Renting a Home Is Even Harder Than Buying One in Unrelentingly Hot U.S. Market

For Atlanta real estate agent Jamie Douglas, a dearth of inventory has made it almost impossible to take on new clients hunting for affordable rental homes.

Now, she works with people who have at least $5,000 a month to spend on rent, double her usual base of around $2,500 because there’s just nothing available at lower price points. One house will get 15 to 20 applications and be rented within a day, she said.

“I literally have people begging me to get them a rental,” Douglas said in an interview. “It’s just so crazy down here.”

It’s the latest turn in the unrelentingly hot U.S. housing market, where remote workers and young families fleeing coastal cities for the Sun Belt during the pandemic spurred double-digit increases in housing costs and squeezed supply. And at a time when stocks are slumping, cryptocurrencies are crashing and interest rates are set to rise, real estate seems to be the only area of the market impervious to a slow down.

Rental prices for single-family homes grew an average of 7.8% in 2021, an all-time high, according to the most recent data available from CoreLogic Inc. In December, U.S. home rents jumped 12% year over year for the month, with Miami leading the way with a 35.7% increase.