
Report: February 2025 Rent Trends

By Lilly Milman
Mar 03, 2025
On Monday, March 3, we published our monthly National Rent Report, highlighting national rent trend data as well as rent price data by state and by city. To create this report, we analyze rent trends in 100 major U.S. cities.
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In this month’s report, we explained a few key market trends:
- In most of the country, the February rent thaw has begun.
- In a few warm-weather markets like Albuquerque, there is little seasonality when it comes to price.
- A looming insurance crisis has driven Louisiana rents way up.
National Trends
While rent trends differ from region to region, here’s what you need to know about rent prices on a national level:
Rent prices have begun their annual seasonal climb.
- The national median price of a one-bedroom apartment (now $1,550) increased by 7% from January to February.
- As we reported last month, rent prices typically reach their all-time low in January and begin slowly climbing back up in February.
- Renters in the market can expect to see asking rent prices start ticking up month after month until the end of the summer when demand peaks.
Regional Trends
In this month’s report, we dove deep into the following topic:
In a few warm-weather markets, seasonality has had little effect on price this year.
- This month, we decided to look at the rental markets that offer a rare relief for renters: price stability. To do so, we analyzed MoM and YoY rent price changes over 2024 and 2025 so far.
- Albuquerque, NM, Richmond, VA, Tucson, AZ, and Portland, OR had the least price fluctuation over that period of time.
- Seasonality affects almost every rental market in the U.S. to some degree, but these warm-weather cities had the most price stable rental markets in the country this past year.
- Albuquerque was the city with the least fluctuation; the largest MoM rent change in 2024 in was $15. Along with the rest of the country, Albuquerque rents spiked in mid-2022 as a result of the pandemic, climbed through mid-2023, and then began to drop until eventually reaching a stable point in January 2024. It’s a similar story in Richmond, Portland, and nearby Tucson.
Rent at the State Level
- Louisiana saw the biggest MoM and YoY rent increase in February (+15.8% and +20.6%, respectively).
- Louisiana has been facing a historic insurance crisis for years as a result of multiple devastating hurricanes.
- Insurance companies are becoming insolvent, leaving the state, or raising prices dramatically — and property owners, as well as their tenants, are facing the consequences.
- As insurance premiums double or, in some cases, triple, many renters are eating the costs on behalf of their landlords in housing markets like New Orleans and Baton Rouge.
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