📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

Rental Prices Plunge in the Bay Area and Sun Belt — See Where Prices Are Falling Across the U.S. One-bedroom apartments in one California city experienced a substantial 7.2% drop in rent prices compared to the previous year.

By Madeline Garfinkle

Key Takeaways

  • In September median rent for a one-bedroom unit in Oakland reached its lowest point since at least 2017.
  • San Francisco and Portland are facing similar challenges in conjunction with retail exodus and crime issues.
  • Sun Belt cities like Austin are also seeing a decline in rental growth.
entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Last month, one-bedroom apartments in Oakland experienced a significant decline in rental prices at a 7.2% drop compared to the previous year, marking the most substantial drop among the 100 largest cities in the United States, according to data from Apartment List, per The San Francisco Chronicle.

The median rent for a one-bedroom unit in Oakland stood at $1,430 in September, the city's lowest rental rate since at least 2017, and more than $100 lower than the rental price for last year.

The price drop extended to the broader San Francisco metropolitan area, where there was a smaller year-over-year decrease of 4.3%, putting median rents for a one-bedroom at $2,269, per Apartment List.

San Francisco has faced many challenges in the aftermath of the pandemic, as the downtown area has experienced a retail exodus and ongoing homelessness crisis. However, rent declines are also affecting other major metropolitan areas.

Related: American Eagle Sues Westfield for Security 'Failures' and 'Broken Promises' That Let a San Francisco Mall 'Deteriorate Into Disarray'

In September, Portland's rental growth declined by 5.5% compared to the previous year, according to Apartment List, with the median rent for a one-bedroom apartment standing at $1,223 — down from about $1,290 in 2022. Like San Francisco, Portland has grappled with crime-related challenges and retail exodus. Last month, Nike announced it would permanently close a factory store in Portland due to ongoing theft. Other retailers like Walmart and REI have also announced they would shut down stores in the area this year.

Another major city that experienced rent decline was Austin, with a 6.4% drop compared to September 2022. Austin's significant drop comes after its rapid increase in home building permits in 2022, the fastest of any U.S. city, which has created an imbalance of too much supply and insufficient demand.

Related: While Rent Prices Dropped Around the Country in March, Manhattan Hit a New Record High

Madeline Garfinkle

News Writer

Madeline Garfinkle is a News Writer at Entrepreneur.com. She is a graduate from Syracuse University, and received an MFA from Columbia University. 

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Social Media

Schedule Your Social Media Easier with This $50 Subscription

Streamline your social production game with this fantastic deal.

Business News

Is It an iPad or a MacBook? Apple Makes It Tough to Tell By Revealing a 13-Inch iPad Pro With 'Outrageously Powerful' M4 Chip for AI

The new iPad keyboard has a function row and larger trackpad "so the entire experience feels just like using a MacBook," said John Ternus, Apple senior vice president of hardware engineering, at Apple's first event of 2024.

Career

Jobs Are Disappearing — These 3 Strategies Are What You Need to Future-Proof Your Career

Adopting tech tools for professional development, combined with boosting soft skills and staying tech-savvy, offers a path to becoming an invaluable asset in a tech-driven future.

Business News

'An Obvious Move': Elon Musk Suggests Warren Buffett Should Make This Investment Move Next

Berkshire Hathaway held its Annual Shareholder meeting over the weekend.

Side Hustle

The Sweet Side Hustle She Started in an Old CVS Made $800,000 in One Year. Now She's Repeating the Success With Her Daughter — and They've Already Exceeded 8 Figures.

Mother-daughter team Elisabeth and Gina Galvin are taking their snack brand Stellar Snacks to new heights, literally — you've probably seen their products in-flight.