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Fewer Multifamily Permits Today Could Mean Costlier Rents Ahead

In This Article:

  • Rent jumps are expected in: New York, N.Y., Kansas City, Mo., Detroit, Mich., Washington D.C., San Jose, Calif., Baltimore, Md., Boston, St. Louis and Charlotte, N.C.

  • Federal employment hot spots show no sign of meaningful impact from federal layoffs… yet

AUSTIN, Texas, March 19, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Rents have been on a decline in the top 50 metros for over a year, but low multifamily permitting activity is making way for higher rent prices, according to the Realtor.com® February rent report. In fact, within the top 50 metros only 294,000 multifamily units were permitted in 2024, which is well below the 318,000 units permitted at the peak of the pandemic in 2020.

National Rents by Unit Size
National Rents by Unit Size

"During the pandemic, rent prices surged significantly. While there has been a gradual correction, the current trend of declining rents over the past 19 months and a still-sizable number of multi-family units under construction have impacted builders' enthusiasm for new projects," said Danielle Hale, Chief Economist of Realtor.com®. "The nation is short 3.8 million homes according to Realtor.com® research. As builders attempt to right-size their construction pipelines amid shifting economic and policy cross currents, multifamily builders nationwide have made headway, evidenced by vacancy rates trending up. Still, the shortfall varies by market and region. The low level of permitting for multifamily housing, particularly in markets where rents are still climbing, may become a catalyst for future rent growth."

When Supply is in a Pinch, Rent Will Rise
In hot markets where demand is high, and rent is already growing, low levels of multifamily housing permitting will cause further supply constraints and could make rents go up even higher in the future. For nine of the top 50 metros, multifamily permitting was lower than recent history in 2024, and these places experienced a rise in rent, including New York, N.Y., Kansas City, Mo., and Detroit, Mich.

Hot Markets Where Rent is Poised To Grow as Permits Decline

Metro

Rent Increase
YoY

Multifamily Permits vs

5-year Baseline

New York-Newark-Jersey City, N.Y.-N.J.

6.80 %

-9.50 %

Kansas City, M.O.-Kan.

6.00 %

-6.00 %

Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, Mich.

3.60 %

-11.60 %

Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, D.C.-Va.-Md-W.Va.

3.30 %

-35.00 %

San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, Calif.

1.30 %

-51.00 %

Baltimore-Columbia-Towson, Md.

1.20 %

-22.60 %

Boston-Cambridge-Newton, Mass.-N.H.

0.70 %

-22.30 %

St. Louis, Mo.-Ill.

0.30 %

-27.30 %

Charlotte-Concord-Gastonia, N.C.-S.C.

0.20 %

-19.00 %