Seattle-Area Rents Slower To Normalize Than Much Of The US
SEATTLE Renters in the Seattle area are still paying some of the highest rents in the country, bucking the cooling trend seen in many markets across the United States. Online rental service Zumper released a new analysis of price trends this week and found signs of calming emerging in more than half of the nation's cities, where median prices remained flat or began to decline over the last month.
"Were seeing modest month-over-month declines in more than half of the cities on our list, including Minneapolis, MN; Nashville, TN; El Paso, TX; and Jacksonville, Tampa and Orlando, FL," Zumper writes. "As we noted last month, Fresno has one of the most drastic year-over-year increases in the country; but this month its median one-bedroom rent is down a notable 3.9 percent. And 16 citiesincluding Phoenix, AZ; Newark, NJ; and Oklahoma City, OKhave remained flat month-over-month."
According to the report, the Emerald City and its neighbors are among the big exceptions: Median one-bedroom rents rose another 2 percent in September and are nearly 21 percent higher than the same time last year.
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Median prices hit $2,040 for a one-bedroom around Seattle this month and held at $2,810 for a two-bedroom, Zumper found. That makes Seattle the nation's 11th-priciest rental market, tied with Anaheim, California, and considerably more expensive than cities like Chicago, Atlanta, and Denver.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/realestate/seattle-area-rents-slower-to-normalize-than-much-of-the-us/ar-AA12pC5U