Washington’s Rental Housing Market Is Looking Better, Still Tight In Rural Areas

File photo. Seattle's rental housing market shows more availability than other areas of Washington, like Kittitas and Yakima counties, where new construction hasn't kept up with demand. CREDIT: TED S. WARREN/AP
Seattle's rental housing market shows more availability than other areas of Washington, like Kittitas and Yakima counties, where new construction hasn't kept up with demand. CREDIT: TED S. WARREN/AP

Listen

Two months into this year, researchers are looking back at what changed on the housing front in 2018.  

According to the latest numbers from the Washington Center for Real Estate Research at the University of Washington, the statewide vacancy rate for all apartments is 4.26 percent. That’s better than it was last fall, but not by much.

A market is generally considered full at a 5 percent vacancy rate. And while it is getting better for renters looking for an apartment, it’s still not easier in terms of affordability.

Rural areas like Kittitas County continue to face one of the worst vacancy rates in the state, with less than half of one percent of rental stock available. Counties like Walla Walla and Whatcom are in similar situations. Yakima is slightly better at 1.3 percent.

James Young, director of the UW Center for Real Estate Research, says that “Yakima is playing a game of catch up at the moment,” as it’s in need of more housing. But he says the Yakima area has some of the cheaper rent in the state at around $770 per month.

Compare that to the steep price tags in the Puget Sound region: The highest average rent in the state comes in at $1,800 a month in King County. One the flip side, while Seattle-area renters have to pay out more, the silver lining is there are more units available in terms of vacancy rates.

Young points to slow development as a problem statewide.

“Unfortunately you can’t build apartments that quickly,” Young said. “It’s just the way real estate markets work in general. It’s hard to keep the supply and demand in balance.”

As for home buying, the median price in Washington is around $370,000. The highest median home prices in the state are also in King County, while the lowest are in Lincoln County, in eastern Washington’s wheat-growing region.

Data for the last quarter of 2018 was supposed to be finalized this month. But the recent partial government shutdown meant researchers didn’t get data on time, as it comes from the Census Bureau.

The next housing report will be available in early March.

Copyright 2019 Northwest News Network

Related Stories:

Old homes in a denser neighborhood near Tacoma's busy Sixth Avenue.

Tacoma City Council moves forward with zoning changes

The next phase of Tacoma’s attempts to address housing shortages will soon be implemented, as the Tacoma City Council has voted unanimously to adopt the second phase of the Home in Tacoma zoning package.
The package of changes to city zoning standards aims to create more opportunities for different types of housing across the city, including by allowing more units to be developed on a standard city lot.

A bright yellow and black sign is placed in a front yard. Some of the text, in red letters, reads: "Save our homes and tree canopy."

Next phase of housing, zoning changes being considered in Tacoma

In season four, episode 19 of the sitcom “Parks and Recreation,” actor Bradley Whitford plays a city council member in the fictional town of Pawnee, Indiana. Whitford tells Amy Poehler’s character, Leslie Knope, “City council isn’t about making everyone happy. In fact, every decision you make is going to make a lot of people very unhappy.”
Right now, the Tacoma City Council is considering a set of planning commission recommendations under the second phase of Home in Tacoma, the housing action strategy the city has been implementing over the last few years.