➤ Key Highlights
U.S. apartment occupancy registered 95.5% — the lowest level since 2013.
Yardi’s May advertised rent was $1,767, up just 0.2% year over year and 0.3% for the month.
Texas metros are the softest: Houston 91.6%, Austin 91.8%, Dallas 92.3%.
High-supply Sun Belt and Mountain markets face supply plus macro headwinds at once.
Positive asking-rent growth is now expected only in late 2026 for many of those metros.
➤ The Signal
The supply wave is now showing up in occupancy, not just rent.
The pain is concentrated in the metros that built the most.
Operators are competing on price to fill units, not pushing rate.
The multifamily supply cliff has been a forward-looking story for a year. The May data turns it present-tense: occupancy at a 13-year low means landlords are absorbing record deliveries by giving ground on both price and fill. Rent growth near zero is the symptom; occupancy slippage is the cause.
Geography sharpens it. The weakest occupancies sit in exactly the metros that led the construction boom — Houston, Austin, Dallas — where 50-year-high supply is colliding with softer in-migration and affordability strain. The Sun Belt’s growth story and its absorption problem are the same markets.
For underwriters, the takeaway is timing. The delivery peak is still washing through, and pro formas written on quick stabilization and trend rent growth are being repriced in real time. The relief — a development pullback — is real but a year or more away from showing in occupancy.
➤ Implications
Expect concessions and flat-to-negative effective rents in high-supply Sun Belt metros into late 2026. Markets that under-built — coastal and Midwest — hold occupancy and pricing better. Patience and basis discipline matter more than rate optimism.
➤ Key Takeaway
The supply wave stopped being a forecast and started showing up in the occupancy line.
Source: RealPage / Yardi Matrix — May 2026, June 2026



