Rental Housing
Rental housing is home to more than a third of US households. Renters are an increasingly diverse group with growing affordability challenges. Our biennial America’s Rental Housing report and other publications analyze trends and issues related to the changing nature of demand; the cost, character, and location of the stock; and the government policies that affect the supply of market-rate and subsidized units.
Government Benefits Reduce Housing Cost Burdens
Curbing Fees: How States and Cities are Addressing Up-Front Rental Costs
Explore more in Rental Housing
Deteriorating Rental Affordability: An Update on America’s Rental Housing 2024
Problems and Progress: Public Housing in an American Social Housing System
Rental Markets Are Cooling, but Rents Still Far Exceed Pre-Pandemic Levels
Renters Struggle with Competing Costs of Food, Energy, and Housing
Rental Deserts, Segregation, and Zoning
Rental Housing Unaffordability: How Did We Get Here?
Rents Are Cooling, but Not Everywhere
Six Takeaways from America’s Rental Housing 2024
America's Rental Housing 2024
8 Facts About Investor Activity in the Single-Family Rental Market
Low-Cost Rentals Have Decreased in Every State