After several years defined by unprecedented construction pipelines and elevated supply risk, the U.S. multifamily market is entering a period of normalization. With new starts significantly below the 2021 peak and vacancy rates stabilizing, the competitive advantage in 2025–2026 is shifting decisively from aggressive rent pushes to operational excellence—renewal capture, expense discipline, and targeted value-add strategies.

Supply Roll-Off: The Inflection Point Is Here
The defining pressure of the last cycle was supply. Deliveries peaked at roughly 585,000 units in 2024, the highest in modern history. But as financing tightened and construction costs escalated, new project starts collapsed throughout 2023–2024.
That decline is translating into a meaningful 2025–2026 supply roll-off:
- 2025 forecasted deliveries: ~431,000 units
- 2026 expected deliveries: materially below trend as the pipeline empties
For the first time in three years, future leasing risk is decreasing rather than increasing. Markets that were flooded with new supply—Austin, Atlanta, Phoenix, Nashville—will see less competitive pressure as absorption catches up.
Vacancy Is Plateauing—Not Spiraling
National vacancy, which climbed sharply during the supply bulge, is showing signs of leveling. As of mid-2025:
- National vacancy sits near ~7%, up from ~6.6% a year prior
- Forward projections show a slow glide back toward the mid-6% range as deliveries decline
- Concessions are flattening, especially in stabilized assets and necessity-driven submarkets
This is the first indication that the market has absorbed the peak supply wave and is now transitioning into a more balanced occupancy environment.
Rent-Growth Bands Return to Sustainable Levels
The days of 10–15% annual rent spikes are gone—and that’s a good thing. Sustainable, predictable growth is returning:
- 2025–2026 national rent growth: 2%–3%, depending on metro and asset class
- Strongest rent performance expected in: Midwest, Florida metros, select Texas markets
- More moderated growth in: oversupplied Sun Belt pockets and urban Class A corridors
Renewal capture—not new-lease premiums—will drive NOI growth. Operators that optimize renewal pricing can outperform in this environment without relying on volatile market lifts.
Underwriting: Normalized, Not Defensive
In 2023–2024, underwriting was dominated by caution—higher vacancy assumptions, big concession reserves, and wide exit caps. As fundamentals stabilize, underwriting frameworks are normalizing:
- Vacancy assumptions: stabilizing in the 5.5%–7% range, depending on market
- Concessions: declining in stabilized assets
- Exit caps: widening from 2021 lows but no longer increasing quarter-by-quarter
- Rent growth underwriting: normalized to 2%–3%, with premium only for value-add repositioning
This clarity is helping deals pencil again—especially for operators with proven cost control.
Insurance Costs: The New Line Item to Watch
Insurance remains a major underwriting driver, particularly in coastal markets and catastrophe-exposed states. While increases have slowed from 2023 highs, premiums remain elevated:
- Many operators are baking in 5%–10% annual increases
- Markets like Florida and Gulf Coast still experience outlier spikes
- Institutional owners are increasingly negotiating portfolio-wide insurance structures to offset risk
Effective risk management and property-level hardening are becoming sources of operational alpha.
2025–2026: The Era of Operational Outperformance
With supply easing, vacancy leveling, and rent growth stabilizing, multifamily performance in 2025–2026 will depend less on macro tailwinds and more on operator skill. Renewal strategy, expense control, smart value-add deployment, and disciplined underwriting will separate outperformers from average owners.
For investors, this is the moment where fundamentals—not momentum—drive returns. The cycle is normalizing, and operational alpha is back in the spotlight.