Priced Out or Locked In: How Cost and Geography are Defining America's Renters, Realtor.com®
New analysis of 100 largest metros reveals a rental landscape shaped by unequal access rather than individual preference
Young renters are being priced out of the markets they once defined, while family renters — disproportionately minority households — find homeownership structurally out of reach. Meanwhile, long-term renters remain largely locked in place, many unable to afford the market they already live in. Together, these trends reveal a rental landscape shaped less by individual preference than by cost, geography, and unequal access.
"We often hear that today's renters are choosing to rent because they don't want to be homeowners or are choosing to be 'forever renters', but in order to understand what's holding renters back, we need to know who they are, where they are, and why they're renting," said
The New Geography of Young Renters
- Represent 31.9% of all renter households nationally
- A typical young renter household in the
U.S. is headed by a 28-year-old adult, with a household size of 2 people living in a 2-bedroom unit, earning$65,000 annually - Concentrated in mid-size, affordable inland metros that offer job opportunity— not expensive coastal cities
- Markets with high young renter shares show significantly lower affordability stress, higher shares of single-person households, and lower rates of doubling-up
Young renter households, headed by an adult under 34, represent 31.9% of all renter households nationally. While high-profile coastal cities are traditionally seen as magnets for this group, they are increasingly absent from the top markets for young renter concentration. Instead, young renters are flocking to mid-size, affordable inland metros with tight labor markets.
The top metros for young renters include
The top markets also offer something equally important — jobs. In
Where renting is affordable, these households have the financial room to live independently, with higher shares of single-person households. Where it is not, they are forced to double up. In
The Homeownership Barrier for Family Renters
- Represent 44.3% of all renter households nationally
- A typical family renter household in the
U.S. is headed by a 42-year-old adult, with a family size of 3 people living in a 2-bedroom unit, earning$68,000 annually - Concentrated in majority-minority markets across
California ,Texas ,Florida , andHawaii - Face a double barrier: high home prices that put buying out of reach, compounded by a long-documented homeownership gap that disproportionately affects minority households
- Markets where family renters concentrate most heavily are among the most burdened and most crowded in the country
Family renters represent the largest share of the market at 44.3% nationally. The geography of family renting is, to a significant degree, the geography of minority America. The highest concentrations are found in majority-minority markets across
This concentration reflects two forces working in the same direction. First, minority groups tend to have higher family formation rates. For example, among all Hispanic households, 67.9% are family households, compared to 60.1% among white-alone households. Second, and more fundamentally, minority families in these markets face a double barrier to homeownership.
Home prices have climbed far beyond the reach of median-income households — every one of these markets scores below the national affordability benchmark, according to Realtor.com data. This affordability wall is compounded by structural barriers that persist regardless of market conditions — unequal access to credit and limited intergenerational wealth have produced a homeownership gap that remains wide and well-documented.
The Lock-In Effect for Long-Term Renters
- Represent 36.1% of all renter households nationally
- Concentrated in rent-regulated anchor cities (
New York ,Los Angeles ) and their spillover markets acrossCalifornia and the Northeast - A majority cannot afford current market rents. An average of just 39.2% of renting households in the top 10 metros would face severe affordability stress if forced to move at fair market rent within the same metro, assuming the same household incomes and bedroom sizes.
- A typical long-term renting household is headed by a 55 year-old adult, living in a household of 2 people and 2 bedrooms with a median household income of
$48,500 .
Long-term renters, those in the same unit for five or more years, are increasingly concentrated in the country's most expensive anchor cities. In
This "lock-in" effect extends to overflow markets as well. Renters priced out of
Not all long-term renters are the same. Some stay by choice — drawn by community ties, neighborhood familiarity, or simply a preference for stability, especially for senior renters. But for many others, staying put is not a preference.
"When you look beneath the national averages, you see a market that is failing to provide mobility," said
Methodology
This analysis draws on 2024
Affordability is measured using HUD's 2024 Fair Market Rents (FMR) as the rent benchmark rather than actual rents paid. This approach captures what households would face if forced to move to a new unit within the same metro today, holding household income and bedroom size constant. It is designed to answer a specific policy question: what share of current renter households could afford a typical market-rate unit in their metro if they had to move?
We define affordable housing as units where rent represents less than 30% of household income, consistent with the standard HUD threshold. Severe affordability challenges are defined as rent-to-income ratios exceeding 50%. Households reporting zero or negative household income are excluded from burden calculations, consistent with standard housing research methodology.
We define doubled-up households as where at least two unmarried or unpartnered working-age adults share a unit, often as a strategy to manage rising housing costs.
Crowding is defined as more than two persons per bedroom, a threshold that reflects practical space constraints for renter households. This definition is more conservative than HUD's standard of one person per room, focusing specifically on bedroom capacity as the relevant measure of residential crowding for renter households.
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