Hot Not CRE

Episode 76: Occupancy Recovering — 89.4% and Climbing


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It's Monday, April 6th, 2026 — kicking off the week with the latest residential and multifamily data.WHAT'S HOT:

  • Occupancy recovering — conventional apartments at 89.4%, nearly 2-point YoY increase
  • Stabilized assets even stronger at 93.7% occupancy
  • Operators prioritizing occupancy over rent growth — and it's working
  • Supply relief arriving — completions dropping 24% in 2026 (450K units vs 595K in 2025)
  • Construction starts at lowest levels in years
  • Absorption-to-delivery ratio finally improving after staying below 1.0x for two years
  • Northeast & Midwest outperforming — Hartford and New Haven vacancy below 1%
  • San Francisco posting 5.9% YoY rent growth — leading the nation
  • Northeast projected for 4-5% annual rent growth; Midwest at 3-4.5%
  • Build-to-rent demand strong — J.P. Morgan actively investing in BTR developers
  • Nashville and Atlanta target markets for BTR
  • Renting cheaper than owning in all 100 largest U.S. metros
  • Mortgage rates averaging ~7% — buy-vs-rent premium pushing demand to apartments
  • National vacancy at 8.6% — highest since post-financial-crisis recovery
  • Historical average around 6.9%
  • Nearly 1.8 million units delivered over past three years outpaced absorption
  • Dallas-Fort Worth vacancy at 12.2%
  • Austin, San Antonio, Phoenix, Nashville navigating elevated lease-up pipelines
  • Concessions widespread in new construction and top-tier price points
  • Asking rent growth at just 0.1% YoY — weakest pace since late 2010
  • Growth projected to return to low single digits — 2026 is normalization, not acceleration
  • BTR construction slowing — single-family built-for-rent starts fell 19% in 2025 vs 2024
  • Potential legislation could require institutionally financed BTR units sold within 7 years — ~40K units/year at risk

WHAT'S NOT:WHY IT MATTERS:The multifamily market is bifurcating by geography. Coastal and Midwest markets with supply discipline are seeing rent growth and tight occupancy. Sun Belt markets with heavy deliveries are still in absorption mode. The national vacancy rate masks significant regional divergence. Transaction volume is recovering with prices rising steadily. Investor confidence increasing that the market is nearing its low point.INVESTOR TAKEAWAY:Geography matters more than ever. Target Northeast and Midwest markets with supply constraints. Be cautious in Sun Belt until absorption catches up. Occupancy is recovering, but rent growth won't accelerate until 2027 or 2028. The supply wave is cresting — position for the recovery.#Multifamily #ApartmentInvesting #Occupancy #RentGrowth #CRE #CommercialRealEstate #MultifamilyInvesting #SunBelt #Northeast #Midwest #BuildToRent #BTR #HousingAffordability #RealEstateInvesting #VacancyRates #SupplyAndDemand #PropertyInvesting #RealEstateFinance #ApartmentMarket #WhatsHotWhatsNot

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Hot Not CREBy Hot Not CRE