Zillow Says U.S. Rents Rising At Slowest Pace Since 2020
Zillow says U.S. rents are rising at their slowest pace since 2020. The online real-estate data firm reached that conclusion in its latest rental market analysis. The report marks a clear pullback from the pandemic-era surge in rents that drove big year-over-year increases.
Slower rent growth reflects easing demand and gradual supply improvements in many metro areas, analysts say. That dynamic has softened bidding on rentals and reduced the pressure on rents in once-hot cities. CBS MoneyWatch shared Zillow's analysis on its Facebook page, signaling broad public interest in the shift.
Coverage has shifted from alarm over runaway rents to noting a cooling trend as the market normalizes. Earlier reporting emphasized sudden, steep rent hikes during 2020-22; newer pieces led by data from Zillow and outlets like CBS MoneyWatch highlight slower gains and stabilization.
📌 Key Facts
- Typical U.S. rent in March was $1,910, up 1.8 percent year over year, the slowest growth since December 2020
- Median households spent 26.5 percent of income on rent, and a $76,400 annual income is needed to comfortably afford the typical rent
- Single-family rents are up nearly 45 percent and multifamily rents 28 percent since early 2020, despite the recent cooling in growth
📊 Analysis & Commentary (1)
"The piece argues that a slowdown in headline rent growth (per Zillow) masks persistent affordability problems caused by restrictive zoning, local politics, and supply shortages, and that housing policy keeps failing because it focuses on short‑term fixes instead of pro‑housing supply reforms."
📰 Source Timeline (1)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time