Who's getting evicted in America? The latest data shows a grim reality for millions of US adults — and kids — facing eviction as the housing crisis continues for renters
Who's getting evicted in America? The latest data shows a grim reality for millions of US adults — and kids — facing eviction as the housing crisis continues for renters
Who's getting evicted in America? The latest data shows a grim reality for millions of US adults — and kids — facing eviction as the housing crisis continues for renters

Propelled by rising rents and a shortage of affordable housing, eviction filings are skyrocketing across the country — leaving many Americans scrambling to cover costs, find a new place or face the risk of homelessness.

The rental crisis was already worrying before the pandemic: Roughly 7.6 million Americans faced eviction each year from 2007 to 2016, according to a recent report from The Eviction Lab and U.S. Census Bureau tallying for the first time the number of individuals, not just households, under threat.

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Fast forward to today, and eviction filings are more than 50% higher than the pre-pandemic average in multiple cities.

Eviction Lab researchers are tracking eviction filings in 34 cities across 10 states, and the data provides a grim snapshot of the risks facing a growing number of American renters right now.

Here’s what is pushing the rental crisis to new heights — and the disturbing truth about who is most at risk.

Rents are still high amid housing shortage

The typical rent in the U.S. now sits at $2,011 — 3.2% higher compared to last year and up slightly from September — according to a November report from Zillow.

And the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC) notes a full-time worker would need to earn $28.58 an hour on average to afford a modest, two-bedroom rental — far higher than the national minimum wage of $7.25.

This puts low-income Americans at major risk of losing out on housing — and facing homelessness.

While monthly rent growth is slowly cooling ahead of the winter months, more low-income workers are rent-burdened, as they struggle with wages that aren’t keeping pace with inflation and no more pandemic programs to help keep them afloat.

To compound this issue, the U.S. is facing a shortfall of 7.3 million rental homes that are affordable to renters with extremely low incomes (incomes at or below either the federal poverty guideline or 30% of their area median income), reports the NLIHC.

However, the latest rental report from Zillow points to an uptick in supply on the horizon as several multi-family builds near completion. The report states that this is "likely to nudge rental vacancy rates upward and help dampen asking rent prices for multifamily units in the months to come."