Rent Increase

After last year's experience of having my rent raised on me by more than $100 per month for two years in a row, I decided to try mitigating the problem by only signing a 9-month lease. I wanted to move my lease renewal period from June to March/February, in order to hopefully lock in low rental rates during the winter. My hypothesis was that June is a bad time to sign a lease due to all of the college kids who just graduated and are starting new jobs at that point, thus creating increased demand for apartments. In my area there's also a large influx of summer-only interns that work for nearby tech companies. The traditional wisdom is that all of these hundreds of interns fill up all the available apartments and cause rents to be higher over the summer. I haven't seen any data that actually backs up this idea, but it seems plausible.

Today I got my lease renewal offer from my apartment manager and I was "pleased" to find out that my rent is only increasing $40 per month for this year, which is much less than in previous years and within the 2%-4% "move out threshold" that I established last year. I want to attribute this "success" to my plan described above, but in all reality it probably has much more to do with the plummeting housing market in Seattle than anything else.

As far as I can tell, there are two schools of thought about the relationship between apartment rents and housing prices:

  • The "traditional" model says that rents and prices are tightly linked to each other, and the economy as a whole. If house prices go down, then rents should also go down because there's less money flowing around. Similarly they should both go up at the same time as well. This model seems to have matched the last few years, as both housing prices and apartment rents have climbed to ridiculously high levels.
  • The "bubble" model suggests that when a housing bubble "pops", as seems to be happening right now, then rents should actually increase as housing prices decrease since all of the people who would have been buying houses are now forced into renting apartments due to the credit crunch, which increases renting costs everywhere due to increased competition. Similar logic would also seem to imply that rents should decrease or level off during a housing boom, since lots of renters are moving out and buying houses.

The fact that my rent is still going up even though local housing prices are declining seems to indicate that neither theory is totally correct (or as often seems to be the case, reality is just more complicated).

It may also be related to the fact that Microsoft keeps hiring 10,000 new people every year. Any theory is going to predict that local prices are going to be rising in that scenario...

Posted on January 14, 2008
Filed under: General, Housing Comments Off
Comments (7) Trackbacks (0)
  1. I’m not sure I believe home prices have fallen in Seattle. The very simple stat they show is the average price has fallen, which more likely means expensive home sales have slowed while entry-midrange homes haven’t slowed as much.

    The stats I see from my agent break things down more based on home value range, where # of sales per month are down differently based on price range, but within each range the homes selling were still going up

  2. Hmm, yes it is of course very complicated, and that scenario is entirely possible. But a drop in the median home price from $501K in August to $455K in December is quite a big drop to be accounted for by saying “expensive sales have slowed”. It’s also interesting that the inventory of unsold homes is up 70%, meaning that people aren’t buying at these still-inflated prices. So the only way to clear that inventory is to either drop prices, or wait for a very long time with no price increase.

    Also, are you sure you want to get your data from a real estate agent whose entire income depends on convincing people that prices are going up up up, and they should buy right away? Of course they will tell you that prices aren’t declining 🙂

  3. Unless they are doing major repairs or improvements at your complex, I don’t understand the big increases.

    On a related housing topic: Being a financial genius, I never thought I’d say renting is smarter than owning. But I think that if you’re single and plan to move in the next five years, it is so much smarter to rent than it is to own. I don’t know if Home Owners Associations are all the rage in Seattle, but they are here and I HATE them. Oh, I know, they’re supposed to serve the purpose of making sure you don’t have a neighbor with a bright orange front door or a junker parked out front, but really? I think HOAs are a crock of…well, a crock (watching my language!)

    If you own a home, you have taxes, HOA fees (which can be HUNDREDS per month), all the repairs, all the utilities. If you rent, chances are one or more of your utilites are included or at least available at a reduced rate. You don’t have property taxes. You don’t have to repair your own stuff in most cases…if something breaks, your landlord fixes it.

    Owning is EXPENSIVE! One appliance breaks and boom! It’s $2000 or more every time.

    Still a bummer that your rent has gone up, but owning can be pretty craptastic.

  4. Like I said a year ago, I would negotiate down your monthly rent. Tell them you will move out if they increase it further, mentioning how much your rent has already gone up despite falling house prices. Chances are they will work with you on the price in order to keep you in a lease – they will stand to lose a lot of money if the apartment is unoccupied for even one month.

    If you ask for a $0 increase and the best they give you is a $20 increase, you’ve still done better than if you just kept your mouth shut.

  5. Yeah I am not all that pleased with the rent increase, small(er) as it may be. I’ll try to bargain with them to get it lowered, but unfortunately I have a ‘special’ apartment which is supposedly in high demand.

    And yep, we have HOA fees here too as well. A condo I was looking at recently had a fee of $350 per month(!), which over a 30-year mortgage would effectively raise the cost of the condo by $125,000. That, along with property taxes and that kind of thing made me decide not to buy a condo (any time soon anyway). The numbers just don’t add up compared to renting.

    For a little bit more (less than twice the price), you can get a full house that’s a lot better than a condo, and doesn’t have any HOA fees to boot. I think I’ll plan to save and do that.

  6. Just be sure that if you buy a house, that the neighborhood doesn’t have an HOA instituted. That is very common here, even with actual houses (instead of condos or townhouses.) I actually don’t even understand how this is legal if you are buying property! If you own the land that your home is on…how can they tell you what to do and force you to pay extra money? I have to pay over $200 a month and I resent it big time. I could tell you stories but I have already taken up too much space in your comments section!

  7. Hmm I’m not sure I’ve heard of HOA fees for regular houses before, but that does seem like a ripoff. How annoying!

    Don’t worry about wasting too much space in the comments section – there’s plenty of pixels to go around 🙂

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