Rents across the United States fell slightly in March on an annual basis, although prices are potentially set up to jump in the future because of limited construction, according to real estate brokerage Redfin.
“Asking rents have stabilized below their 2022 record high of $1,705.
“March marked the 13th-straight month in which asking rents barely decreased or increased, with a year-over-year change of less than 1 percent during each of those months.”
Among the 44 major metropolitan areas analyzed by the brokerage, Austin, Texas, saw the biggest year-over-year percentage decline in rent at 10.7 percent. This was followed by San Diego; Portland, Oregon; Minneapolis; and Raleigh, North Carolina.
Redfin attributed the large decline in rent in Austin to Texas’s being a top homebuilder during the COVID-19 pandemic boom. With the recent decline in rental costs, Austin is no longer Texas’s most expensive large city for renters.
“During the pandemic moving frenzy, rents skyrocketed because there weren’t enough apartments to meet surging demand. Builders then ramped up construction, which caused rents to fall in 2023 and early 2024 because landlords were competing for tenants,” Redfin said.
“There are still a lot of newly built apartments coming on the market, which is keeping rent growth at bay. But renter demand is strong due to high homebuying costs, which means rent declines are also limited—for now.”
Economists at Redfin suggested that rents may tick up again because construction of new apartments is slowing down, which would reduce supply and entice landlords to raise rental prices.
Chen Zhao, the company’s economics research lead, suggested that U.S. tariffs could make building apartments more costly because the United States purchases a lot of building materials from other nations.
“NAHB is pleased President Trump recognized the importance of critical construction inputs for housing and chose to continue current exemptions for Canadian and Mexican products, with a specific exemption for lumber from any new tariffs at this time,” Hughes said.
Renters Under Pressure
Rental costs over the past four years have surged, putting financial pressure on renters.It estimates that the country’s 10.9 million low-income renter households face a shortage of 7.1 million affordable and available rental properties, which results in only 35 such homes available for every 100 of these households.
“Eighty-seven percent of extremely low-income renters are cost-burdened, and 75 percent are severely cost-burdened. Extremely low-income renters account for about a quarter of all renters, 43 percent of all cost-burdened renters, and 68 percent of all severely cost-burdened renters,” the report stated.
“More than 90 percent of extremely low-income renters are either in the labor force, are seniors, have a disability, are in school, or are single adult caregivers.”
The task force aims to use underutilized federal lands to boost the housing supply. In a March 17 post on social media platform X, Turner highlighted that the country needs 7 million affordable homes and that the Interior Department owns one-fifth of the United States’ landmass.
“With a slowdown in apartment construction and an uptick in single-family home development, the gap between single-family and multifamily rents is likely to narrow,” it stated.