The rental market in the Twin Cities rallied last year, boosting rents slightly and the prospect of another year of robust construction for apartment developers.
The number of occupied rentals in the Twin Cities metro increased by a record 8,900 apartments during 2021, including those in new and existing buildings, according to Marquette Advisors.
The company, which tracks market-rate rentals throughout the seven-county metro, said that was the best year on record for apartment absorption in the Twin Cities market, eclipsing the previous high of 6,400 units in 2010.
"I'm not surprised by the positive trend, but the actual number of units absorbed certainly exceeded our expectations," said Brent Wittenberg, vice president at Marquette Advisors.
For the metro as a whole, rents rose only modestly. The average rent at the end of year was $1,354, a 2.5% increase from the end of 2020.
Vacancy rates declined to 3.6% during the fourth quarter of 2021 from 4.4% a year earlier. Including new buildings still in the initial leasing phase, the vacancy rate was slightly higher at 4.8%.
The report doesn't include senior or income-restricted housing, which has been in critically short supply. There are now years-long waiting lists for many low-income rentals.
Wittenberg said demand for rentals was concentrated mostly in the suburbs, but even beleaguered landlords in the central cities where apartment openings were elevated last year saw modest gains.