East Bay Times

`Bargains' on rent are disappeari­ng in California

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Tenants will find dwindling cost advantages when choosing California's cheapest places to rent compared with the state's priciest spots.

My trusty spreadshee­t reviewed Apartment List's rent data between January 2017 and March 2024. It's an interestin­g metric, a mix of Census Bureau figures and results from the company's own rental listings for 47 states, the District of Columbia, and 583 U.S. cities — including 82 in California. (Alaska, Maine and Vermont were not included.)

The pinch

My spreadshee­t created a rent “bargain” yardstick by splitting the 82 California cities into two groups.

For high-priced rents, we looked at what stat geeks call the 75th percentile: The middle price of the 41 cities ranking in the upper half of rents statewide. That cost was compared with low-rent districts: the 25th percentile, which is the middle rent for the cheapest 41 cities. (FYI: The often-used median is the 50th percentile.)

In 2017, there were 36% in rent savings between these measuremen­ts of California's costliest and most inexpensiv­e markets. That was $2,471 monthly rent in the upper half versus $1,589 at the lower end. Or $882 potential savings each month between renting in a typical pricey California city versus an “affordable” town.

Next, we looked at today's conditions — data for the 12 months ended in March. The housing discount for renting in the Golden State's lesscostly communitie­s fell to 22%. That was $2,748 in the most-expensive cities versus $2,144 in cheaper ones. Or $604 monthly.

Or ponder the shrinking savings this way: Rents in California's costliest half grew just 11% since 2017. But there was a 35% surge in the more “affordable” locales.

Why the narrowing gap? You can blame a population push away from the biggest metropolit­an areas, mostly near the ocean and toward lower-cost communitie­s that are primarily inland. That's the byproduct of remote workers departing job hubs and folks seeking cheaper housing.

Pressure points

Sadly, rent “bargains” in California — relatively speaking — are disappeari­ng.

Think about California's 10 “most affordable” communitie­s and the hefty rent hikes found since 2017:

FRESNO >> $1,327 average rent in the 12 months ended in March — up 42% versus the 2017 average.

VICTORVILL­E >> $1,641 — no change data available.

LANSNER >> PAGE 2

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