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Asking Rents Posted First Gain in Five Months in February

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Housing Markets

Asking Rents Posted First Gain in Five Months in February

After falling at the close of 2022, asking rents are on the rise in these popular US metros


March 6, 2023
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Asking rents posted their first monthly increase in five months in February with a $6 (0.3%) gain, suggesting that while the rental market remains cooler than normal, it may be slowly gaining steam ahead of the spring market. Typical asking rents are now $1,976, a rate still 6.3% higher than one year ago, but 0.5% below the peak of $1,987 recorded in September 2022, Zillow reports.

The steepest monthly rental declines took place in cities such as Cleveland, Jacksonville, Fla., and Salt Lake City, where costs fell -1.0%, -0.4%, and -0.4%, respectively. By contrast, rents rose the fastest in Hartford, Conn. (1.3%), Sacramento, Calif. (0.9%), and Chicago (0.8%) throughout February.

Not only did monthly rent growth in February break its 4-month streak in the red; it also climbed much closer to average pre-pandemic growth rates for that time of year. In each of the last 3 months, the monthly growth rate was 25 to 30 basis points lower than the pre-pandemic average: -0.41% in November (vs -0.11%); -0.26% in December (vs -0.01%); and -0.06% in January (vs 0.21%). But this February, growth was only 13 basis points below the 0.43% averaged at this time of year in the five years of data from 2016 to 2020.

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