Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Landlords discount rents across nation

- By PATRICK CLARK

Have you ever bought a sweater off the sale rack and then thought,”Wait, 30 percent off what?”

That’s what it’s like shopping for apartments in dozens of U.S. rental markets, as landlords offer discounts on asking prices — even as rents remain at historic highs. In San Francisco, where median rents have marched upward for years, landlords reduced the listing price on 21 percent of listings in the 12 months that ended Sept. 30, according to a new report published by Trulia. That’s up from 14 percent of listings that were price-chopped last year.

In more than 40 cities across the country, including both hot spots like Denver and quieter markets like Tulsa, Okla., landlords cut prices on at least 10 percent of listings, the report said.

These aren’t what the real estate trade calls “concession­s,” a free month’s rent or a couple of Uber gift cards to seal the deal, though they’re being tossed around, too. While rent growth has slowed in the last year, rents are still rising in most markets.

The price reductions the new report documents occurred when a landlord listed an apartment on Trulia’s website at one price before marking down the price to lure renters. And these discounts are much more modest than on that sweater in the rummage rack-usually under 5 percent, according to Trulia. Even as landlords budge on price, they’re still commanding historical­ly high rents.

There are two main reasons for the rent reductions, said Mark Uh, a data scientist at Trulia. In the most expensive U.S. markets, landlords may have exceeded what renters will pay and are beginning to ease up. In cities where rents are cheaper, property managers are probably lowering their asking prices to make their units competitiv­e with the supply of new apartments flowing into the market.

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