Rents remain far above pre-COVID levels. Use this tool to check prices in your area

Article originally posted on USA Today on June 12, 2025

After seven years of work and more than $18 million invested, Harbour Village, a new affordable housing development in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, officially opened its doors in January.

The 40-unit rental development came together thanks to Safe Harbour, a housing nonprofit based in Carlisle.

By the time Safe Harbour started screening prospective tenants, there were over 400 applications, said Scott Shewell, the group’s long-time president and CEO.

“And I still get calls every day,” he told USA TODAY.

The median apartment rent in Carlisle was $1,259 in May. It was one of the fastest-growing areas for rent prices that month, up 6% from a year ago, according to a USA TODAY analysis of Apartment List data.

Shewell wasn’t surprised. The area, he said, has seen blockbuster growth over the past several years and even well-meaning local governments committed to affordable housing haven’t been able to keep up with the demand.

Population in Carlisle borough has gone up nearly 12% since 2020, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

In May, Manhattan, Kansas, led other metros as the fastest-growing market in rental prices. The metro saw a 14% increase in rent prices from the same month last year. It was followed by Abilene, Texas; Grand Forks, North Dakota-Minnesota and Shreveport-Bossier City, Louisiana.

Recent data shows that the rental prices in most metro areas have leveled off, but for millions of renters, the typical rent still remains dramatically higher than it was before the COVID-19 pandemic began.

The USA TODAY analysis of Apartment List data for 202 metro areas found that average monthly rent between January and May was significantly higher in 94% of the metros, compared with the same period in 2019.

Excluding the handful that stayed about the same as pre-pandemic levels, the data showed that prices were up by an average of 31%.

The pandemic supercharged the rental market, breaking old patterns of steady growth as the population shuffled, cities closed, and people started working from home. After a short drop in rental prices, prices rebounded aggressively, hitting record highs before flattening in the latter half of 2022.

The impact has been felt across the board, from Manhattan in New York City to Manhattan in Kansas.

The Apartment List data shows that the new level remained steady in May 2025, which, although a relief, does not do away with the rent burden the already high prices have put on families.

According to census data, about 25% of renters in America are so rent-burdened that they spent more than half of their income on rent in 2023. That figure was 22% in 2019. A three-percentage point difference means millions more Americans are spending a substantial chunk of their paycheck in rent.

When these high prices were accompanied by broader inflation in groceries, gas and energy, the strain was felt by families – charting up as a top issue in the 2024 presidential election, in which Americans elected President Donald Trump who centered his campaign on bringing down prices.

Housing market experts say that the rental market might have settled on a new baseline, which means prices might not go back down to what they were in 2019.

Rob Warnock, a senior research associate at Apartment List, said a reversal to pre-pandemic prices is unlikely, as we’re now at a level for how much housing costs.

“More realistic than rent prices coming down is rent prices stabilizing at a place where incomes can catch up,” Warnock said.

For now, two trends in the market have emerged to keep the rental prices at a stable level: slowed rental demand and a recent construction frenzy.

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