Bill Gates has tackled malaria, hunger, and education reform. But in 2017, he turned his attention to something he freely admitted he'd never experienced: the relentless brutality of housing instability in America.
Writing on his blog GatesNotes, Gates reviewed "Evicted" by sociologist Matthew Desmond—a Pulitzer-winning book that spent 18 months documenting the lives of renters and landlords in Milwaukee's poorest neighborhoods. The book wasn't preachy or judgmental. It was just unflinchingly clear about how housing can become a trap.
When One Setback Triggers Ten More
"I have no personal experience with the kind of crisis faced by Sharon," Gates wrote, referring to a single mother evicted after missing a single rent payment while recovering in the hospital. But he understood what Desmond was showing: housing instability isn't just uncomfortable. It's a tipping point that locks people into cycles they can't escape.
For many families Desmond followed, rent consumed 50% to 70% of their income. One emergency—a busted pipe, a missed shift, a sick kid—and they were out. Gates distilled it to one devastating line: "There's no room for bad luck."
That phrase captures the whole problem. Poverty isn't just about lacking money. It's about what happens when instability compounds. Take Arleen, a mother evicted after paying for a friend's funeral. She moved so often her son attended five different schools in one year. One financial setback triggered housing instability, which triggered educational disruption, which made everything harder to fix.
The System Fails Even When It's Working
Gates, whose net worth hovers around $103 billion, wasn't pretending to relate. But he used his platform to spotlight what Desmond revealed: a system that fails even when operating exactly as designed.
Housing vouchers and assistance programs theoretically provide relief. In practice, only one in four families who qualify actually receive help. Waitlists stretch for years, sometimes decades. And in cities like Milwaukee, even the poorest zip codes don't have cheap rent. When average rent in high-poverty neighborhoods runs just $50 below the citywide median, something is structurally broken.
Gates flagged this as a red flag and supported Desmond's follow-up research into eviction trends and the hidden forces keeping prices high even in struggling communities.
The Contrast Has Only Grown Starker
Eight years after that review, Gates acknowledged his own reality in an interview with The Times of London. "I have three houses," he said. "My house in Seattle, I admit, is gigantic. My sisters have downsized. I can't. I like the houses I have. My kids like to come back—that is a luxury."
He wasn't being flippant. That luxury—choice, stability, space—is precisely what millions lack. Gates isn't choosing between convenience and affordability. He's choosing between three fully-owned, multi-million-dollar estates. Meanwhile, millions of Americans are just trying to hold onto whatever space they have until the rent increases, the job disappears, or bad luck strikes.
The Crisis Hasn't Eased
Despite having "no personal experience" with housing crises, Gates landed on a message that hasn't aged a day: when 70% of your income goes to rent, there's no margin for error. The American Dream isn't just delayed—it's quietly dismantled, one eviction at a time.
If anything, the situation has intensified. Rents surged during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. Wages didn't keep pace. Millions of families now spend half or more of their income just to stay housed, with no cushion, no fallback, no room for even the smallest emergency.
Gates didn't need to live through eviction to recognize what happens when housing transforms from shelter into trap. When you're spending 70% of your income on rent, you're not building toward anything. You're just surviving—until you can't anymore.




