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SFR Growth Expands in Q3 Amid Housing Market Uncertainty

HouseCanary, Inc. [1] has released its latest National Rental Report [2], which showed that Single-Family Rental (SFR) inventory continues to expand with a 31.5% surge in Q3 2023 compared to the previous year.

Average days on market grew 28.4% year-over-year to 27 days, attributed to the surplus of available-for-rent inventory, while price increases were marginal at just 0.7%, indicating SFR prices may have reached their peak, particularly when compared to the 6% increase observed in Q1 of this year.

Southern states have experienced the most upward growth in the number of listings available for rent in the market. Most notably, MSAs located in North Carolina, Florida, Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama accounted for 100% of the top 10 MSAs, seeing the largest listing increases.

"Q3 2023 reaffirms the single-family rental market's resilience, with steady year-over-year growth in listings and rental prices," said Chris Stroud, Co-Founder and Chief of Research at HouseCanary. "Lingering market uncertainties are mainly driving this, with potential buyers opting to rent for property investment risk mitigation. The marginal rise in median SFR prices, much smaller in comparison to the substantial growth in days on market and net new listings (up by 28.4% and 31.5% year-over-year, respectively), reflects a surplus of available-for-rent inventory.”

Following a thorough analysis of the aggregated data, HouseCanary’s report identified the following key findings about the rental market for single-family detached listings in the third quarter of 2023:

“Projections align with our Q2 2023 outlook, indicating that median SFR prices may have plateaued, with limited room for further escalation," said Brandon Lwowski, Senior Director of Research at HouseCanary. "Anticipated smaller rate increases, along with the initiation of student loan repayments, promise a more favorable environment for purchasing activity to gain momentum in the future."

To read the full report, including more data, charts, and methodology, click here [2].