Zumper released its National Rent Report for apartments across all major U.S. cities. The median one-bedroom rent rose 1.6%
anually to 1,534 while two-bedroom rents climbed 2.7% to 1,915.
New York's one-bedroom rent hit an all-time high of 4,500 this august while San Francisco hit a 4-year high at 3,160.
The Rental market is over performing from high-interest rates, leading to less transitions from renting to home buying. Despite continuous supply increases, the market is still keeping up with demand.
NYC is a notable outlier. One-bedrooms were priced at a median of 4,500 (12.8% up annually) and two-bedrooms rose to 5,100.
San Francisco's rental market is recovery from a vacancy rate of 92.2% to 95.4% earlier this year. Likewise, although rents maintained at around 3,000 for a few years, it finally grew 5.3% to 3,160. The rising rents can be marking a resurgence of renters returning or normal seasonal moving.
Below are more graphs.
A full data sheet of 100 cities is in the link:
https://www.zumper.com/blog/rental-price-data/