The largest rent hikes in U.S. cities since 2020
- Last update: 22 hours ago
- 2 min read
- 283 Views
- BUSINESS
For many Americans, buying a home remains out of reach, and paying rent is becoming increasingly challenging. In the nations 50 largest cities, the average monthly rent for a one-bedroom apartment increased by $457, or 41%, reaching $1,578 between 2020 and 2025, according to a recent analysis by LendingTree. During the same period, two-bedroom apartments saw an average rent increase of $505, or 37%, bringing the average to approximately $1,858 per month.
Since 2019, rent growth nationwide has outpaced wage increases by about 1.5 times, according to a 2024 report from Zillow and StreetEasy.
If your earnings rise alongside rent, the added cost might not feel significant, said Matt Schulz, chief consumer finance analyst at LendingTree. However, many Americans have very limited financial flexibility, so paying hundreds more in rent monthly can be a real burden.
Nationally, rents are expected to see a modest decline of around 1% next year, according to Realtor.com.
Cities with the Largest Rent Increases
New York, San Diego, and Miami have experienced the largest jumps in monthly rent. Since 2020, one-bedroom apartments in these cities have increased by $854, $817, and $764, respectively. Two-bedroom units rose by $857, $877, and $885 over the same period.
Other cities in the top 10 for one-bedroom rent growth include:
- Riverside, California
- Tampa, Florida
- Sacramento, California
- Atlanta, Georgia
- Orlando, Florida
- Boston, Massachusetts
- Phoenix, Arizona
In New York and San Diego, the rent surge is largely due to high demand and limited housing availability. Miamis increase is driven by population growth from both domestic and international migration.
Cities with Slower Rent Growth
San Francisco is one example where rent hikes have slowed. Over the last five years, the average rent for a one-bedroom rose by $54 to $2,977, and two-bedroom apartments increased by $51 to $3,604. Other cities with more gradual increases include Birmingham, Alabama; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; San Antonio, Texas; and St. Louis, Missouri.
LendingTrees analysis is based on fair-market rents from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which estimate the 40th percentile of rents for standard-quality units in metropolitan and nonmetropolitan areas. The data excludes public housing and units built in the past two years.
Author: Olivia Parker
Share
Approval granted for anaerobic digestion plant plans
3 minutes ago 2 min read BUSINESS
Columbia Returns With a New Star Wars Collaboration, And Fans of Princess Leia Are Excited About Its Hidden Reference
4 minutes ago 2 min read BUSINESS
Formal proposals submitted for revitalization of town center
8 minutes ago 1 min read BUSINESS
Can artificial intelligence improve the accuracy of predicting catastrophic hurricanes?
11 minutes ago 3 min read BUSINESS
All You Need to Keep Yourself Safe from Norovirus
13 minutes ago 4 min read BUSINESS
Americans resort to community fridges due to rising grocery prices: 'The value of the dollar is not going as far as before'
15 minutes ago 2 min read BUSINESS
Fundraising event for making wreaths raises £5,000 for charity
17 minutes ago 2 min read BUSINESS
Owner of EPL Club Brighton Alleged to be Operating Covert Betting Syndicate
24 minutes ago 2 min read BUSINESS
Louis Carr appointed President of BET, BET Studios rebranded as CBS Studios under leadership of Aisha Summers-Burke
48 minutes ago 2 min read BUSINESS
Scott Mills to Depart from BET After Over 20 Years, Louis Carr to Assume Role of President
53 minutes ago 2 min read BUSINESS