Insufficient rental inventory fuels low vacancy rate, median rent increase >Lloyd’s Hills Apartments, a 28-unit project in Bethlehem, built by Affordable Housing Education and Development. John Tully
Published: 7/24/2021 9:06:17 PM
Rental vacancies are still on the floor and median rents are climbing, according to the 2021 New Hampshire Residential Rental Cost Survey Report published Thursday by the New Hampshire Housing Finance Authority (NHHFA).
“Unfortunately, in many ways, there’s not a lot that’s very surprising here. This is very consistent with what we’ve seen for many years,” said Dean Christon, executive director of the NHHFA.
The vacancy rate is sitting at 0.6% presently. Christon said anything lower than 2% is considered a fluctuation in turnover, and 5% is considered balanced. By contrast, both the U.S. and Northeast vacancy rates are 6.8%.
New-hampshire
United-states
Hampshire-residential-rental-cost-survey
Housing-authority
Council-on-housing-stability
Hampshire-housing-finance-authority
Hampshire-residential-rental-cost-survey-report
New-hampshire-housing-finance-authority
Dean-christon
Housing-stability
புதியது-ஹாம்ப்ஷயர்