> People have income on a curve, and at a certain point of price/quality will move further out and commute or move to a lower cost of living city entirely.
This doesn't describe the major renter class who has few workable options to choose from. They take whatever they can get.
Once they manage a place to live, they're likely trapped there because they don't have a wad of cash on hand (required to move).
That's average renter difficulty. It can get far worse.
In 2021, the few rentals available here got 400 applications/day. We beat out 50 applicants for one that was advertised for 2 hours (offered 6mos up front).
We beat long odds and barely avoided homelessness (even tho we had good employment history + money in the bank).
Many, many others were less lucky. Every rent-by-the-week hotel filled up, typically with people exhausting their savings.
People also start to take on roommates or become roommates. People in general want a place of their own. However as rent goes up they will start to be willing to rent the upper bunk in a bedroom, and people who do have a place to live start to become willing to rent out part of their bedroom just to afford the rent. For most this is the last option they will take (homeless might be better if they can find a place to sleep the night outside)
In NYC, the typical non-negotiable broker's fee for a not-disintegrating apartment ranges from 10-15%. That's on top of a security deposit and all the other costs associated with moving. It's a cartel that can only be broken by collective political action.
Things are slowly moving in that direction, only because the pressure has been so high for so long. It almost boiled over during COVID in some neighborhoods. There are still works of "Abolish Rent" graffiti left over from that time.
This doesn't describe the major renter class who has few workable options to choose from. They take whatever they can get.
Once they manage a place to live, they're likely trapped there because they don't have a wad of cash on hand (required to move).
That's average renter difficulty. It can get far worse.
In 2021, the few rentals available here got 400 applications/day. We beat out 50 applicants for one that was advertised for 2 hours (offered 6mos up front).
We beat long odds and barely avoided homelessness (even tho we had good employment history + money in the bank).
Many, many others were less lucky. Every rent-by-the-week hotel filled up, typically with people exhausting their savings.