Residential rental rates continue to cool—except for in New York and San Francisco, where rates remain among the highest in the nation.
Anthemos Georgiades, Zumper’s CEO, said national rental prices have cooled as the rental market continues to recalibrate.
“A combination of cautious renter demand amid economic headwinds, ample inventory on the market, and a labor market that’s losing momentum have eased the pressure on rents we saw earlier this year,” Georgiades said.
Annual rent costs fell the most in the West. Salt Lake City, Utah, saw a decline of 11.1 percent; Denver, Colorado, followed at 7.3 percent; Boise, Idaho, at 5.8 percent; and Phoenix, Arizona, at 3.8 percent, Zumper reported. Much of the declines in the Mountain Region states can be attributed to a flood of new construction that increased vacancy and stalled rental growth.
There were more than 77,000 new rental units delivered across the mountain states in the first quarter, an increase of more than 5 percent. Salt Lake City and Phoenix are slated to deliver numerous additional multifamily properties through the next quarter, Zumper said, but multifamily construction is slowing in many markets.
On the West Coast, rental rates in San Francisco topped pre-pandemic benchmarks, rising to $3,510 for single-bedroom units and hitting the $5,000 mark for the first time for two-bedroom properties, Zumper said.
Those figures represent annual increases of approximately 11 percent and 17 percent, respectively, driven by return-to-office policies and increases in AI tech hiring in the city. OpenAI, for example, is headquartered on Market Street, while Anthropic has its headquarters in the city’s Mission Bay district.






