Fly south, apartment hunters.
A new report that classifies the kindness of renting 150 cities in the United States based on the cost of life, local economics and general quality of life completely ignores the great apple and the surrounding area.
Instead, a large number of southern subway regions devastated the annual rental rankings, leaving the dust on the north coast -east and the west coast.
“The cost of life, very weighted, really improved for the southern cities,” Doug Refront, a Yardi Matrix Business Intelligence Manager, who provides data to Rentcafe.
The south not only dominated the ten main slots in the report, but also occupied an impressive three -quarters of the first 50.
Metros in Texas, Florida and Georgia occupied the podium, with McKinney, Texas, which reigns supreme.
Ressler told The Post that, while public transport offered an increase in rankings for well-connected northern cities, their southern counterparts advanced thanks to a strong post-paid recovery and increased job offers from home.
McKinney, a rise suburb of Dallas, offers the tenants “advantages of the large city in a small environment”, according to the report, including a lower cost than the average of life, a strong labor market and a large green space.
Almost 35% of McKinney’s rental inventory was built in the last five years and 83% of units are considered “high -end”.
Beachy Sarasota, FL and Atlanta Animada won the second and third place, respectively.
The Rentcafe rankings were leaked to three main metrics: the cost of life and housing, the local economy and the quality of life. While some cities offered excellent work growth, others excelled thanks to a wide green space or short displacement time.
The arrangement of these considerations reveals a very different geography from the hot spots.
While Myrtle Beach took the first place for the cost of life and housing, Miami won his prosperous local economy.
Metropolitan Washington, DC, occupied the number one for the quality of life for an impressive second year in a row.
Top 10 north -American cities for tenants by 2025
- Mckinney, tx
- Sarasota, fl
- Atlanta, ga
- Austin, tx
- Huntsville, at the
- Wilmington, NC
- Charleston, SC
- Round Rock, Tx
- Raleigh, NC
- Orlando, fl
Despite a bad general demonstration, the shoebox apartments of the popular cities of the East coast are still a hot merchandise. The tenants still go faithfully to places like Philadelphia and Boston to enjoy rich cultural and social lives, despite the strongest costs.
To a little surprise, an increasing Manhattan was finally qualified in the housing and the cost of life, the heaviest metric in the rental report of Rentcafe.
Brooklyn and Queens also flew to the bottom of the list.
The largest city in the world, however, took fifth place for quality of life and the seventh for economic benefits.
Take this, Myrtle Beach!
#North
Image Source : nypost.com