Apartment vacancies nationally dwindled to another record low in September at just 2.7%, according to RealPage, Inc. This marked the fourth consecutive month of record-breaking lows in a dataset going back three decades.
Ultra-low vacancy traces to unprecedented demand from both new renters moving in and existing renters choosing to renew leases. Remarkably, new lease demand in the 12-month period ending in September shattered the pre-2021 peak by an incredible 50.5%. At the same time, apartment resident retention surprisingly surged to 58.0% – surpassing the all-time high set during the peak of the lockdowns in April 2020. Retention rates represent the share of renters with expiring leases who choose to renew in a given period.
The fact that more new renters are entering the front door, but fewer existing renters are leaving out the back door is an unprecedented phenomenon that translates to a severe shortage in rental housing availability at every price point and in essentially every city across the country.
In apartment operations, a vacancy rate of 4% to 5% is considered essentially full, accounting for normal turnover time. As of September, though, vacancy registered below 4% in 140 of the nation’s 150 largest metropolitan areas. Furthermore, 113 metros reported vacancies below 3% and 48 came in at or below 2%. Among large metros, the top three were Orange County, CA and Providence, RI (both at 1.12%) and Riverside, CA (1.37%).
Renewal demand has been equally surprising. Retention rates initially spiked as high as 57.8% in spring 2020 when renters couldn’t or wouldn’t move due to lockdowns. Retention then eased back once lockdowns subsided, and few expected retentions ever to approach lockdown-era highs again. But retention surged back up over the last three months and reached a new pinnacle of 58.0% in September 2021.
In other words, renters looking for other housing options are often finding that their best and most affordable option is to stay put. There are a few available apartments, single-family rentals, or for-sale homes. The options that do exist are often much more expensive. Plus, property managers routinely price renewal leases well below new lease rents.
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