Current:Home > reviewsFlorida rentals are cooling off, partly because at-home workers are back in the office -ProfitSphere Academy
Florida rentals are cooling off, partly because at-home workers are back in the office
View
Date:2025-04-15 10:33:44
After dominating the nationwide markets for rental price growth over the pandemic, cities in Florida are showing signs of a slowdown.
Eight of the nine measured cities in Florida saw yearly rent increases at or below the national average in June, according to researchers at Florida Atlantic University and two other schools.
Nationally, rents increased 4% percent year-over-year in June, while yearly rents in metros across Florida saw increases at or below that. Rents in Palm Bay rose 4%; Deltona, 3.9%; North Port, 3.7%; Miami, 3.4% percent; Tampa, 3%; Lakeland, 2.5%; Jacksonville, 2.4%; Orlando, 2.3%, according to the Waller, Weeks and Johnson Rental Index.
Cape Coral was the only metro in Florida with yearly increases higher than the national average: 7.7%.
While the ability to work from home over the pandemic resulted in an influx of people moving into Florida, the return-to-office mandates that many companies have begun instituting are playing a role in the slowdown, says Ken H. Johnson, a housing economist at FAU's College of Business, who along with along with fellow researchers Shelton Weeks of Florida Gulf Coast University, and Bernie Waller of the University of Alabama conducted the study.
“When the pandemic first hit, you could go live in Florida and work from home five days a week. But as soon as the businesses in New York City said, ‘well, you're gonna have to come in some number of days a week, well, you can't live in Miami and work one day a week and commute back to New York City, the other four’,” Johnson told USA TODAY.
Home prices:Housing market recession? Not likely. Prepare for hot post-pandemic prices
The rental price increases in Cape Coral, the only city in Florida to fare better than the national average, is attributable to scarcity of housing inventory in the aftermath of last year's Hurricane Ian, which damaged homes and propped up rental prices on available stock, according to Johnson.
But that doesn’t mean rents have become affordable in the Sunshine State.
“They just aren’t expanding as rapidly as before,” said Johnson. “The state is easing out of a rental crisis and into an affordability crisis where renters are faced with increasing costs and incomes that aren’t rising to meet those costs.”
A few factors are keeping rents elevated in Florida, with little signs of a decline: a sustained influx of out-of-state people still moving to the state, hybrid office work options that allow people to work from home and an insufficient number of units coming on the market to meet demand.
“It’s taking longer than it needs to build in Florida, and we are still exposed to the scenario where apartment rates could take off again if we don’t start building fast enough,” Weeks said. “It’s also possible that some people will leave the area, as the cost of living is getting too high.”
The highest yearly rental increases in the country were found in Madison, Wisconsin, where rents increased 10%; Charleston, South Carolina, 8%; Springfield, Massachusetts, 7.6% percent; Wichita, Kansas, 7.3%; and Knoxville, Tennessee, 7%.
“In the areas of the country where year-over-year rent increases are the highest, supply continues to significantly lag demand,” says Waller. “It takes time to put turnkey units into the ground. In time, rents will come into line as supply and demand come into balance. However, the affordability issue will still be there.”
All three researchers agree that the rental crisis is morphing into a protracted housing affordability crisis, which more units on the markets and corresponding increases in wages can best solve.
Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy is a housing and economy correspondent for USA TODAY. You can follow her on Twitter @SwapnaVenugopal and sign up for our Daily Money newsletter here.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- 'Most Whopper
- Louisiana mayor who recently resigned now faces child sex crime charges
- Horoscopes Today, August 3, 2024
- Schwab, Fidelity, other online trading brokerages appear to go dark during huge market sell-off
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- 'House of the Dragon' Season 2 finale: Date, time, cast, where to watch and stream
- Powerball winning numbers for August 3 drawing: Jackpot rises to $171 million
- Everything you need to know about the compact Dodge Neon SRT-4
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Christine Lakin thinks satirical video of Candace Cameron Bure's brother got her fired from 'Fuller House'
Ranking
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- National White Wine Day: Cute Wine Glasses & More To Celebrate
- Everything you need to know about the compact Dodge Neon SRT-4
- Golf analyst Brandel Chamblee says Jon Rahm’s Olympic collapse one of year's biggest 'chokes'
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Tesla brings back cheap Model 3 variant with big-time range
- Florida power outage map: Over 240,000 without power as Hurricane Debby makes landfall
- Everything you need to know about the compact Dodge Neon SRT-4
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Zac Efron hospitalized after swimming accident in Ibiza, reports say
The internet's latest craze? Meet 'duck mom.'
Everything you need to know about the compact Dodge Neon SRT-4
Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
3 people are found dead at a southeast Albuquerque home, police say it appears to be a homicide case
Novak Djokovic beats Carlos Alcaraz to win his first Olympic gold medal
Archery's Brady Ellison wins silver, barely misses his first gold on final arrow