Austin, Texas
(-4.7%), Memphis, Tenn. (-4.4%),
St. Louis (-4.0%), Atlanta (-3.7%), Miami (-3.6%), and Phoenix (-3.2%) lead the nation
with the largest rent drops
SANTA
CLARA, Calif., April 30,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Rents declined in March for the
eighth consecutive month, with year-over-year prices dropping by
-0.3% and declines seen across all unit sizes, according to the
Realtor.com® Rental Report released today. Even so, the
median rent of $1,722 was only
$36 less than the peak seen in
August 2022 and was $313 more than in March
2019, before the pandemic, pointing to a resilient rental
market.
Top 10 markets with the largest yearly rent price declines
include: Austin-Round Rock, Texas
(-4.70%); Memphis, Tenn.-Ms.-Ark.
(-4.40%); St. Louis, Mo.-Ill.
(-4.00%); Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell, Ga (-3.70%); Miami-Fort
Lauderdale-West Palm Beach,
Fla. (-3.60%); Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale,
Ariz. (-3.20%); Nashville-Davidson–Murfreesboro–Franklin,
Tenn. (-2.90%); Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford,
Fla. (-2.80%); Tampa-St.
Petersburg-Clearwater, Fla. (-2.50%); and Cleveland-Elyria,
Ohio (-2.50%).
"Rising shelter costs have been a major driver of overall
inflation, a top concern for the Fed as it meets this week," said
Danielle Hale, Chief Economist at
Realtor.com®. "There is some good news for renters with
prices falling in many parts of the country, especially outside
expensive metro markets in the West and Northeast. However, we
expect cost pressures to continue as interest rates remain high and
would-be buyers opt to rent instead and keep demand high. New
housing construction is needed, especially in major markets in the
Northeast and West, to alleviate the home supply shortage. Softer
rents in the South are evidence that more supply helps tame rising
costs."
Rents in Midwest held steady amid rising unemployment,
declined in the South
March rents in the Midwest were flat,
though there was strong growth in Chicago (4.3%), Kansas City, Mo. (3.4%), and Indianapolis (3.3%). Midwest markets have
remained more affordable, with median rent in Chicago ($1,846), for example, more than $1,000 less than in New
York and Los Angeles. Still
with unemployment rising in the Midwest, rental prices could slow
or decline there. In the South, meanwhile, the median asking rent
fell by -1.5% from a year ago. The biggest drops occurred in
Austin, Texas (-4.7%),
Memphis, Tenn. (-4.4%),
Atlanta (-3.7%), Miami (-3.6%) and Nashville, Tenn. (-2.9%). Unemployment is low
and demand for rental housing was strong, but an influx of new
units has helped push down rental prices.
Rents in the West saw new growth, while expensive Northeast
markets continue to climb
The median asking rent in the West
rose by 0.4% from a year ago, the first annual increase after 13
months of declines. Increases came in expensive metro areas such as
San Diego (2.9%) and Los Angeles (1.6%), as more potential
first-time buyers opted for renting in the face of high home prices
and the expectation that mortgage rates will remain elevated in the
near future. Unemployment rates in the West rose, potentially
forcing some people to postpone buying plans and pushing up rental
rates – although if labor market conditions deteriorate, more
people may leave the area entirely. Some Western metros saw
declines in rent, including Phoenix (-3.2%) and Denver (-1.9%). Expensive Northeastern metros
continued to see an even faster pace of rent growth, with median
rents in New York rising by 3.8%
and in Boston by 3.3%. Labor
markets in the region remain relatively robust, and demand for
rental housing is outstripping supply.
Amid general drop in rents, studios saw biggest
decline
In March, units of all sizes saw median rent
declines, with studios showing the largest drop (-1.4%) on a
year-over-year basis, to $1,435. It
was the seventh consecutive month of rent declines for studios,
though the median asking rent is still 17.6% higher than five years
ago. Median asking rents for one-bedroom units declined by -0.1%,
to $1,602. That relatively small drop
may be because one-bedroom units are an alternative to both smaller
and larger units. Meanwhile, rents for two-bedroom units declined
by -0.5% to $1,908, the eighth
consecutive month of year-over-year decline. These units still had
the highest growth rate over the past five years, up by
$372 (24.2%).
National Rental Data – March
2024
Unit
Size
|
Median
Rent
|
Rent
YoY
|
Rent Change - 5
Years
|
Overall
|
$1,722
|
-0.3 %
|
22.2 %
|
Studio
|
$1,435
|
-1.4 %
|
17.6 %
|
1-bed
|
$1,602
|
-0.1 %
|
22.1 %
|
2-bed
|
$1,908
|
-0.5 %
|
24.2 %
|
Top 10 metros with the largest year-over-year declines,
March 2024
Metro
|
Median Rent (0-2
Bedrooms)
|
YOY (0-2
Bedrooms)
|
Austin-Round Rock,
TX
|
$1,531
|
-4.7 %
|
Memphis,
TN-MS-AR
|
$1,258
|
-4.4 %
|
St. Louis,
MO-IL
|
$1,306
|
-4.0 %
|
Atlanta-Sandy
Springs-Roswell, GA
|
$1,626
|
-3.7 %
|
Miami-Fort
Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL
|
$2,378
|
-3.6 %
|
Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, AZ
|
$1,554
|
-3.2 %
|
Nashville-Davidson–Murfreesboro–Franklin,
TN
|
$1,614
|
-2.9 %
|
Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL
|
$1,683
|
-2.8 %
|
Tampa-St.
Petersburg-Clearwater, FL
|
$1,732
|
-2.5 %
|
Cleveland-Elyria,
OH
|
$1,247
|
-2.5 %
|
Rental Data – 50 Largest Metropolitan Areas – March 2024
Metro
|
Median Rent(0-2
Bedrooms)
|
YOY (0-2
Bedrooms)
|
Atlanta-Sandy
Springs-Alpharetta, GA
|
$1,626
|
-3.7 %
|
Austin-Round Rock,
TX
|
$1,531
|
-4.7 %
|
Baltimore-Columbia-Towson, MD
|
$1,795
|
-1.9 %
|
Birmingham-Hoover,
AL
|
$1,240
|
-2.4 %
|
Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH
|
$3,023
|
3.3 %
|
Buffalo-Cheektowaga,
NY
|
NA
|
NA
|
Charlotte-Concord-Gastonia, NC-SC
|
$1,539
|
-0.9 %
|
Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN-WI
|
$1,846
|
4.3 %
|
Cincinnati,
OH-KY-IN
|
$1,300
|
-1.4 %
|
Cleveland-Elyria,
OH
|
$1,247
|
-2.5 %
|
Columbus, OH
|
$1,189
|
-1.7 %
|
Dallas-Fort
Worth-Arlington, TX
|
$1,515
|
-1.0 %
|
Denver-Aurora-Lakewood,
CO
|
$1,902
|
-1.9 %
|
Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, MI
|
$1,326
|
0.7 %
|
Hartford-West
Hartford-East Hartford, CT
|
NA
|
NA
|
Houston-The
Woodlands-Sugar Land, TX
|
$1,399
|
2.3 %
|
Indianapolis-Carmel-Anderson, IN
|
$1,297
|
3.3 %
|
Jacksonville,
FL
|
$1,547
|
-1.0 %
|
Kansas City,
MO-KS
|
$1,340
|
3.4 %
|
Las
Vegas-Henderson-Paradise, NV
|
$1,520
|
-0.3 %
|
Los Angeles-Long
Beach-Anaheim, CA
|
$2,869
|
1.6 %
|
Louisville/Jefferson
County, KY-IN
|
$1,224
|
0.4 %
|
Memphis,
TN-MS-AR
|
$1,258
|
-4.4 %
|
Miami-Fort
Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL
|
$2,378
|
-3.6 %
|
Milwaukee-Waukesha,
WI
|
$1,568
|
-1.7 %
|
Minneapolis-St.
Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI
|
$1,500
|
-0.9 %
|
Nashville-Davidson–Murfreesboro–Franklin,
TN
|
$1,614
|
-2.9 %
|
New Orleans-Metairie,
LA
|
NA
|
NA
|
New York-Newark-Jersey
City, NY-NJ-PA
|
$2,876
|
3.8 %
|
Oklahoma City,
OK
|
$977
|
1.0 %
|
Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL
|
$1,683
|
-2.8 %
|
Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington,
PA-NJ-DE-MD
|
$1,803
|
-0.6 %
|
Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, AZ
|
$1,554
|
-3.2 %
|
Pittsburgh,
PA
|
$1,439
|
2.8 %
|
Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR-WA
|
$1,683
|
0.5 %
|
Providence-Warwick,
RI-MA
|
NA
|
NA
|
Raleigh, NC
|
$1,523
|
-2.2 %
|
Richmond, VA
|
$1,506
|
-0.3 %
|
Riverside-San
Bernardino-Ontario, CA
|
$2,209
|
-0.2 %
|
Rochester,
NY
|
NA
|
NA
|
Sacramento-Roseville-Folsom, CA
|
$1,878
|
2.8 %
|
San Antonio-New
Braunfels, TX
|
$1,266
|
-0.7 %
|
San Diego-Chula
Vista-Carlsbad, CA
|
$2,866
|
2.9 %
|
San
Francisco-Oakland-Berkeley, CA
|
$2,867
|
0.1 %
|
San
Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA
|
$3,227
|
1.5 %
|
Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA
|
$2,014
|
0.0 %
|
St. Louis,
MO-IL
|
$1,306
|
-4.0 %
|
Tampa-St.
Petersburg-Clearwater, FL
|
$1,732
|
-2.5 %
|
Virginia
Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA-NC
|
$1,510
|
-1.4 %
|
Washington-Arlington-Alexandria,DC-VA-MD-WV
|
$2,222
|
1.5 %
|
Buffalo, N.Y.,
Hartford, Conn.; New Orleans; Providence, R.I.; and Rochester, N.Y.
area metrics have been excluded while data is under
review.
|
|
Methodology
Rental data as of March 2024 for studio, 1-bedroom, or 2-bedroom
units advertised as for-rent on Realtor.com®. Rental units include
apartments as well as private rentals (condos, townhomes,
single-family homes). We use rental sources that reliably report
data each month within the top 50 largest metropolitan areas.
Realtor.com® began publishing regular monthly rental trends reports
in October 2020 with data history
stretching back to March 2019.
About
Realtor.com®
Realtor.com® is an
open real estate marketplace built for everyone.
Realtor.com® pioneered the world of digital real
estate more than 25 years ago. Today, through its website and
mobile apps, Realtor.com® is a trusted guide for
consumers, empowering more people to find their way home by
breaking down barriers, helping them make the right connections,
and creating confidence through expert insights and guidance. For
professionals, Realtor.com® is a trusted partner
for business growth, offering consumer connections and branding
solutions that help them succeed in today's on-demand world.
Realtor.com® is operated by News Corp [Nasdaq:
NWS, NWSA] [ASX: NWS, NWSLV] subsidiary Move, Inc. For more
information, visit Realtor.com®.
Media contact:
Sara Wiskerchen,
press@realtor.com
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SOURCE Realtor.com