Single-family rents reach record high, 20% above apartments

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It costs about $350 more each month to rent a single-family home 

  • Rents for single-family homes are up 41% over pre-pandemic norms; multifamily rents have risen 26% in that time.

  • Concessions are being offered on two out of every five rental properties on Zillow, another record.

  • For-sale inventory continues to recover, but is still 25% below pre-pandemic norms.

SEATTLE, Jan. 22, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Rented single-family homes are the housing market's big standout right now, with costs 20% higher than that of a typical multifamily apartment, according to the latest market report1 from Zillow®. That's the largest difference ever recorded by Zillow.

Zillow Group logo, April 2019 (PRNewsfoto/Zillow Group)
Zillow Group logo, April 2019 (PRNewsfoto/Zillow Group)

While stubbornly high mortgage rates are keeping a lid on buyer demand and home value growth, and a response from builders has kept multifamily rent growth stable for many months, rents for detached single-family homes continue to accelerate.

"Right now, more multifamily units are hitting the market than at any time in the past 50 years, but detached homes aren't seeing the same surge in construction," said Skylar Olsen, Zillow chief economist. "We've also got the large millennial generation wanting to move into a larger space. High and unpredictable mortgage rates and hefty down payments are pushing some to rent that lifestyle instead of buying it. Similarly discouraged, some homeowners may return to the market and sell to capitalize on record prices, rather than continue to wait for lower rates."

Looking at annual growth, rents for detached homes are up 4.4% — on par with their trajectory before the pandemic — while apartment rents are growing at a relatively stable 2.4% annually, a bit lower than the mid-3% growth seen in 2018 and 2019. Meanwhile, home value appreciation for owned homes has settled to 2.6% year over year, compared to 5.2% in December 2019.

Single-family rents are up 41% since before the pandemic, compared to 26% on multifamily rents. Single-family rentals hold a 59% price premium over multifamily units in Salt Lake City, the largest difference among the 50 largest U.S. metros. Detroit has the smallest delta percentage at 9%, and Pittsburgh — where single-family construction has boomed over the past five years — had a low 14% difference.

Rents are sticky, but concessions keep rising
Despite the general surge in apartment construction, rents on the multifamily side are proving to be sticky. Annual rent growth has been relatively stable, in the mid-2% range, over the past year. 

Property managers are instead increasingly turning to concessions to lure in tenants. These deal sweeteners, such as months of free rent or free parking, are now offered on 41% of all rental listings on Zillow, another record high. Zillow's Rental Market Report has additional data and details.