When people think of Habitat for Humanity, they often picture volunteers raising walls or a family receiving the keys to their first home. Those moments are powerful, but they’re only one piece of a much larger economic ripple.
According to Habitat for Humanity International’s 2024 National Economic Impact Analysis, every home built or repaired by Habitat produces measurable, long-lasting economic benefits in the surrounding community. That means the work we do right here at Lake-McHenry Habitat for Humanity not only transforms lives, it strengthens the entire economy of McHenry County and Lake County, Illinois.
In a region where housing costs continue to climb and working families struggle to keep up, this impact matters more than ever.
The Big Picture: What the 2024 Economic Impact Report Shows
Across the United States, Habitat affiliates and support organizations invested $1.68 billion in homebuilding, repairs, and operations.
The economic ripple effects include:
- $2.91 billion in total economic output
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A return of $1.74 for every $1 invested
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28,751 jobs supported
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$1.61 billion in labor income
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Approximately 2.2 jobs supported per home built or repaired
But numbers alone don’t capture the full story. Behind every economic statistic is a family gaining stability, a child with a safer place to learn, a volunteer building connection, and a local business supported through Habitat’s work.
When viewed through the lens of our own neighborhoods, from the busy streets of Waukegan to the growing communities around Woodstock — the impact becomes even clearer. Stable, affordable housing lays the foundation for stronger schools, healthier families, and more resilient local economies.
That’s why the national data matters for us here at Lake-McHenry Habitat: it reflects the economic transformation we see every time a family turns the key to a home they helped build. And it sets the stage for understanding how our specific initiatives strengthen Lake and McHenry Counties every day. So what does this national data mean for us locally?
The unfortunate truth is that a gap in housing assistance for the average American is real, it is growing, and it’s right here in McHenry and Lake county.
Many families earn too much to qualify for subsidized housing, but too little to afford safe, stable market-rate homes.
It leaves many between a rock and a hard place, but we see them, and we’re here to be a place to land.
We’re here to fill that housing gap.
Rising home values are outpacing wages.
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McHenry County median home value: ~$286,900 (6% year-over-year increase)
— Source: DataUSA McHenry County -
Lake County median home value: ~$375,700 (4.8% increase)
— Source: Zillow Lake County Market Overview
High homeownership rates hide growing gaps.
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McHenry County homeownership rate: 82.6%
— Source: McHenry County Census QuickFacts -
Lake County owner-occupied rate: ~74%
— Source: CMAP Lake County Profile
When a Habitat home is built, something much larger begins to grow. A family finds stability. A neighborhood gains strength. A contractor receives steady work. A child sleeps safely. A community sees possibility.
This ripple effect is exactly what the national economic analysis captures — and it’s happening every day in Lake and McHenry Counties. The numbers show what we already know from experience: affordable housing doesn’t just change one household. It strengthens the economic and social fabric of the entire region.
As home prices rise and affordable options shrink, our work becomes a critical anchor for families who want to stay close to their support systems, jobs, and schools. And that’s where our local programs begin to shine
Our work not only lifts homeowners, it lifts the entire community.
Our Trinity Trail development in Woodstock is the largest project in our history — and a major economic engine for McHenry County.
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Ten homes = 22+ jobs supported
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Local subcontractors and trades benefit directly
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Future homeowners contribute ongoing property taxes
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Families reinvest income locally in stores, schools, and services
Trinity Trail is more than a construction project, it’s a long-term investment in county-wide economic stability.
Women Build strengthens the local economy through:
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Sponsorships from area companies
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Volunteer spending at local businesses
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Contracts with local trades
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Funds reinvested into materials and supplies
Every participant, sponsor, and volunteer helps build both a home and the economic resilience of our region.
Veterans Build contributes to the economy by:
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Employing local trades
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Conducting repairs that prevent displacement
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Improving veterans’ employment and financial stability
Stable housing gives local veterans the foundation to stay in the workforce, support their families, and participate in the local economy.
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Keeps seniors safely aging in place
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Prevents blight and preserves property values
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Supports small contractors and trades
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Protects community stability
CHR work often takes place in older homes — a major need in both counties.
These results reflect direct spending (materials, labor, operations), indirect spending (supply chains and subcontractors), and induced spending (household income circulating in the local economy).