Los Angeles Times

More in suburbs renting homes

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In the American imaginatio­n, suburbs are places to buy a house and put down roots. But a growing percentage of suburbanit­es rent, according to a new study.

About 29% of suburbanit­es living outside the nation’s 11 most populous cities were renters in 2014, up from 23% in 2006, according to a report being released Tuesday by New York University’s Furman Center real estate think tank and the bank Capital One.

The f inances of homeowners­hip since the mortgage meltdown might be a lead reason for the change, but the cost of renting also is rising in most of the biggest metropolit­an areas, the study found.

Adding to data showing a national rise in renters in the last decade, the report zooms in on Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Philadelph­ia, San Francisco, Washington and their suburbs. For a national benchmark, the researcher­s also looked at all metropolit­an areas encompassi­ng a city of at least 50,000 people.

“It’s the extensiven­ess of the affordabil­ity problem that is notable,” Laura Bailey, Capital One’s managing vice president of community developmen­t, told the Associated Press before the report’s release.

Still, the study shows some of the nation’s biggest rental markets have become more, not less, affordable to their typical tenants. Some findings:

At home — with renting — in the suburbs: Renting is still more common in big cities than their suburbs. In Miami and New York, about two- thirds of residents rent. But the gap is narrowing.

In the Atlanta area, the increase in the suburban rental population between 2006 and 2014 was twice the size of the entire tenant population in the city itself. Eighty percent of the growth in Dallas- area renters happened outside the city limits. Nearly half of residents outside the city of Los Angeles are tenants.

Nationwide, 37% of all households nationwide now rent, the highest level since the mid- 1960s, Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies noted in December.

8 Making the rent: Typical tenants could afford fewer than half the rental homes available in metro areas nationwide in 2014, under officials’ traditiona­l definition of affordabil­ity: spending under 30% of income on rent and utilities. ( Government- ese for people who spend more: “rent- burdened.”)

But the picture differs from city to city, depending on the interplay of median rents and incomes. The percentage of rent- burdened tenants actually declined moderately between 2006 and 2014 in Boston and Houston, while staying f lat in Chicago and San Francisco and rising elsewhere.

Where do renters have it the hardest? That depends how you measure it. The Washington and San Francisco metro areas had 2014 median rents topping $ 1,500 a month but also the highest median tenant incomes: $ 57,000 for San Francisco and $ 58,200 for Washington. That made them relatively affordable: Half of San Francisco- area tenants and 49% of Washington- area ones were rent- burdened. ( The national metro- area average was 53%.)

Contrast that with about two- thirds of tenants in the Miami area, where the median renter made $ 34,300 a year while paying $ 1,150 a month.

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