But renting can still be a more affordable option for some, especially in places where you can get plenty of space for a price that’s less a monthly mortgage payment.
Analysis by research firm RentCafe shows that your dollar can still get you a sizable apartment in plenty of places in the US — if you move away from the coasts.
“The Midwest and the Southeast have been undersupplied for a long time,” Doug Ressler, an analyst at Yardi Matrix, told Business Insider.
RentCafe looked at the top 200 US cities based on population and ranked each city by how much square footage a renter could get in a multifamily property with a monthly budget of $1,500.
Unsurprisingly, coastal cities like New York, Boston, and San Francisco rank low in square footage on that budget, with average apartment sizes under 400 square feet for all three cities at that price.
On the flip side, cities in the middle of the country and a handful in Texas offer spacious apartments on a reasonable budget. But cities down South are losing their edge as the most affordable part of the country.