➤ Key Highlights
National vacancy sits near 7.2% and is declining — the first sustained drop in 4+ years.
YoY rent growth held soft at about 0.8%.
Sun Belt still negative: San Antonio −3.4%, Denver −2.6%, Austin −2.5%, Phoenix −2.3%, Las Vegas −2.1%.
Highest vacancy: Sarasota 17.6%, Huntsville 17.4%, San Antonio 15.8%.
➤ The Signal
Demand is finally absorbing the 2023–2025 supply wave — nationally.
But averages hide a two-speed market.
The inflection is real; the recovery is not evenly distributed.
The national vacancy downtick matters because it’s the first evidence the record supply pipeline is being digested rather than deepening. Absorption is outrunning deliveries as starts collapse (a theme the desk flagged 6/17 and 6/22).
The catch: the metros that overbuilt are still repricing. Rents are falling 2–3%+ across the high-supply Sun Belt while gateway and supply-disciplined markets firm. A 7.2% national number is an average of markets at ~4% and markets near 17%.
For operators, this is the moment underwriting discipline separates winners from losers: the same “national stabilization” headline supports very different rent-growth assumptions depending on submarket supply.
➤ Implications
Acquirers should underwrite by delivery pipeline, not national trend. The stabilization narrative will tempt aggressive rent assumptions in exactly the markets least able to support them.
➤ Key Takeaway
Multifamily stopped bleeding nationally — but you still can’t underwrite Austin like you underwrite the average.
Source: Yardi Matrix · Apartments.com · Chandan — June 2026


