loading...

Was 2021 The Strongest Year Ever for the DC Apartment Market?

  • January 24th 2022

by Nena Perry-Brown

✉️ Want to forward this article? Click here.

A rendering of the roof lounge at The Burton apartments in NoMa.

Several signs point to DC having its strongest rental market on record in 2021.

Apartment absorption increased by a whopping 654% in DC proper last year, according to the latest quarterly report from Delta Associates, with more than 8,000 apartments leased in the city. These absorptions not only accounted for almost half of all apartments absorbed in the DC metro area in 2021, but it was also the first year that over 8,000 units were absorbed in the city.

Snapshot of DC rental market. Click to enlarge.

Consequently, rents rose by 19% in the city last year, although the average rent remains at 97% of pre-pandemic levels. Metrowide, Class A apartment rents were up by 15% last year, compared to a 10.2% drop in 2020.

Areawide rent recovery for Class A apartments, by submarket. Click to enlarge.

In Northern Virginia, absorption rose by 68% last year, led by high-rises in the Rosslyn/Ballston Corridor. In the fourth quarter of 2021, average rents in Northern Virginia were at 102.3% of rent levels in March 2020. Meanwhile, annual absorption rose by 129% in Suburban Maryland, led by high-rises in Bethesda (617 units absorbed, 1,006 units delivered). Fourth quarter rents in the submarket were at 104% of March 2020 levels.

Projected supply and demand. Click to enlarge.

Rent growth was the highest areawide last year in Central DC (Penn Quarter, Logan Circle),where rents rose almost 30% year-over-year; the Columbia Heights/Shaw submarket came in second with rents rising 18%. The Capitol Hill/Capitol Riverfront/Southwest submarket led both the city and the area in absorption, its 3,936 leased units exceeding the total absorption in all of Suburban Maryland. The NoMa/H Street submarket led the region in the number of units delivered last year (1,945), although apartment deliveries were down by 21% across DC.

Here is a quick snapshot of average rents for high-rise Class A apartments in DC area sub-markets, as defined by Delta:

  • Alexandria: $2,213 per month
  • Bethesda: $2,792 per month
  • Capitol Hill/Capitol Riverfront: $2,570 per month
  • Central (Penn Quarter, Logan Circle, Dupont Circle, etc.): $2,923 per month
  • Columbia Heights/Shaw: $2,619 per month
  • Crystal City/Pentagon City: $2,452 per month 
  • Hyattsville/College Park: $1,962 per month
  • NoMa/H Street: $2,341 per month
  • Northeast: $2,075 per month
  • Rosslyn-Ballston Corridor: $2,580 per month
  • Silver Spring/Wheaton: $2,038 per month
  • Upper Northwest: $2,989 per month

Note: The rents are an average of studios, one and two-bedroom rental rates at Class A high-rise buildings in the DC area in Q4 2021.

Definitions:

Class A apartments are typically large buildings built after 1991, with full amenity packages. 

This article originally published at https://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/was-2021-the-strongest-year-ever-for-the-dc-apartment-market/19177.

DC Real Estate Guides

Short guides to navigating the DC-area real estate market

We've collected all our helpful guides for buying, selling and renting in and around Washington, DC in one place. Start browsing below!