Sentences with phrase «number of renter households»

This contributed to the growing number of renter households early in the recession.
The U.S. added 1.3 million owner households over the last year and lost 286,000 renter households, the fourth consecutive quarter in which the number of renter households declined from the same quarter a year earlier.
Meanwhile, the number of renter households has increased by an average of 770,000 annually from 2004 through 2014, the fastest pace for a 10 - year period since the late 1980s.
The U.S. added about 1.5 million new owner households in 2017, while the number of renter households actually declined by 76,000 — a potentially worrying sign for landlords looking to fill large numbers of new apartments.»
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the number of renter households has steadily increased in 2015 and 2016 (2.7 percent and 2.3 percent, respectively).
Despite U.S. population growth of roughly 1 percent per year, the number of owner households has held steady, in the range of 75 million since 2007, while the number of renter households has increased from 35 million in 2007 to nearly 40 million today.
That percentage could well increase as the number of renter households is at an all - time high and projected to increase faster than the new households purchasing homes.
... [T] he number of renter households will increase by nearly 500,000 annually over the ten years from 2015 to 2025 — a still robust pace by historical standards.»
On the contrary, while homeownership may be slowly on the rise, experts predict the number of renter households is likely to continue to increase at a healthy clip, driving up the need for additional supply.
As homeownership rates have dipped, the number of renter households has increased.
As the homeownership rate declined, the number of renter households grew sharply — by more than a million in 2012 alone.
Over the last 10 years, the number of renter households expanded by 9 million.
Also, more Americans are showing a preference for owning: The number of owner households increased by 755,000 from a year ago, while the number of renter households fell 348,000, according to the Census Bureau report.
The decline in homeownership since its peak in 2004 reflects two key trends: a drop in the number of renter households becoming owners, and a rise in the number of homeowners becoming renters, whether by choice or because of economic distress.
Since the peak of the housing market in 2006, the number of renter households has grown — on average, by 692,000 a year — while the number of owner households is shrinking — on average, by 201,000 a year, according to the Census data.
In contrast, rental markets continued to grow, fueled by another year of large increases in the numbers of renter households.
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