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
Inflation Pressures Are Stressing Renter Households
Practicing Community: Bernheimer Architecture’s Affordable Housing
Lower-Income Renters Have Less Residual Income than Ever Before
Rental Markets One Year After Our America’s Rental Housing Report
Number of Renters Burdened by Housing Costs Reached a Record High in 2021
The Geography of Renter Financial Distress and Housing Insecurity During the Pandemic
The Potential for Supporting Low-Income Renters Through Transportation Spending Under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and Beyond
Linking Historic Transportation Investments with Housing
Record-Breaking Rent Growth in Markets in the South and West
Rental Deserts Perpetuate Socioeconomic and Racial Segregation
The Short-Term Benefits of Emergency Rental Assistance