
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Welcome back to What's Hot What's Not C.R.E. — your daily pulse on commercial real estate in America. It's Thursday, February 12th, 2026. Today — Class A versus B versus C multifamily. Which one wins in 2026?
🔥 What's Hot — Class B Workforce Housing Dominates: Class B is the clear winner heading into 2026. Occupancy at 95.8% — outperforming Class A at 95.7%. Rent growth more durable — in down cycles, Class B outpaces Class A as renters trade down. The rent premium between A and B has compressed — Class A concessions eating into that gap. Workforce housing sits in the demand sweet spot — rising wages supporting tenants' ability to pay. Midwest and Northeast markets leading: 3 to 4.5% rent growth in the Midwest, 4 to 5% in the Northeast. Limited new supply in these regions — most construction targeted Class A in Sun Belt. Institutional capital returning to Class B — seen as recession-resistant with stable cash flows. Public-private partnerships emerging — developers getting tax abatements for workforce housing. Class B offers the best risk-adjusted returns in today's market.
❄️ What's Not — Class A Oversupply and Class C Distress: Class A struggling in oversupplied Sun Belt markets — elevated vacancy, heavy concessions. Dallas, Austin, Phoenix, Tampa — Class A properties stabilizing slowly. Rent growth for Class A projected at just 1 to 2% nationally — well below Class B. Class C facing serious headwinds — deteriorating performance signals emerging. Older 1980s-era properties concentrated in Phoenix, Florida, and Texas under pressure. Immigration policy uncertainty creating risk for Class C tenant base. Operators forced into heads-on-beds strategy — maximizing occupancy over rent growth. Expense pressure hitting Class C hardest — deferred maintenance catching up. Capital access for Class C severely limited — lenders pulling back.
💡 Investor Takeaway: Class B workforce housing is the strongest play for 2026. Stable occupancy, durable rent growth, institutional backing. Avoid Class A in oversupplied Sun Belt until late 2026. Class C carries the most risk — limited upside, capital constraints, tenant uncertainty. Focus on Midwest and Northeast Class B for the best risk-adjusted returns.
Thanks for tuning in. See you tomorrow!
Don't forget to Like, Share and Subscribe!
Visit hotnotcre.com to learn more and subscribe to our newsletter.
#CRE #CommercialRealEstate #Multifamily #WorkforceHousing #ClassBMultifamily #RealEstateInvesting #ApartmentInvesting #RentGrowth #SunBelt #Midwest #Northeast #PropertyInvesting #RealEstate2026 #MultifamilyInvesting #InvestorTips #CashFlow #RealEstateMarket #MarketUpdate #OccupancyRates #InstitutionalInvestment
By Hot Not CREWelcome back to What's Hot What's Not C.R.E. — your daily pulse on commercial real estate in America. It's Thursday, February 12th, 2026. Today — Class A versus B versus C multifamily. Which one wins in 2026?
🔥 What's Hot — Class B Workforce Housing Dominates: Class B is the clear winner heading into 2026. Occupancy at 95.8% — outperforming Class A at 95.7%. Rent growth more durable — in down cycles, Class B outpaces Class A as renters trade down. The rent premium between A and B has compressed — Class A concessions eating into that gap. Workforce housing sits in the demand sweet spot — rising wages supporting tenants' ability to pay. Midwest and Northeast markets leading: 3 to 4.5% rent growth in the Midwest, 4 to 5% in the Northeast. Limited new supply in these regions — most construction targeted Class A in Sun Belt. Institutional capital returning to Class B — seen as recession-resistant with stable cash flows. Public-private partnerships emerging — developers getting tax abatements for workforce housing. Class B offers the best risk-adjusted returns in today's market.
❄️ What's Not — Class A Oversupply and Class C Distress: Class A struggling in oversupplied Sun Belt markets — elevated vacancy, heavy concessions. Dallas, Austin, Phoenix, Tampa — Class A properties stabilizing slowly. Rent growth for Class A projected at just 1 to 2% nationally — well below Class B. Class C facing serious headwinds — deteriorating performance signals emerging. Older 1980s-era properties concentrated in Phoenix, Florida, and Texas under pressure. Immigration policy uncertainty creating risk for Class C tenant base. Operators forced into heads-on-beds strategy — maximizing occupancy over rent growth. Expense pressure hitting Class C hardest — deferred maintenance catching up. Capital access for Class C severely limited — lenders pulling back.
💡 Investor Takeaway: Class B workforce housing is the strongest play for 2026. Stable occupancy, durable rent growth, institutional backing. Avoid Class A in oversupplied Sun Belt until late 2026. Class C carries the most risk — limited upside, capital constraints, tenant uncertainty. Focus on Midwest and Northeast Class B for the best risk-adjusted returns.
Thanks for tuning in. See you tomorrow!
Don't forget to Like, Share and Subscribe!
Visit hotnotcre.com to learn more and subscribe to our newsletter.
#CRE #CommercialRealEstate #Multifamily #WorkforceHousing #ClassBMultifamily #RealEstateInvesting #ApartmentInvesting #RentGrowth #SunBelt #Midwest #Northeast #PropertyInvesting #RealEstate2026 #MultifamilyInvesting #InvestorTips #CashFlow #RealEstateMarket #MarketUpdate #OccupancyRates #InstitutionalInvestment