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The 10 most affordable US cities for renters
  + stars: | 2023-09-25 | by ( Noah Sheidlower | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +3 min
Jefferson City, MO, ranks as the most affordable metro area in the US for renters. Jefferson City, MO, ranked as the most affordable metro area for US renters, according to data from the US Census Bureau. For the top cities, Insider analyzed the share of residents with affordable rent, meaning the percent of residents who pay less than 30% of their income on rent. Around two-thirds of renters in Sheboygan and Appleton had affordable rent, while 63% in Racine had affordable rent. The data supports recent findings that wealthier Americans are moving to Montana and Idaho for more affordable rent.
Persons: Lucie, Louis Organizations: Metro, Service, Census Locations: Jefferson City ,, Ohio , Wisconsin, Wyoming, Wall, Silicon, Missouri , Wisconsin, Jefferson City, Missouri, Lima, Ohio, Wisconsin, Sheboygan, Appleton, Racine, Wyoming , South Dakota , Montana , North Carolina, Washington, Montana and Idaho, Florida, Homosassa Springs, Naples, Port St, Miami, Fort Lauderdale, York, Newark, Jersey City, Midwest, Northeast, Lincoln , Fresno, St, Tampa
New Yorkers fed up with a tough housing market are making the pilgrimage to Jersey City. New York City housing is becoming more elusive and expensive, and Jersey City is an attractive option. That's not to say that Jersey City is much cheaper, but there are more options: Along the Hudson River waterfront in Jersey City, dozens of luxury high-rises have sprouted up within the last 10 years, some filled with their own coffee shops, heated pools, and rooftop dog runs. Now, he knows at least eight to 10 acquaintances who have taken the Jersey City plunge since he moved. When it comes to the space and amenities that Jersey City provides, "once you have it, you can't go back."
Persons: Chelsea Vaughn, I'm, Vaughn, brownstones, Vaughn isn't, Steven Fulop, Fulop, cringes, Alexa Lacayo, would've, She'd, Susannah Byrne, Byrne, should've, Joey Politano, Zack Chibane, he's, Chibane Organizations: Service, Bushwick, Jersey City, New, Apple, Jersey, NYC, Income Housing Association, Alexa, New York's Financial, York, New Jersey, New York Locations: Jersey City, While Jersey, York, New York City, Jersey, Wall, Silicon, Brooklyn, Brooklyn , Manhattan, Vaughn, Harlem, New York, Grove, , It's, Florida, New, Manhattan, Hoboken, Murray Hill, Hudson, NYC, New Jersey
Rent growth is rapidly decelerating across the US after taking off during the pandemic. Lower rent growth means that the cost of an apartment is still climbing, just at a slower pace. Renting may be expensive, but considering how many are feeling about the economy, it's easy to see why so many are sticking to apartments — especially as rent growth steadily slides. 42 cities that are getting more affordableBelow are 42 real estate markets where median rent for a one-bedroom apartment is lower than it was in 2022, according to Zumper. Along with each city are its year-over-year and month-over-month rent changes, average rent price, and national rent ranking among the largest 100 US cities.
Persons: Price, Anthemos Georgiades, Georgiades
Below, we've compiled stories with tips for prospective homeowners, investors, and renters. And for those opting to continue renting since this path is increasingly cheaper than taking on a new mortgage payment, one piece shows where rents are falling the fastest. Sean Pavone/ShutterstockThis list from Scholaroo shows where prospective homeowners can find the cheapest combo of prices and property taxes relative to local incomes. John M Lund Photography Inc/Getty ImagesThis piece on an analysis by CoreLogic shows where investors are betting on most right now. Earlier in August, Goldman Sachs said they expect home prices on a national basis to grow another 1.8% this year.
Persons: we've, Goldman Sachs, hasn't, Sean Pavone, El Paso , Texas Denis Tangney Jr, Alan Diaz, Doug Ressler, John M, David Greene Organizations: CoreLogic, Service, AP, Kansas, John M Lund Locations: Wall, Silicon, El Paso , Texas, Kansas City , Missouri, Scholaroo
Rent Increases Are Softening, but Not Everywhere
  + stars: | 2023-08-03 | by ( Michael Kolomatsky | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The tight home-buying market is forcing many people to stay in their rentals, but the good news is that their rent may not be rising quite as fast as it has in recent years. The July rent report by the rental platform Zumper found that rate increases are slowing in many of the 100 largest U.S. cities (counter to what is typically expected during a peak moving season), though not decreasing. Since last July, rents are down in 38 of the 100 cities, steady in seven, and up in 55. The biggest drop was found in Lincoln, Neb., where the median one-bedroom costs $830 a month — 18.6 percent lower than a year ago. Also an example of short-term volatility, Lincoln saw rents rise more than 6 percent from June to July, the steepest monthly increase in the report.
Persons: Lincoln Locations: Lincoln, Neb
Here are 38 cities where rent is cheaper than it was last year, according to Zumper. ZumperLower rent growth comes as inflation falls from multi-decade-highs. While rent growth is modest compared to the double-digit rates of 2022, renters are contending with an affordability crisis, Zumper's researchers noted. That's a recipe for lower rent growth, but not a dramatic dip. Along with each city are its year-over-year and month-over-month rent changes, average rent price, and national rent ranking among the largest 100 US cities.
Persons: Anthemos Georgiades, Lofty, Georgiades
High-earners in New York could save 40% of their salary by moving to Texas, a new study shows. This is because New York City has higher tax rates and living costs. High-earners in New York City could save 40% of their salary by relocating to Texas, a new study found. This is because after accounting for tax and the cost of living, you'd have only $160,717 left in New York but in Austin, you'd have $418,929 left. Some young professionals are being pushed out of New York City because wages are not keeping up with increasing costs.
Persons: SmartAsset, San Francisco Organizations: New, New York City, Council for Community, Economic Research, Smart Asset, New York, San Locations: New York, Texas, San Francisco, Austin , Texas, Austin, Austin it's, New York City
Columbus, Ohio was named the top city for digital nomads in the United States, while Fort Lauderdale ranked last. Portland, Houston and Chicago have topped several lists highlighting the best cities for digital nomads, namely for having low housing costs and a high share of remote jobs that pay $100,000 per year or more. New York and Los Angeles, meanwhile, didn't even crack the top 20 best cities for digital nomads. 24, while New York City ranks No. The remote job market is shrinking in some cities, but flourishing in others.
Persons: Zumper, Louis, Covid — Organizations: Fort Lauderdale, Columbus , Ohio Portland , Oregon Kansas City , Missouri Houston St, Louis Chicago Cincinnati San, Louis Chicago Cincinnati San Antonio Detroit Denver Analysts, New York City, U.S . National Bureau of Economic Research, San Francisco Locations: U.S, California, Florida, Midwest, Zumper, Columbus , Ohio, United States, Columbus , Ohio Portland , Oregon Kansas City , Missouri Houston, Louis Chicago Cincinnati San Antonio, Kansas City, Cincinnati, St, Portland, Houston, Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, Washington, San Francisco, York
Here are 33 cities where rents are less than they were in June 2022, according to Zumper. That's a stark difference from May, where rent prices set a new record after rising from the prior month for the first time since December. For example, a $100 rent increase would be 10% of $1,000, but about 7% of $1,500. 33 markets where rent growth is droppingBelow are the 33 metro areas where rents for a one-bedroom apartment are lower than they were in 2022, according to Zumper. Along with each city are its year-over-year and month-over-month rent changes, average rent price, and national rent ranking among the largest 100 US cities.
Persons: It's, Zumper, Anthemos Georgiades
$104,400 is a "low" income in San Francisco County, according to California's housing department. Such a salary classes as a "low'" income in San Francisco County, according to California's Department of Housing and Community Development. In San Francisco County, the median income for a one-person household is listed as $122,500, per California's housing department. Making $18,400 a year is an "acutely low" income, $39,150 is "extremely low," $65,350 is "very low," and $104,400 is "low." Marin County, which is directly north of San Francisco County, and San Mateo County, to the south, both have the same income limits.
Persons: Organizations: Service, California's Department of Housing, Community, Fox Business, US Department of Housing, Urban, Survey, Stanford University, San, US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Census Locations: San Francisco County, Mississippi, San Francisco, Marin County, San Mateo County, Santa Clara, Jose, Google's, Palo Alto, New York City, Jersey City, San Francisco's
Midwestern cities were prominent in Zumper's list of best places for digital nomads. Zumper also took transportation, restaurant, and entertainment offerings into account. In 2021, the number of these digital nomads rose 42%, topping 10 million, MBO partners, a self-employment tech provider, found. It based its findings on myriad factors including short-term rental prices, ease of access to airports and other transportation, restaurant and entertainment offerings, air and WiFi quality. The cost of a short-term rental held the most weight in the ranking.
Persons: , Zumper, It's Organizations: Service, Nomads Locations: Placer.ai, Austin , Texas, Florida, Columbus , Ohio, Kansas City , Missouri, Chicago, Detroit , Michigan
Alex Akmal and her partner, Alex, along Memorial Union Terrace on Lake Mendota. In the case of Gen Z, one move often begets another, according to one demographer. Gen Z bonds have been cemented even more because many young people are delaying marriage and having children, the center found. After her studies, she said she might move to Washington, D.C., an even larger Gen Z hangout with those offerings and more. Cities must evolve for the futureFor whatever reason they are coming to these cities, these Gen Zers are here to stay.
Here are 25 cities where rent is either lower or the same as in 2022, according to a new report. Rent growth in the US hit a record high in May after accelerating for the first time in five months, according to a recent report from online rental platform Zumper. Renters' reluctance to ditch their apartments for homes can be traced to lofty mortgage rates that have risen in response to stubbornly high inflation. A Friday report revealed that core PCE, which is a common proxy for price growth, came in hotter than the market expected in April. Along with each city is its year-over-year and month-over-month rent growth, average rent price, and national rent ranking among the largest 100 US cities.
The 31-year-old grew his net worth to over $4 million through smart real estate investing (and a few frugal habits). Here's Baldwin's top two pieces of advice for beginning to build wealth through real estate. Before you buy property: Get your finances in orderThe first step to getting into real estate investing is figuring out how you're going to pay for it. Putting everyday purchases on a credit card and immediately paying it off can help you build credit for the first time or improve your existing score, he says. "Just put your regular expenses on [your credit card] and eventually, you'll build credit."
Rent growth has been steadily declining since late 2022, according to a new report. Today, median rent growth is three times higher than that at 6%. There's another startling sign that the US rental market isn't yet back to normal: the US currently has more cities with double-digit rent growth than those with negative rent growth. 20 cities where rent is falling right nowFor renters feeling the squeeze of continued rent growth, Insider compiled a list of the 20 US cities where median rent for one-bedroom apartments declined over the last 12 months ending in April. Below are the 20 cities that saw year-over-year median rent declines in April 2022, along with the year-over-year and month-over-month rent changes, average rent prices, and national rent ranking among the largest 100 US cities for each.
The national median price for a one-bedroom apartment is $1,495 in April, flat month over month. For a two-bedroom place, the national median price of $1,842 was up by 0.5%. One-bedroom median rent over the last month was down in 39 of the top cities tracked by Zumper. The report also found the one-bedroom median price was up 6% year over year, lower than the double-digit increases throughout much of 2021 and 2022. New York City ranked first in a list of median prices for one-bedroom apartments at $3,570, followed by Jersey City, NJ, at $3,000.
Gen Z is moving in droves to college towns after they get their degree. Alex Akmal and her partner, Alex, along Memorial Union Terrace on Lake Mendota. Gen Z bonds have been cemented even more because many young people are delaying marriage and having children, the center found. After her studies, she said she might move to Washington, D.C., an even larger Gen Z hangout with those offerings and more. For whatever reason they are coming to these cities, these Gen Zers are here to stay.
In cities both small and large, some locals are calling out short-term rentals for making housing more expensive. The same question is perplexing local governments and fueling impassioned locals to weigh in: What should we do about Airbnb-style, short-term rentals? Jacob Boomsma/Getty ImagesFor Bozeman Tenants United, it's simple math: Bozeman homes should be occupied by Bozeman residents first, before out-of-towners. Formed in 2020, Bozeman Tenants United surveyed Bozeman residents on the most pressing issues in local housing and landed on short-term rentals. Fire Thunder said the increase of short-term rentals and vacation-owned properties is just one harbinger of a concerning trend.
Institutional investors may control 40% of U.S. single-family rental homes by 2030, according to MetLife Investment Management. And a group of Washington, D.C., lawmakers believe that Wall Street needs to back away from the market. Khanna is the lead author of the Stop Wall Street Landlords Act of 2022. "What's outrageous is your tax dollars are helping Wall Street buy up single-family homes," he said in an interview with CNBC. Since the early 2010s, Tricon Residential, Progress Residential, American Homes 4 Rent, Invitation Homes have each bought thousands of homes.
If the first Cold War was defined by the development of nuclear weapons, this Tech Cold War is defined by the computer chip. The massive Intel plant in Ohio is a key part of the race with China for the future of tech. Even before the Intel plant, the Columbus area was well acquainted with these sorts of trade-offs. But, the Ohio State study found, Columbus' residential tax-abatement programs did little to meaningfully address the housing problem, while draining the city's funds. Federal, state, and local subsidies add up to billions of dollars that Intel is saving on its new Ohio semiconductor factory.
There are five cities where rent prices are predicted to cost the most next year, based on existing rent prices and projected demand, per an analysis provided by Zumper. Here's a look at the cities where rent is expected to be most expensive for a one-bedroom home, as well as price trends in each. New York CityMedian rent in December 2022 : $3,738: $3,738 Median rent in December 2020 : $2,399: $2,399 Percent change: 56% Prior to the pandemic, median rent for a one-bedroom home in the Big Apple was closer to $3,000. "We've seen record numbers of applications for apartments" in areas around New York City, Chen says. Luckily, rent prices have not climbed back up to the city's pre-pandemic peak of $3,700 in 2019.
On top of that, new rentals that do become available skew toward the luxury market, pushing median rent prices even higher. One reason Boston is experiencing a spike in rental prices: there just aren't many homes available, Zumper reports. The median price for a one-bedroom rental in Boston jumped by nearly 6% in October to $3,060 per month. Move over San Francisco — Boston is now the second most expensive city for a one-bedroom rental, behind only New York City, according to Zumper's latest national rent report. And even though New York City still ranks as the most expensive city to rent a one-bedroom, median rent prices have fallen about 2% compared with September.
She doesn't believe mortgage rates will return to 3% because that is very low. Mortgage rates have just about doubled from where they were this time last year. If you zoom out and look at where interest rates have been, you'd realize that historically, 7% is just about average, she noted. If you're a first-time buyer, you could qualify for a Federal Housing Administration loan (FHA), which requires a lower down payment but could still provide competitive interest rates. This will allow you to readjust when interest rates come back down.
Rent prices are falling across the country. It could be a lifesaver for not only Americans' bank accounts but also the entire US economy as a recession looms. The issue is that it takes time for lower rent prices to filter into the consumer-price index and other widely watched measures of inflation. "The faster those things show up in consumer-price inflation, the faster the inflation steps down, the sooner the Fed will back off." Sahm said the Fed was well aware of the way rent inflation is measured, adding that it "knows this data better than anyone in the world."
"Now — with a turbulent, unpredictable economy causing fear of recession, migrations are slowing, occupancy rates are falling and rent prices are following suit." Data from real estate database RealPage shows that in the third quarter of the year — a typically robust leasing period — rental demand turned "moderately negative" as leasing traffic plummeted. "The faster those things show up in consumer price inflation, the faster the inflation steps down, the sooner the Fed will back off." According to Zumper, more than half of the 100 US cities measured in its monthly national rent report posted month-over-month price declines in October. Lawler's analysis, as well as the recent rental market data, both suggest things are trending in the right direction.
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