
Austin apartment permits have plummeted since the pandemic
Why it matters: Apartment construction influences housing affordability in Austin, where a wave of new apartments ultimately helped curb rent hikes.
The construction slowdown, which tariffs could prolong, risks reigniting rent inflation.
The big picture: The rise of remote work during the pandemic allowed Americans to relocate to Austin and other cities, leading to a surge in rental demand.
Builders ramped up construction in response — but now, rents are flattening and borrowing costs are high, making building less attractive.
By the numbers: Developers got permits to build an average of 64.5 multifamily units per 10,000 people in greater Austin from April 2024 to March 2025, according to Redfin's analysis of Census Bureau data.
That's down from the nearly 95 multifamily units per 10,000 people during the pandemic surge.
Reality check: Austin is still issuing more multifamily permits — buildings with five or more units — than any other metro Redfin analyzed.
The local rate of multifamily building permits granted outstrips the national rate of 12.4 multifamily units per 10,000 people in recent months.
State of play: The median asking rent in Austin dropped 10.7% year over year to $1,420 in March — $379 below its record high.
That was the largest decline in percentage among the 44 major U.S. metropolitan areas Redfin analyzed this spring.
Zoom out: 63% of major metros are seeing fewer units approved per 10,000 people compared to the pandemic era.
What they're saying: Builders nationwide are "pumping the brakes because elevated interest rates are making many projects prohibitively expensive," Redfin senior economist Sheharyar Bokhari wrote in the report.
What's next: Mayor Kirk Watson is offering a resolution at Thursday's City Council meeting ordering city officials to re-examine incentive programs that allow developers to build taller buildings in exchange for affordable housing.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
26 minutes ago
- The Hill
Biden: GOP megabill ‘reckless,' ‘cruel'
Former President Biden said that President Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' is 'reckless' and 'cruel' after it passed the House on Thursday. 'The Republican budget bill is not only reckless — it's cruel. It slashes Medicaid and takes away health care from millions of Americans,' Biden said on X. 'It closes rural hospitals and cuts food assistance for our veterans and seniors. It jacks up energy bills. And it could trigger deep cuts to Medicare while driving up the deficit by $4 trillion. All of this to give a massive tax break to billionaires,' he added. 'Working people deserve better.' On Thursday, House Republicans passed the core of Trump's domestic policy agenda, featuring sweeping tax cuts, an immigration crackdown, a boost in energy production and significant cuts in Medicaid. The bill made its way through Congress despite fierce opposition from Democrats and a few Republicans. In a post on X Thursday, the House Democrats said on their official account that their GOP colleagues 'just passed their One Big Ugly Bill that rewards billionaires while throwing 17 million Americans off their health insurance.' 'People will get sicker. Hospitals will close. Children and seniors will go hungry,' they added. House Republican leadership reveled in the megabill's passage on Thursday, saying in a statement that 'Republicans in Congress have succeeded in our mission to enact President Trump's America First agenda.' 'And importantly, we did it in record time, so that the effects of this nation-shaping legislation can be felt by the American people as soon as possible,' they added.
Yahoo
29 minutes ago
- Yahoo
218 Republicans Vote for Budget Ripping Away Health Care From Millions
House Republicans on Thursday passed Donald Trump's sweeping, 887-page budget bill, an unpopular piece of legislation that is poised to further enrich the wealthiest Americans while tattering the social safety net. The House of Representatives passed the bill 218-214, with every 'yes' vote coming from a Republican. Only two Republicans, Representatives Thomas Massie and Brian Fitzpatrick, were brave enough to join Democrats and vote against the legislation. The bill includes historic rollbacks of social programs. The Congressional Budget Office estimates it will strip 17 million people of their health insurance by 2034 due to its cuts to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act, and deal the most severe blow to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or food stamps, in the program's history. By some estimates, the bill's Medicaid cuts alone are projected to cause 51,000 avoidable deaths per year. And it will staggeringly transfer wealth from less wealthy to ultra-wealthy Americans. According to the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, it is 'the most regressive tax and budget law in at least the past 40 years.' Trump and other Republicans are sure to try to distract from this by pointing to the bill's sops to those expecting populist reforms—such as its no-tax-on-tips provision—which themselves are 'designed in ways that limit their benefits for less affluent taxpayers.' And, of course, it will supercharge the Trump administration's barbaric war on immigrants, pouring $100 billion dollars into Immigration and Customs Enforcement, all while the American public increasingly considers the agencies' actions of late to be going too far. This part of the bill, Vice President JD Vance implausibly argued, makes all of its odious effects 'immaterial' by comparison. All this while adding an estimated $3.3 trillion to the nation's debt.
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Donald Trump's 'big beautiful' tax cuts bill passes final hurdle in US Congress
Donald Trump's 'big beautiful bill' has been passed by the US congress, sending it to the president to sign into law. The controversial tax breaks and spending cuts package cleared its final hurdle as the Republican-controlled House of Representatives narrowly approved the bill with a 218-214 vote. The bill delivers tax breaks promised in his 2024 election campaign, cuts health and food safety programmes, and zeroes out dozens of green energy incentives. According to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO), it will lower tax revenues by $4.5trn over 10 years and add $3.4trn to the US's $36.2trn debt. But despite concerns over the 869-page bill's price tag - and its hit to healthcare programmes - Republicans largely lined up in support, with just two rebelling on the vote. Every Democrat in Congress voted against the bill, blasting it as a giveaway to the wealthy that will leave millions of Americans uninsured. House Speaker Mike Johnson made the Republicans' closing argument for the bill, telling Congress: "For everyday Americans, this means real, positive change that they can feel." Earlier, the House's Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries gave a record-breaking eight-hour and 44-minute speech against it. "The focus of this bill, the justification for all of the cuts that will hurt everyday Americans, is to provide massive tax breaks for billionaires," he said. 👉 Follow Trump100 on your podcast app 👈 The bill's spending cuts largely target Medicaid, the health programme that covers 71 million Americans on low incomes. It will tighten enrolment standards, institute a work requirement and clamp down on a funding mechanism used by states to boost federal payments. The changes could leave nearly 12 million people without health insurance, according to the CBO. On the other side of the ledger, it will stave off tax increases that were due to hit most Americans at the end of the year, when tax cuts from President Trump's first term were due to expire. It also sets up new tax breaks for overtime pay, seniors and tipped income. Read more: The bill on Tuesday after vice president JD Vance cast the deciding vote to break a 50-50 tie. Mr Trump will sign it into law on Friday at 5pm local time (10pm in the UK), the White House said.