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- The national average rent went up by 3.2% in the past year but dipped by 0.1% month-over-month, reaching $1,471 in September according to data from Yardi Matrix.
- Coral Gables, FL renters saw the highest monthly rent increase in September, with the average rate reaching $2,601 per month.
- Coral Gables apartments are the most expensive, while apartments in Titusville have the cheapest rents.
The first monthly decline in over two years brings the U.S. average rent down to $1,471
As part of a seasonal respite, the national average rent decreased for the first time since February 2017, dipping by -0.1% ($1) from last month to $1,471. The decrease might seem insignificant, but coupled with the slowest year-over-year hike in the past 13 months, 3.2% ($45), it points to a slight wind-down in rent prices in the context of a more volatile financial climate, according to Yardi Matrix.
Renting in Florida in September 2019
The average rent in Florida cities is generally lower than the national average rent. The fastest growing rents in September were in Coral Gables, where rental apartment prices increased by 2.6% month over month, or $67. Wesley Chapel apartments saw the second highest monthly increase, jumping by 1.7% and making them $22 more expensive than last month, while in Winter Haven prices decreased by 2.2% ($23) compared to August.
Coral Gables apartments are the state’s most expensive for renters, with an average rent of $2,601, followed by apartments in Doral, where the average monthly rent is $2,208. On the other hand, the cheapest city to rent an apartment of the cities analyzed is Titusville, with an average apartment rent of $849, followed by DeLand with $897 and Plant City with $983, all under $1,000.
To compare the rental market in Florida with other cities in the U.S., you can also check our national September rent report.
Methodology
RentCafe.com is a nationwide apartment search website that enables renters to easily find apartments and houses for rent throughout the United States.
The data on average rents included in our reports comes directly from competitively-rented (market-rate) large-scale multifamily properties (50+ units in size), via telephone survey. The data is compiled and reported by our sister company Yardi Matrix, a business development and asset management tool for brokers, sponsors, banks and equity sources underwriting investments in the multifamily, office, industrial and self-storage sectors. Fully-affordable properties are not included in the survey and are not reported in rental rate averages. Local rent reports include only cities with a statistically-relevant stock of large-scale multifamily properties of 50+ units.
Fair use and redistribution
We encourage you and freely grant you permission to reuse, host, or repost the images in this article. When doing so, we only ask that you kindly attribute the authors by linking to RentCafe.com or this page, so that your readers can learn more about this project, the research behind it and its methodology.
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Sanziana Bona is a content marketing writer for Yardi Corom, a cloud-based software solution designed for commercial tenants and corporate occupiers and Yardi Kube, an all-in-one coworking management platform. She covers many commercial real estate related topics including FASB/IFRS compliance, lease accounting, coworking and flexile spaces, and more. You can connect with Sanziana via email.
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