to 5.3% average increase
in the European Union (EU). Some non-EU countries saw even sharper
rent increases with 37% in Montenegro, 43.5% in Serbia and 232.9%
in Türkiye, reflecting high inflation rates. 


21. While housing costs have been rising for decades and are the
largest expenditure item for all households,
housing-related spending escalates further
with the rising energy bills for tenants in poorly isolated or insufficiently
upkept housing.
Many end up in lower quality housing in
more deprived neighbourhoods, which results in spatial segregation
between income groups. These neighbourhoods often have limited access
to the necessary facilities to overcome income inequality, such
as fewer public transport alternatives, reduced levels of health
services and lower quality education resources compared to higher-income
neighbourhoods. 



22. Housing inequality and the number of homeless people have
both increased at an alarming rate in almost all Council of Europe
member States, while the social housing sector has been outsourced
and underfinanced in many of them. Income and housing inequalities
are strongly interlinked. Lack of access to stable and adequate
housing clearly has spill-over effects that exacerbate other inequalities,
hurt human dignity, impact personal health condition and hinder
social mobility.
Access to adequate housing can be
a precondition for the enjoyment of other human rights, notably
the rights to work, health, social security, vote, privacy and education.
The housing crisis falls disproportionately
on vulnerable groups which already face discrimination, such as
Roma and Travellers, persons with disabilities, national minorities,
refugees, migrants (in particular of non-western origin), as well
as tenants without income security, notably the young people, migrant
workers and the unemployed, and people on the lowest parts of the
labour market or in the non-standard forms of employment. Victims
of domestic violence and couples who are separating are other examples
of persons who may encounter particular difficulties on the housing
market, especially when there are children involved.
Large families also tend to find
it hard to find adequate housing, especially in cities.



23. Homelessness and forced evictions are prima
facie violations of the right to housing and also violate
a number of other human rights.
According to the UN Special
Rapporteur on the right to adequate housing, experiencing homelessness
means not having stable, safe and adequate housing, nor the means
and ability of obtaining it. It is widely recognised that homelessness
is not only the absence of physical shelter and a roof over one’s
head, but also a condition which leads to the loss of social connection
and the social exclusion.

24. Moreover, there are various forms of homelessness, including
hidden homelessness, with “persons living on the streets, in open
spaces, or cars; persons living in temporary emergency accommodation,
in women’s shelters, in camps or other temporary accommodation provided
to internally displaced persons, refugees or migrants; and persons
living in severely inadequate and insecure housing, such as residents
of informal settlements”,
or when persons cannot afford autonomous
living and are financially constrained to live with their parents,
relatives or friends. As we have learned during the visits of social
housing facilities in Paris and a shelter facility managed by Vinzirast
in Vienna, many individuals in need of emergency housing support
also suffer from addictions or face mental health issues.

25. Forced evictions are a major concern. They result from “the
permanent or temporary removal against their will of individuals,
families and/or communities from the homes and/or land which they
occupy, without the provision of, and access to, appropriate forms
of legal or other protection”.
Forced
evictions intensify inequality, social conflict, segregation and
invariably affect the poorest, most socially and economically vulnerable
and marginalised groups of society, especially women, children,
minorities and indigenous peoples. 


26. Legal and administrative barriers can be a further substantial
obstacle in accessing housing. Some countries have adopted statutory
definitions of homelessness: in England, for example, falling under
this definition is a requirement in order to be eligible for housing
and assistance. Hence, in order to have access to emergency accommodation,
a person must be legally homeless and have a legal right to be in
the country.
Requiring administrative
documents can also hinder access to emergency accommodation for
people who are already outside of the administrative processes and
support services. Some services require people to have no criminal
convictions, to be legally in the country or even simply to provide
identification. In Greece, most night shelters require a tax statement
and proof of identification, which puts undocumented migrants and persons
who have been subject to human trafficking in an exceedingly difficult
situation.
Moreover, emergency
accommodations are temporary, may not offer appropriate living conditions,
and do not prevent further situations of instability.


27. Experts suggest that the prevention of homelessness through
structural measures is more effective and more economic than short-term
emergency responses. Under Article 31(3) of the European Social
Charter, countries are required to have comprehensive housing benefit
systems to protect the neediest households and to ensure sufficient
supply of affordable housing. Other structural measures recommended
by experts include income support and rent regulation, development
of social housing, adequacy of housing benefits, legal advice and
support on tenancy issues, debt settlement procedures to avoid evictions
caused by housing arrears, and specific support for those leaving
institutional settings. We should also welcome a recent decision
by the United Kingdom to repeal the Vagrancy Act which has long
criminalised homelessness in England and Wales, by spring 2026.
4. The role of the State in securing adequate housing for all: a focus on prevention through social policies and public investment
28. My research and fact-finding
show that prioritising prevention of homelessness and better use
of public policy tools to ensure the right to housing is a major
and most cost-efficient solution to supporting the vulnerable population
groups. The OECD Toolkit to Combat Homelessness proposes nine building
blocks for a people-centred integrated housing strategy based on
policy design (strategic orientations built on stakeholder involvement,
measurement of data and regular evaluation for fine-tuning policies),
policy implementation (prioritising prevention, ensuring long-term
housing solutions and providing targeted support with related services)
and policy delivery (with effective structures, communication, multi-source
funding and incentives; good co-ordination and capacity building;
and ultimately, structural economic reforms ensuring policy coherence
focused on the public interest). 

29. Part of the problem is that housing is treated as a commodity
rather than a human right and a social good.
A study conducted by the Council
of Europe Development Bank (CEB) in 2017 found that most governments
were either moving or had moved away from directly providing housing
to disadvantaged groups, public spending on social housing had decreased
and States were limiting their role in the direct provision of social
housing.
Another study by the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) suggests that fiscal measures, such as targeted
subsidies to the bottom income tercile, could save 7% of households
from financial distress at an estimated cost of 0.8% of GDP.
One paradox in Europe is that despite
the lack of affordable housing, there is a high number of vacant
housing units in the region. States should better address this issue
through specific tax policies and housing mobility strategies.



30. States must re-think and accelerate efforts to tackle the
housing crisis in order to guarantee the rights to life and to health
that are linked to the right to housing. One major aspect of national
housing strategies is long-term housing programmes (with “Housing
First” targeting the homeless or “Housing-led” models, the latter targeting
low-income population). Social housing thus plays a crucial role
in that respect. Among the Council of Europe member States, some
countries have a very important share of social housing (above 20%
of total housing) such as the Netherlands, Denmark and Austria;
others, such as the United Kingdom, France, Ireland, Iceland and
Finland have 10 to 19%, while Germany, Belgium, Hungary, Italy,
Malta, Norway, Poland, Slovenia, Switzerland and Türkiye have between
2 and 9%; Latvia, the Slovak Republic, Luxembourg, Spain, Estonia,
Lithuania, Czechia have a very small share of social housing (up
to 2% of the total housing). 

31. The eligibility criteria for access to social housing vary
considerably across countries. They mostly include income levels
(Austria, the Netherlands, Ireland, Germany, Italy, Latvia and certain
areas of the United Kingdom and Estonia), household composition
or size (Austria), and nationality (Italy). We should note that
a requirement of a period of residence as a condition of eligibility
for public housing that applies equally to nationals and non-nationals
has been considered by the ECSR as a breach of Article 19(4) of
the European Social Charter because it was deemed to be indirect
discrimination given that non-national migrant workers find it much
more difficult to comply with such a requirement than nationals
and that this cannot be justified for good public interest reasons. 

4.1. Vienna’s model of social housing – over one hundred years of consistent policy making
32. As part of my work on this
report, I have explored the Vienna’s approach to social housing
which appears to be the most successful example of strong State
policies. In Vienna, the sixth largest city of the EU with two million
inhabitants (2.8 million in the metropolitan area), nearly 60% of
the city’s population live in subsidised municipal housing dwellings.
Each year, the local administration invests about €500 million in
housing construction and rehabilitation, plus the direct financial
support to persons in need. The public housing system is financed
by a 1% tax on the salaries of all Vienna’s residents and the rental
payments. The availability and accessibility of social housing also
help to lower prices on the private housing market, ensuring a fairly
spread social mix of the population across the city. What is even
more impressive, is that Vienna has a parallel strategy of urban
development with a clear focus on supporting new housing whilst
preserving green spaces (which currently represent half of the municipal
territory). Not surprisingly, Vienna leads the global ratings in
terms of quality of life and urban innovation.
33. The three pillars of Vienna’s housing model are municipal
apartments, dwellings built by non-profit or limited-profit organisations,
and housing rehabilitated through the urban renewal programme. Unlike
many other cities, Vienna has kept control of municipal housing;
Wiener Wohnen – the municipal housing administration – is thus Europe’s
biggest public housing enterprise. Most housing in Vienna (76%)
is rental flats, and about 43% of all housing has capped rents.
By combining public capacity to own land for constructions (through
subsidised housing zoning approach) and long-term planning for housing
construction along with transport infrastructure Vienna manages
to rein in speculation and render housing more affordable. About
5 000 apartments (or 40% of the total new housing) are added as
municipal housing each year.
34. Moreover, using competition tools enables the city to keep
quality high for any new housing construction or rehabilitation
projects, including in terms of operating adjustment to new sustainability
standards. Thus, mainstreaming thermal insulation of residential
buildings through the Thewosan scheme wields about 50% reduction
in energy consumption for heating. In addition, Vienna’s district
heating system, to which nearly half of apartments are connected,
helps to reduce CO2 emissions and air pollution
because it is increasingly relying on renewable energy sources (mainly
large-scale heat pumps, geothermal, wind and solar thermal energy); the
latter should fully cover the district heating needs by 2040.
35. An important feature of Vienna’s housing model is that the
income thresholds for municipal apartments are only applied when
persons first move in; residents can stay in the same apartment
as long as they wish even if their income levels increase beyond
the initial threshold. This ensures greater mixing together of inhabitants
with different income levels, supports their social integration
and fosters stable communities. The eligibility criteria foresee
specific support for young people (up to 30 years old), the elderly,
the persons with disabilities, single parent families and other
vulnerable population groups. There is also a “fast-track” service to
facilitate access to housing for persons in emergency situations,
migrant workers with temporary needs and asylum seekers or refugees
when a housing solution can be proposed in 24 hours.
This helps
to prevent social fall and homelessness to a large extent.

36. What can we learn from Vienna’s experience? First and foremost,
ambitious public investment and long-term planning allow for securing
the right to adequate housing seen as a public good, improving the
social cohesion and significantly reducing speculation in the local
housing market. Secondly, policy coherence guarantees that sustainable
development objectives are given sufficient attention to operate
a strategic shift in the population’s lifestyles, improving comfort,
cutting energy bills and reducing the environmental footprint.
4.2. Subsidised housing with integrated services in Paris and rent capping in urban areas
37. In June 2024, committee members
visited two social housing units (boarding houses – pensions de famille) in Paris which
were supported by the CEB in a co-financing scheme with Adoma, a
semi-public company. Since 2015, the CEB has extended two €100 million
loans via Adoma towards the restructuring, modernisation or construction
of social housing. As we have learned during the visit, these projects
focus on the social integration of vulnerable persons through housing
as part of a public interest mission. Taylor-made social services
are thus offered to people in precarious situations (young individuals
in transition to autonomous living, migrant workers, low-income
individuals, single-parent families, the homeless, asylum seekers,
isolated persons with urgent social and health needs often due to
addictions), helping to empower and encourage individuals to fully
integrate into society.
38. Moreover, a number of French cities (Paris, Lille, Lyon, Bordeaux
and Montpellier) introduced rent control mechanisms in recent years
to help rein-in the escalation of housing prices. In addition, the
national rent reference index (IRL) has put a ceiling on the annual
indexing of rents which has proven useful to help stabilise rent
levels in urban areas with high demand for housing. Although the
official evaluation of the impact of these regulatory measures is
only expected next year, the initial observations of experts are
very positive.
39. As it were, the CEB plays an important role in co-financing
decent, sustainable and affordable housing across Europe. In 2023
alone, the CEB invested nearly €375 million with six loans to eight
countries into social and affordable housing which supported the
displaced, homeless and elderly persons, students, as well as migrants
and refugees. Additional €867 million (13 loans to eight countries)
were mobilised for promoting the development of inclusive neighbourhoods
and resilience of urban and rural communities (projects to improve wastewater
treatment, energy efficiency, renewable energy production and access
to decentralised healthcare).
I wish to encourage more member
States to work with the Bank so as to enhance access to decent housing
for their population.

5. Identifying housing solutions for young persons
40. Access to housing has become
increasingly complicated for younger generations (students, trainees, young
workers, young families and migrants). The
OECD considers that young people are disproportionately affected
by housing insecurity and often face additional financial pressures.
By spending over 40% of their income on rent or mortgage payments,
young people have little room for other essential expenses like education
or healthcare, especially if they get no financial support. Given
a limited offer of affordable housing options for students, notably
in big cities, young people are often forced to live in overcrowded
or inadequate housing conditions.
They
may also face discrimination as landlords tend to prefer older tenants
with more stable revenue, and the banks are more hesitant to give
loans to young people holding fixed-term or low-paid work contracts.
In addition, the rise of short-term rentals through platforms further
reduces the availability of long-term rental options for smaller
apartments. 


41. According to the OECD, young families tend to delay homeownership
due to financial constraints, and over 60% of young people in Europe
view housing costs as the main obstacle to achieving financial independence.
If the average age of first-time homebuyers in Europe was 29 in
the early 2000s, it has risen to 34 nowadays. This problem is particularly
acute in Southern and Eastern Europe, where economic instability and
high youth unemployment make access to adequate housing increasingly
difficult. Besides, students, trainees and first-time employees
have to move more frequently and are repeatedly exposed to housing problems.
The EU Youth Strategy (2019-2027) highlights housing affordability
as a critical issue for young adults.
The average age of young people
leaving the parental home is 26.2 years with figures ranging from well
above 30 years in countries such as Croatia, the Slovak Republic,
Greece, Italy and Serbia to below 22 in the Nordic countries (Finland,
Sweden and Denmark). 


42. In certain countries (for example Germany, Italy, the Netherlands),
the shortage of student housing has led to protests and pressing
calls for government intervention. Studies show that young people
want to be actively involved in decision-making processes that affect
their housing options, which points to the need for participatory
approaches in urban planning and the importance of action at municipal
level.
43. Several European cities have implemented innovative strategies
to tackle the housing crisis for young people, particularly students
and young professionals. In the Netherlands, Amsterdam has developed
creative solutions by partnering with universities and private developers
to create affordable and well-located student housing complexes.
These housing units often include shared facilities such as kitchens,
study rooms and recreational areas, fostering a sense of community
among students. To prevent price speculation, the city has also
introduced rental price caps for student accommodations.
44. In Spain, Barcelona has embraced co-operative housing as a
means to provide affordable and sustainable housing for young people.
In this model, residents collectively own and manage their housing, which
helps to keep costs low while ensuring that the housing meets the
needs of the community. The city has also allocated public land
for co-operative housing projects, making it easier for young people
to access affordable housing. This approach has proven highly effective
in creating socially inclusive and community-oriented living environments.
45. In Finland, Helsinki has adopted the “Housing First” strategy,
effectively reducing youth homelessness by prioritising immediate
access to stable housing without preconditions.
This
policy not only provides essential accommodation but also integrates
supportive services, enabling young individuals to achieve financial
and social independence more rapidly. Additionally, organisations
such as the Finnish Youth Housing Association (NAL) offer tailored
housing solutions specifically for young people, including co-housing arrangements,
which encourage affordability, social engagement, community support
and environmental sustainability. 


46. Environmental considerations are central to Finland's housing
strategies, with an emphasis on energy-efficient and sustainable
building practices. Co-housing models in Finland often incorporate
green technologies such as solar panels, energy-efficient heating
systems and eco-friendly materials, significantly reducing their ecological
footprint and operational costs. These environmentally responsible
housing solutions not only address immediate housing affordability
but also contribute to Finland’s broader goals of reducing emissions and
combating climate change. The Finnish Government actively promotes
these inclusive and environmentally conscious housing practices
through national programmes such as the “National Youth Work” and
“Youth Policy Programme”. These initiatives aim to improve the overall
housing conditions for young residents by enhancing financial literacy,
providing resources for independent living and encouraging sustainable
housing practices. Through these comprehensive approaches, Finland
demonstrates a successful model of addressing young people's housing
needs by combining affordable, sustainable housing solutions with
robust policy support and active youth engagement in housing decisions. 

47. The Croatian Youth Network signals that young people are particularly
affected by the increased use of housing for tourism (including
short-term rentals) or secondary residences. The latter are often
owned by foreigners and are used for personal vacation while for
most of the year they stand empty. Moreover, there has been an increase
in both the number of foreign workers who need accommodation and
the illegal conversion of student accommodation to other uses. The
Croatian Youth Network therefore advocates for measures such as
tax on inactive properties, rent caps or rent controls at local
level, greater use of housing co-operatives, improved regulation
of accommodation for foreign workers, stricter controls of short-term
rentals and more investment in student accommodation and public
housing. 

48. The German Youth Council is preoccupied by the sale of municipal
properties and municipal housing companies across the country in
recent years. This has rarely led to the desired effects of lower
costs and stronger investment. The Youth Council is therefore pleading
for the reintroduction of limited-profit status for housing companies
and the return to broad-based re-municipalisation of the housing
stock, which should help increase affordable, needs-based housing
supply at local level. Moreover, enhanced investment in social housing
is needed to increase both the volume and the quality of it, with
the aim of boosting long-term supply of housing and in particular
the renovation of the existing housing in line with energy-efficiency
and sustainable development requirements.
6. The challenge of reconstruction of housing in Ukraine
49. As a result of the full-scale
war of aggression against Ukraine, the country is experiencing an
enormous loss of social infrastructure, with the housing sector
enduring substantial damages and destruction (currently estimated
at over 13% of the housing affecting more than 2.5 million households)
due
to intense shelling of Ukrainian cities. More than 4,5 million people
have been internally displaced, which has created an urgent need to
rapidly rebuild to meet the needs of this part of the population.
Massive damage to critical infrastructure, including district heating
and water supply, has further worsened the situation.
The Reykjavik Declaration underlines
the Council of Europe’s commitment to supporting Ukraine in its
reconstruction efforts, including through solidarity implementing
the Action Plan for Ukraine, and to use all means available within
the Organisation.


50. The CEB, of which Ukraine recently became a member, will play
an important role in this regard together with other multilateral
development institutions. In March 2024, the CEB approved €100 million
loan to Ukraine to finance compensation for destroyed residential
properties focusing on the needs of internally displaced persons
and persons from vulnerable population groups (such as persons with
disabilities, the elderly, women, children and veterans). This project,
based on the Ukrainian Law on damaged and destroyed assets, draws
on the CEB’s experience from the Regional Housing Programme run
in the Western Balkans.
51. The latest assessment by the World Bank Group estimates that
reconstruction and recovery needs are the highest in the housing
sector (€81 billion) of the total long-term needs. Other reconstruction
and recovery needs cover essential infrastructure: the transport
sector (€75 billion), the energy and extractives sector (€66 billion),
commerce and industry sector (over €62 billion), and agriculture
(over €53 billion), while the cost of debris clearance and management
across all sectors totals nearly €12.6 billion. 

7. Impacts of climate change and natural disasters on the right to housing
52. The right to housing is increasingly
challenged by environmental factors such as climate change and natural
disasters. At the same time, inadequate construction of housing
increases risks for both humans and the nature. If the prime concern
in the past was the affordability of housing, the quality and sustainability
of housing nowadays is a growing priority of most countries. Housing
viewed through the sustainability prism blends the “green” perspective
(resources-saving, resilient design, low environmental footprint)
with social justice (protection of the vulnerable population groups,
non-discrimination, equal opportunities for all), public health
(“One health” approach to balance and optimise the health of people,
animals and ecosystems) and economic rationale (quality growth,
greater prosperity, smart investment and long-term gains). These
issues are complex, systemic and intertwined.
53. As climate-related disasters increase, the need for resilient,
energy-efficient and affordable housing solutions becomes more urgent.
Strong policy interventions are required. Rising insurance costs,
infrastructure damages and land speculation in areas affected by
natural disasters further exacerbate housing unaffordability and
deepen socio-economic inequalities, disproportionately affecting
vulnerable populations. Rising temperatures, extreme weather events
and natural disasters contribute to housing instability. According
to the OECD Well-being Framework, climate action must be fully integrated
into broader societal agendas, including affordable housing policies,
to ensure resilience and sustainability. Governments should prioritise
investments in energy-efficient social housing, nature-based solutions
and climate-responsive urban planning to mitigate risks. Economic
instruments, such as targeted subsidies for low-income households
and incentives for sustainable housing retrofits, are essential
to ensure that climate policies do not overburden disadvantaged groups.
Moreover, phasing out environmentally harmful subsidies and reforming
fiscal incentives, as recommended by international organisations,
can free resources to support sustainable and affordable housing,
especially for low-income groups. Without proactive policies, the
housing crisis and climate crisis will reinforce each other, deepening
socio-economic divisions and making adequate housing increasingly inaccessible. 

54. We know that buildings, including housing, account for roughly
37% of CO2 emissions in Europe. About three-quarters
of buildings are not energy efficient. Natural hazards such as floods,
droughts, heatwaves, forest fires, storms and earthquakes intensify
and become more frequent, with impacts on people, their homes and
livelihoods, as well as on public infrastructure, land use and critical
services. The European Environment Agency has estimated climate-related
economic losses for the EU countries at more than € 162 billion
between 2021 and 2023, and projects damage to increase up to 10
times by the end of this century. Governments hold the key to issuing
the right regulatory signals to housing development that align socio-economic
and environmental objectives for retrofitting the existing housing,
ensuring climate-proof new structures and improving spatial planning. 

55. In this context, the Vauban and Rieselfeld urban districts
in Freiburg (Germany) stand out as a pioneering European example
of sustainable housing development.
They provide home to over 17 500 persons
in a living space with the highest environmental sustainability
standards and very strong community integration. The underlying
concept gives two-thirds of land area to green uses (forests, small-scale
agriculture, recreation, water protection) and only one-third is
reserved for urban development, including “green” housing (with
passive and low-energy consuming houses), energy (solar, wind, hydropower,
co-generation) and transportation (public networks combined with
individual car-free mobility such as cycling and walking) optimising
local renewable resources. Thanks to a co-operative approach to
construction, the two urban districts were built with contributions
from individuals and small building companies without any financial contribution
from the local budget (which rather provided the essential physical
and social infrastructure). 80% of dwellings are affordable rentals.

56. During its meeting in Lisbon on 13 September 2024, the committee
has carried out a field visit in Cascais/Guincho to NOVA SBE university
campus to explore the innovative approaches to sustainable development
involving local population. We have learned about the deployment
of smart renewable energy producing capacities (photovoltaic cells)
across the municipality through projects developed together with
the local inhabitants and over 110 professional partners. By participating
in innovative energy projects, local inhabitants became “prosumers”
– active producers-users participating in a systemic change. A new
concept for the greening of public areas was also developed in consultation
with the local community in order to significantly reduce the consumption
of local water resources for the upkeeping of green public areas
whilst enhancing resilience to climate change and boosting biodiversity.
57. Moreover, a holistic approach to construction/housing, energy
and mobility sectors has been developed in Portugal with certain
municipalities leading action at local level. Thus Matosinhos, a
mid-size city of Portugal, is spearheading the local development
action plan for climate action and reducing environmental footprint
of the city and its inhabitants, with efforts being scaled up to
improve insulation of housing, modernise heating systems, carry
out energy efficiency mapping for the housing sector and reduce
waste as well as emissions.
58. In a more global context, the Parliamentary Network for a
healthy environment of the Assembly has also explored the sustainable
housing and urban development efforts in Morocco during its meeting
in Marrakech and Ben Guerir in March 2023. The country’s rapid urbanisation
and demographic growth has led to uncontrolled mushrooming of settlements
on the outskirts of some urban areas. The authorities, having studied the
urban policies of Brazil and Singapore, sought to test some of the
promising practices to design sustainable and resilient housing
adapted to Morocco’s environmental, social, cultural and infrastructural
challenges. Building code and regulations aims to promote housing
quality and affordability, also in the context of rapidly expanding
construction of short-term tourist rentals. As we saw from the devastating
earthquakes in Morocco and Türkiye, hundreds of lives can be lost
in a matter of seconds when buildings collapse. Not a single building should
therefore be built or rebuilt in seismic zones without strict adherence
to seismic norms.
59. In light of the Sustainable Development Goals, the Paris Agreement
and the growing risks to human security, local, national and European
strategies for climate adaptation and sustainable development as
they relate to housing should seize all the opportunities to improve
building design and adapt older buildings to modern requirements.
In the EU, countries are also bound to do so under the European
Green Deal which commits its members to renovate public and private
buildings in a drive to improve energy efficiency, resilience to
natural hazards and living standards. Indeed, about 40 million Europeans
could not afford to heat their homes properly in 2022. The Renovation
Wave initiative therefore aims to renovate some 35 million buildings by
2030, accelerating efforts to cut both energy poverty of households
and their greenhouse gas emissions, to improve comfort and to reduce
wasteful use of resources. States need to facilitate green transition
by supporting investment in large-scale renovation programmes, using
taxation incentives, facilitating the involvement of the most vulnerable
households and protecting green spaces against excessive densification in
urban areas.
8. Way forward: emphasis on good practice, public interest and a human rights-based approach
60. The right to housing is a fundamental
human right enshrined in international law, including the European Social
Charter (notably Article 31 read together with Articles 16, 30 and
others), which obligates Sates to promote access to adequate housing,
prevent and reduce homelessness, and ensure affordability of housing. However,
despite this general commitment, millions of Europeans continue
to face severe housing deprivation, homelessness, and exclusion
due to rising costs, housing shortages (caused by short-term rentals,
secondary residences, insufficient supply, etc.), and financial
speculation. Governments must take urgent action to address these
structural issues, recognising that housing is not just a commodity
but a social good essential to human dignity, health and well-being.
61. A core challenge is the financialisation of housing which
is increasingly treated as a source of profit rather than a basic
necessity. This trend has driven up housing prices beyond the means
of many low- and middle-income individuals. To counteract this,
States should increase public investment in social and affordable
housing, implement stronger regulations to curb real estate speculation,
and introduce rent control measures to ensure that housing remains
accessible to all income groups. The European Social Charter provides
a solid framework for these efforts by mandating State intervention
to prevent adequate housing from becoming an exclusive privilege
of the wealthy.
62. The homelessness crisis remains a pressing concern, with many
vulnerable groups (such as low-income families, migrants, refugees,
young people, older persons and precarious workers) struggling with
access to secure and stable housing. States as regulators should
prioritise prevention-based policies, including the “Housing First”
approach, which provides permanent housing alongside social support
services. Additionally, legal protections against forced evictions
must be reinforced, ensuring that any displacement is carried out
with due process and in line with human rights standards. Administrative
barriers, such as requiring extensive documentation to access emergency
shelters, should be minimised to guarantee rapid assistance for
those in crisis. As affordable housing remains in short supply across
Europe, States should ensure that short-term rentals and secondary
residencies are properly regulated so as not to divert too many
long-term rentals and housing options away from the local population.
63. Countries should look to more successful housing models, such
as Vienna’s municipal housing system, where 60% of residents benefit
from rent-controlled apartments supported by sustained public investment.
The Paris model, which integrates social housing with essential
services and uses rent control regulations, also offers valuable
lessons in addressing housing insecurity. Governments should adopt
long-term urban planning strategies that prioritise the development
of affordable, adequate and stable housing units, ensuring that
lower-income groups are not pushed to the margins of society.
64. The climate crisis and sustainable development needs add another
dimension to housing policies. Many homes across Europe are not
sufficiently resilient to natural disasters and not enough energy-efficient,
thus contributing to rising costs and damage, including to the environment.
Governments must lead sustainable housing policies by co-investing
in energy-efficient renovations, climate-resilient buildings and
infrastructure, and locally available renewable energy sources.
The European Green Deal and the Renovation Wave initiative provide
opportunities to align housing policies with sustainability goals,
reducing energy poverty, mainstreaming the right to a healthy environment
and ensuring that all citizens have access to safe, climate-resilient
housing.
65. To ensure effective implementation, States should enhance
legal enforcement mechanisms related to housing rights. The ECSR
plays a key role in monitoring compliance with the European Social
Charter, and States Parties must strengthen their commitment to
the Charter’s provisions by ratifying the entire Article 31 and
the Additional Protocol providing for a system of collective complaints
if they have not yet done so. Additionally, governments should improve
social protection systems, expanding access to housing benefits and
financial assistance for those at risk of poverty and homelessness.
66. Ultimately, achieving universal access to adequate housing
requires a profound shift in policy priorities. Governments must
treat housing as a fundamental human right which States have an
obligation to respect, protect and fulfil rather than a speculative
asset: they must balance market dynamics with strong public investment
and social protections. By adopting comprehensive, rights-based
housing strategies, States can fulfil their obligations under the
European Social Charter, reduce social inequalities, exclusion and
polarisation, and ensure that housing remains affordable, sustainable,
and accessible for all. This will contribute to democratic stability.