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Devoting 30% of Your Income to Rent Is Becoming the Norm in the U.S.

- Money, Getty Images
Money, Getty Images

Even as the U.S. rental market’s red-hot fever finally breaks, rent-to-income levels are still painfully high, according to new data.

At the end of 2022, financial services firm Moody’s reported that for the first time in almost a quarter century of tracking, the average U.S. rent cracked 30% of the median household income — qualifying the typical renter as “rent-burdened.” While costs cooled slightly in the first quarter of this year, rents are still eating up nearly a third of median annual household earnings on average.

According to Moody’s economists, it’s not looking like that will change anytime soon.

What the data says

For years, financial experts have recommended a rule of thumb that says people should spend no more than 30% of their gross income on rent.

“As wage growth trails behind the cost of shelter, Americans are feeling financially distressed,” Lu Chen and Mary Le, economists for Moody’s, said in a Tuesday news release.

The most rent-burdened cities

Though it may not be surprising to see notoriously expensive cities like New York dominating the list of most rent-burdened metropolitan areas, Moody’s says the pandemic’s disruption of typical migration patterns has increased rent-to-income ratios in Sunbelt locales like Tampa-St. Petersburg and Orlando.

These are the metros with the highest rent-to-income ratios for median-income households nationwide:

  1. New York, New York (66.9%)
  2. Miami, Florida (42%)
  3. Fort Lauderdale, Florida (36.8%)
  4. Los Angeles, California (34.7%)
  5. Palm Beach, Florida (34.2%)
  6. Northern New Jersey (33%)
  7. Boston, Massachusetts (32.8%)
  8. Tampa-St. Petersburg, Florida (29.9%)
  9. Orlando, Florida (29.9%)
  10. San Francisco, California (29.3%)

The takeaway

It’s not news to renters that they’re devoting a bigger share of their incomes on housing — but if they’re hoping for a new rent reality, they might not want to hold their breath.

When Moody’s started its rent burden report about 25 years ago, only New York City qualified as rent-burdened. But now, paying 30% or more of your income for rent is increasingly becoming the norm in the U.S. Moody’s says lagging wage growth coupled with COVID-19’s impact on the housing market have exacerbated the issue.

Rising mortgage rates, according to Moody’s economists, sidelined many would-be homebuyers, increasing apartment demand and driving rent prices to what renters are seeing now.

While rent growth is finally slowing down — even declining — thanks to affordability issues and a slowdown in migration, renters shouldn’t expect prices to return to pre-pandemic levels in 2023.

“We are not quite at an inflection point yet,” Chen and Le said in the release.

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