Is Renting the Future of Single-Family Homes?

Is Renting the Future of Single-Family Homes?

 

In 2023, homebuilders finished 27,495 single-family homes in developments of at least 50 houses, up from around 6,500 each year before the pandemic, according to data from Yardi Matrix, a commercial real estate data firm.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Builders are constructing more single-family homes intended to be rented out instead of owned by the occupier, as home ownership becomes more financially difficult amid high interest rates and prices.
  • Renting a single-family home is a way of gaining living space while keeping the flexibility of renting, and can be a more affordable option.
  • Builders often cluster large numbers of units together in a single development and offer amenities similar to those found in luxury apartment buildings.

All over the country, developers are putting up neighborhoods of single-family homes that are never intended to be owned by the people who live in them.

In 2023, homebuilders finished 27,495 single-family homes in developments of at least 50 houses, up from around 6,500 each year before the pandemic, according to data from Yardi Matrix, a commercial real estate data firm.

While that data is incomplete—it doesn’t capture individual houses or small built-to-rent developments—and is relatively small compared to the 1.4 million homes completed that year, according to the Census Bureau, it does illustrate a trend. As high mortgage rates and low inventories make buying a house far more difficult than it used to be, more people are looking to rent the kind of detached, single-family home they might have bought in a friendlier real estate market.

About 7.3% of all newly constructed homes went directly to the rental market between the second quarter of 2022 and the first quarter of 2023, the Urban Institute think tank estimated in a June 2023 analysis.