Rents rise again, especially on lower-priced properties
Single-family rents continued their upward climb last month, notching a 3.1 percent jump over a year prior. According to new data, the spike was worse on the lower-priced end of the market.
Single-family rents get further out of reach
Affordable rentals just got, well, less affordable. According to the latest Single-Family Rent Index from CoreLogic, national rents jumped 3.1 percent over the year.
Lower-tier rental properties (those with rents under 75 percent of the area’s median price) saw the biggest jump, rising 3.6 percent since 2018. Higher-end rentals jumped just 2.9 percent.
Molly Boesel, CoreLogic’s principal economist, explains, “Increases in low-end rent prices have outpaced those on the high end for more than five years as newly-formed households push up demand for entry-level rentals.”
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Phoenix takes the crown once again
The spike was worse in markets like Phoenix, Seattle and Las Vegas. According to CoreLogic, these areas — “metros areas with limited new construction, low rental vacancies and strong local economies that attract new employees” — tend to see more rent increases on the whole.
Phoenix claimed the largest uptick in rents for the 11th straight month, notching a 6.8 percent increase. Seattle came in second at 5.8 percent, while Vegas came in third at 5.4 percent.
Buying a home is cheaper than renting one in these cities
Other cities with big jumps in single-family rents were Tucson, Arizona; Charlotte, North Carolina; Austin, Texas; Los Angeles; Atlanta; Boston; Orlando, Florida; and St. Louis, Missouri.
Miami saw the lowest jumped in single-family rents with just a 1 percent increase.
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