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The DC Rental Affordability Mismatch

  • April 3rd 2020

by Nena Perry-Brown

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DC Policy Center's latest rental report builds on prior analysis of the city's mismatched housing market.

The report highlights how the scarcity of rentals for households at various income levels creates pressure throughout the rental market, as households at both the lowest and highest ends of the income spectrum face a supply shortage.

Demand and supply for apartments at different rental rates. Click to enlarge.

For example, the 40,200 renter households in DC that would need an apartment renting for $750 or less in order to pay an affordable (30% of income) rate for housing are competing for fewer than 800 units in apartment buildings. However, there are an additional 12,700 units at this rental rate on the shadow rental market (loosely-regulated condos and houses), most of which are in Wards 5, 7, and 8.

At the other end of the spectrum, 41,100 city households could easily pay more than $2,700 per month for rent, although it is unclear the extent to which those households would actually opt to do so. The market provides just under 15,500 units in apartment buildings renting in this range, 4,700 of which are rent-controlled. Another 17,000 units rent for this price on the shadow market, most of which are in Wards 2, 3, and 6.

High competition for the most affordable units and limited options for the most expensive units has the effect of creating pressure on the rental market for the 43,000 households in the middle. Put another way, the approximately 71,400 one- and two-person households that cannot afford the median rent on the 75,730 studio and one-bedroom rental apartments on the market are competing with the 58,300 one- and two-person households that can.

Map of area median income needed to afford unit*. Click to enlarge.

Meanwhile, the variation in rental rates around DC restricts households at certain income brackets to certain areas, even when rent-controlled units are factored in. In Ward 2, for example, a household would need to earn at least the area median income (AMI) to afford the typical two- or three-bedroom rent-controlled unit, or to afford a unit of any size not subject to rent control. Wards 7 and 8 are the only in the city where a household earning up to 60% of AMI can afford the typical unit that isn't subject to rent control.

*AMI estimates based on appropriate match between unit and household size; eg. studios assume one-person households, three-bedrooms assume four-person households, etc.

This article originally published at http://dc.urbanturf.production.logicbrush.com/articles/blog/the-dc-rental-affordability-mismatch/16671.

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