Executive Summary
U.S. rent growth decelerated to 2.8% year-over-year for the period January 2025 to January 2026, the slowest annual increase recorded since 2021 (MarketWatch / ZeroHedge, Mar 25, 2026). After multiple years of above‑trend increases during and after the pandemic, a combination of expanding housing supply, steady mortgage rates near 6%, and wage gains has begun to relieve immediate pressure on rental markets. That deceleration is not uniform: a number of metros now show outright rent declines while other high-demand markets continue to exhibit positive, albeit slower, growth. For institutional investors and policy makers, the transition from acceleration to stabilization raises distinct questions about valuation, new supply absorption, and the interaction between for-sale housing and rental demand.
The shift toward slower rent growth arrives against a backdrop of persistently elevated home prices and incomplete affordability gains. Although headline rent growth is moderating, the stock of households that were priced out during the 2020–22 period still shapes demand patterns in cities with constrained supply. Investors should treat the 2.8% national figure as a directional signal rather than a universal condition: local fundamentals and supply pipelines continue to produce sharp dispersion. This briefing provides context, data-led analysis, sector implications, and a Fazen Capital Perspective on likely near-term outcomes.
Context
The 2.8% YoY figure for Jan 2025–Jan 2026 marks a notable slowdown compared with the post-pandemic surge in rents experienced across 2021–22 and parts of 2023 (MarketWatch / ZeroHedge, Mar 25, 2026). Market commentary and primary data indicate this is the slowest annual pace since 2021; that comparison is important because 2021 represented the early post-lockdown reallocation of housing demand that preceded the most acute phase of rent inflation. Put differently, the national rent cycle is moving from a period of outsized demand-driven inflation toward normalization where supply responses and macro variables exert greater influence.
Policy and macro considerations are relevant. Mortgage rates have remained in the vicinity of 6% on a 30‑year fixed basis in early 2026 (Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey, March 2026), keeping for-sale affordability constrained and sustaining a baseline level of rental demand. Concurrently, developers have ramped production: permitting and multifamily completions picked up through 2025 as projects that began in 2022–24 came to market, boosting supply in several large metros. The net effect has been a rebalancing of marginal markets and a moderation of previously frothy rent trajectories.
Geographic dispersion is a critical feature. Certain gateway cities and Sun Belt metros still report positive rent growth, while smaller markets or formerly overheated coastal cities show flat or negative rents. That heterogeneity reflects differences in new inventory delivery, employment growth, and intra‑metropolitan migration flows. Institutional investors who evaluate portfolios on a national blended basis risk missing concentrated downside in specific submarkets where supply has outpaced demand.
Data Deep Dive
Headline: 2.8% YoY rent growth (Jan 2025–Jan 2026) — source MarketWatch (reported via ZeroHedge), March 25, 2026. This figure is explicit about the period and the YoY window; it is the reference point for the national trend. MarketWatch characterizes the pace as smaller than the year before and below pre‑pandemic norms, signaling a reversal from the double‑digit or high-single-digit growth some metros recorded during 2021–23. The "slowest since 2021" benchmark is useful because it anchors the current pace relative to the immediate pre‑surge era.
Mortgage rates: 30‑year fixed mortgage rates have hovered near 6% in early 2026 (Freddie Mac PMMS, March 2026). That rate profile alters the calculus for households contemplating a for‑sale purchase versus renting; high financing costs reduce purchase affordability even when wages are rising. Wages: market reporting references modestly higher wages in late 2025 that partially offset cost pressures for some renters, but wage growth has not universally restored pre‑pandemic purchasing power — a structural dynamic that continues to support baseline rental demand.
Supply: developers delivered an elevated pipeline of multifamily units through 2025 as a lagged response to elevated rents and construction commencements in 2022–24. Publicly reported delivery schedules and municipal permitting data from late 2025 point to concentrated inventory growth in a subset of Sun Belt and metro periphery submarkets. Where completions have surfaced at scale, absorption has slowed and landlords have offered concessions; conversely, markets with constrained entitlement pipelines still see tighter conditions and higher renewal rates.
Sector Implications
For multifamily operators and REITs, a national easing to 2.8% YoY implies a recalibration of revenue growth assumptions but not necessarily a collapse in fundamentals. Operating performance will bifurcate: assets in high‑barrier core markets with strong employment growth and limited new supply can still achieve positive net effective rent growth above the national average, while assets in delivery‑heavy suburbs or secondary metros may face margin compression. Lease terming and exposure to renewals are key variables—portfolios with a high share of near‑term expiries will feel the deceleration more acutely.
Private equity and development strategies are likewise affected. The internal rate of return (IRR) models that underpinned aggressive acquisitions in 2021–23 must now assume more modest rental escalation and potentially higher cap‑rate normalization if financing spreads widen. New development remains viable in many markets where projected replacement costs and rent decks still justify construction, but underwriting must incorporate longer lease‑up timelines and higher stabilization caps. For balance‑sheet investors, capital allocation decisions will increasingly emphasize income stability, expense management, and selective, covenant‑protected lending.
Homebuilders and for‑sale markets experience cross‑effects: steady 6% mortgage rates limit first‑time buyer turnover, which in turn sustains a base of renter demand even as rents moderate. However, if mortgage rates decline meaningfully, a portion of marginal renters could reenter the for‑sale market, reducing long‑term rental demand and weighing on multifamily upside. The interplay between for‑sale affordability and rental dynamics will be a material driver of market outcomes in 2026.
Risk Assessment
Downside risks remain concentrated and material. A macro shock that depresses employment would quickly translate to higher vacancy and faster downward rent adjustment in cyclical, supply‑heavy markets. Conversely, a run of lower mortgage rates could accelerate single‑family purchases by renters, producing localized tenant outflows and longer vacancy durations for certain rental stock. Both scenarios underscore the importance of stress testing portfolios under multiple macro paths with explicit vacancy, concession, and turnover assumptions.
Valuation risk: public and private asset pricing has priced rental growth expectations into cap rates and leverage levels. The transition to lower growth increases the probability of valuation compression if investors reprice expected cash flows. Lenders will adjust underwriting on new originations; assets with floating‑rate debt or large near‑term maturities face refinancing risk if spreads widen. Duration and leverage management are therefore critical mitigants for institutional holders.
Operational risk: rent deceleration places a premium on active asset management—tenant retention programs, expense control, and targeted value‑add capital projects that enhance net operating income without heavy initial capex. Markets with growing supply pipelines require especially disciplined leasing strategies (e.g., concessions modeling, flexible lease terms) to preserve occupancy and stabilize income during rent cycles.
Fazen Capital Perspective
At Fazen Capital we view the 2.8% national rent growth as a normalization rather than a structural reversal. The deceleration reflects successful supply responses and the mechanical effect of high mortgage rates limiting for‑sale transitions, not an abrupt demand collapse. Our contrarian read is that the national number conceals persistent micro‑market scarcity: high‑barrier central business districts and constrained coastal submarkets will continue to outperform, creating opportunities for concentrated owners with underwriting discipline and operational expertise.
We also believe market participants are underestimating the role of regulatory and entitlement constraints in preserving tightness in certain metros. Where zoning and permitting remain restrictive, new supply will lag demand and support stronger rent and occupancy outcomes than the national 2.8% headline implies. This divergence will create a dispersion premium: active managers who combine granular supply‑side analysis with employment and wage trends will be better positioned than passive strategies that rely on national averages.
Finally, our scenario work suggests that modest declines in mortgage rates — for example, a 100 bps drop from current levels — could catalyze a gradual conversion of a subset of renters to buyers over 12–24 months, but the conversion rate will be uneven and concentrated among households at the margin. Therefore, asset strategies that prioritize tenant retention and flexible lease structures during stabilization phases are likely to preserve value more effectively than those that assume a rapid return to pre‑pandemic growth rates. See our broader macro research and housing insights here: [macro research](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and [housing insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
FAQ
Q: Does 2.8% YoY mean rents are falling everywhere? A: No. The 2.8% figure is a national average for Jan 2025–Jan 2026 (MarketWatch / ZeroHedge, Mar 25, 2026). It masks substantial geographic dispersion: some metros report negative rent trajectories while others maintain positive growth above the national mean. Investors need market‑level leasing and supply data to evaluate local performance.
Q: How material is the impact of mortgage rates on rental demand? A: Mortgage rates near 6% (Freddie Mac PMMS, March 2026) materially reduce purchase affordability relative to pre‑pandemic norms and therefore sustain a baseline of rental demand. However, the effect depends on regional house price levels, wage growth, and household balance sheet conditions; a meaningful decline in rates could gradually shift marginal renters into buyers, particularly in markets with affordable price-to-income ratios.
Bottom Line
National rent growth has cooled to 2.8% YoY (Jan 2025–Jan 2026), signaling a shift from rapid acceleration to stabilization driven by rising supply and sustained financing costs. For institutional investors, outcomes will be driven by micro‑market selection, underwriting conservatism, and active asset management.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
