Apartment Rents Grow Faster than Incomes
Sep 8,
2015 Bendix Anderson,
nreionline.com
The average employee isn’t getting a big raise this year—but apartment rents are growing more quickly than ever.
The average employee isn’t getting a big raise this year—but apartment rents are growing more quickly than ever.
“Across
most markets, renters are paying a higher percentage of their incomes in rent,”
says Luis Mejia, director of U.S. multifamily research with the portfolio
strategy division of research firm CoStar.
That’s
not stopping apartment rents from going up. That’s partly because the average
income is surprisingly high for households living in rental housing with
unrestricted rents. These households can, on average, afford to pay and they
don’t have that many attractive alternatives. For now, for-sale housing is not
a lure for these renters, who may not have gathered the necessary funds for a
down payment, according to experts. Eventually, however, they may look for
cheaper housing in other neighborhoods, bidding up the prices for market-rate
apartments in new areas and gentrifying new neighborhoods.
“Eventually,
budget-constrained renters will look for more affordable options in
neighborhoods that haven’t been exposed to significant demand, or are more
distant from the central districts but still accessible to employment centers,”
says Mejia.
Market-rate
renters have (relatively) high incomes
Most
of the renters who live in “market-rate” apartments, in which the rents are not
restricted by affordability programs, have enough income to pay for current
rent increases, at least for now, according to researchers. “The average annual
household income for residents of market-rate apartments is around $85,000,
well above typical household income for the U.S. populace as a whole,”
according to Greg Willett, chief economist with RealPage, Inc., a company that
provides property management software for the multifamily industry. Willett’s
data is based on the 10 million apartments that use RealPage’s software.
“We
think that info pulled from market-rate apartment users of RealPage products
lines up pretty well with the characteristics of the market-rate stock that
exists in the U.S. as a whole,” says Willett. For example, the proportion of
class-B and class-C stock is about the same in Real Page’s large sample as in
the U.S. overall.
The
average income of $85,000 that RealPage reports is not as high as it might
sound at first, since many of the households may have two or more people
earning incomes. However, it’s enough to pay the average of $1,200 that these
households pay in monthly rent, which works out to just 17 percent of their
average income, says Willett. Apartment market research firm MPF has a few
caveats: rents are higher compared to incomes in West Coast markets and for
younger people.
“But that’s been true for young adults
in every generation historically,” says Willett. “The big-picture story is that
affordability isn’t especially challenging for most market-rate apartment
renters.”
Most
of these renters seem willing to accept rising rents. The average lease renewal
rates are now relatively high compared to years past, according to researchers
including MPF. “Rents will continue to grow faster than wages and inflation,”
says Douglas Robinson, spokesperson for NeighborWorks, an organization that
supports affordable housing. “Bottom line is people need to live somewhere, so
they will pay the higher rent and make it work in terms of budget.”
Where
are low-income people living?
MPF’s
data may show that the nation’s problem with unaffordable housing is worse than
many thought. About 30 percent of U.S. households earn $30,000 or less a year
(once again, that’s household income, not individual income). That’s not enough
money to afford the rent on an average market-rate apartment almost anywhere
across the country.
“A
significant chunk of the very low-income households likely live in rental
single-family home product,” says Willett. Roughly half of the nation’s rental
housing is located in single-family homes.
This
may present extra challenges for low-income people, since these single-family
homes may be more likely than apartments to be located far from jobs or
infrastructure like light rail stations and bus stops. In the past, when many
low-income people were crowded into inner-city neighborhoods, they were more
likely to be near employment opportunities, mass transit options and social
services.
“Transit
costs can surprise a person who lives in the suburbs and commutes into a job
center,” says Robinson.
Demand
is also high for government-subsidized “affordable” apartments with restricted
rents, though the number of these apartments is much smaller than the number of
low-income families, according to numerous experts.
Apartment
rents rise higher and higher
Rents
for market-rate apartments are expected to keep growing quickly. “Reis is
expecting to see rent growth accelerate in 2015,” says Michael Steinberg,
analyst for economics and research at research firm Reis, Inc.
Effective
rents will likely increase by 3.8 percent in 2015, according to Reis. That’s
roughly twice the rate of inflation. It’s also faster than the 3.5 percent rent
growth in 2014 and 3.2 percent rent growth in 2013.
Rents
will grow quickly, even though developers plan to finish hundreds of thousands
of new apartments by the end of the year. These new apartments will cause the
vacancy rate to increase slightly, to reach 4.6 percent by the end of the year.
That’s the wrong direction for vacancies to go, but the vacancy rate is
currently so low that a slight increase won’t change the dynamic by much.
“There
is some concern about the direction of fundamentals, but we are coming from a
very strong performance,” says Reis’ Steinberg. “Even with the amount of new
supply, vacancy rates are still pretty low.
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