Rents are rising at a slower pace than in years past

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Renters Gain Breathing Room as Slower Price Growth Trims Monthly Housing Costs

Rents are still rising nationwide, but at a slower pace than in years past. Plus, income is now growing at a faster pace and the slowdown is relieving some renters of their worst financial pressures and enabling them to pay for other necessities like groceries and gas or to build savings for down payments on a house.

Even though the typical asking rent in March rose 1.8% year-over-year to $1,910. That was the slowest annual increase since 2020, according to Zillow’s March 2026 rental market report. Month-over-month, the increase was 0.5%.

Single-family rents rose on an annual basis in all 50 largest metros by 2.5%, the lowest Zillow has ever recorded. However, prices fell in Baltimore, Richmond and Minneapolis. The slower rise saved the typical household $193 a month or $2,318 a year. In some metros, the savings were even greater: $3,182 a year in Austin, $3,110 in Tampa and $3,002 in Denver.

Rents rose year-over-year in 37 of the 50 largest metro areas Zillow studied, well over the 1.8% average. The biggest gains were in San Francisco (6.4%), Virginia Beach (6%), Chicago (5.6%), Providence (4.9%) and San Jose (4.8%).

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Nevertheless, Zillow found that rents now consume a smaller share of income—26.5%—approaching the pre-pandemic level of 25.8%. But a household income of $76,400 is required to comfortably afford a rental, 1.7% more than in March 2025 and 35% more than pre-pandemic. And rent affordability is 0.4% down from 2025.

Multifamily rents rose 1.3% to $1,757 in March. Since the beginning of the pandemic, they have gone up 28%. The sharpest rises, ranging from 6.5% to 4.6%, were in Virginia Beach, San Francisco, Chicago, San Jose and Providence.

Despite the fact that rents have climbed, 40% of rentals on Zillow offered concessions in March – a share that rose 0.6 ppts month-over-month. However, concessions dropped on a monthly basis in 17 major metros, including Milwaukee, San Francisco, Salt Lake City, Minneapolis and Kansas City. But the use of concessions increased on a monthly basis in 33 major metros, led by Indianapolis, New Orleans and Memphis. On an annual basis, in 30 of the 50 largest metros, Tampa outpaced the rest.

Source: GlobeSt.