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Graph and download economic data for Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: Rent of Primary Residence in Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH (CBSA) (CUURA103SEHA) from Dec 1914 to Sep 2025 about ME, Boston, NH, CT, primary, MA, rent, urban, consumer, CPI, inflation, price index, indexes, price, and USA.
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TwitterThe median rent for one- and two-bedroom apartments in Boston, Massachusetts, amounted to about ***** U.S. dollars by the end of July 2025. Rents decreased slightly after the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic; this trend reversed in 2021, and as of July 2025, the annual rental growth stood at **** percent. Among the different states in the U.S., Massachusetts ranks as one of the most expensive rental markets.
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TwitterThe average monthly asking rent for shopping center space in Boston, Massachusetts, increased between 2020 and 2024. Rents peaked at ***** U.S. dollars per square meter in the 1st quarter of 2024. Hawaii, San Francisco, and San Jose were the markets with the highest average shopping center rent in the U.S.
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TwitterThe Back Bay district was the most expensive real estate market for office space in Boston in the third quarter of 2024. On average, the average asking rent was about ** U.S. dollars per square foot of office space. Downtown Boston, the market with the largest inventory of office space among Boston districts, had the second highest rent, at about ** U.S. dollars. The gross rental rate usually includes costs for utilities and other general maintenance expenses.
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RentSmart Boston compiles data from BOS:311 and the City's Inspectional Services Division to give prospective tenants a more complete picture of the homes and apartments they are considering renting, assisting them in understanding any previous issues with the property, including: housing violations, building violations, enforcement violations, housing complaints, sanitation requests, and/or civic maintenance requests.
You can look up individual properties using the RentSmart dashboard here.
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TwitterRental rates in the United States increased steadily since 2008. In 2024, the producer price index for gross rent in office buildings reached ****** index points. This means that between 2008 when the index value was set to 100 and 2024, gross office rents grew by about ***** percent. Manhattan, San Francisco, and Boston are among the biggest and most expensive markets for office space in the United States.
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Click here to check Short-Term Rental Eligibility
Boston's ordinance on short-term rentals is designed to incorporate the growth of the home-share industry into the City's work to create affordable housing for all residents. We want to preserve housing for residents while allowing Bostonians to benefit from this new industry. Starting on on January 1, 2019, short-term rentals in Boston will need to register with the City of Boston.
Eligibility for every unit in the City of Boston is dependant on the following six criteria:
The Short-Term Rental Eligibility Dataset leverages information, wherever possible, about these criteria. For additional details and information about these criteria, please visit https://www.boston.gov/short-term-rentals.
In June 2018, a citywide ordinance established new guidelines and regulations for short-term rentals in Boston. Registration opened January 1, 2019. The Short-Term Rental Eligibility Dataset was created to help residents, landlords, and City officials determine whether a property is eligible to be registered as a short-term rental.
The Short-Term Rental Eligibility Dataset currently joins data from the following datasets and is refreshed nightly:
** Open** the Short-Term Rental Eligibility Dataset. In the dataset's search bar, enter the address of the property you are seeking to register.
Find the row containing the correct address and unit of the property you are seeking. This is the information we have for your unit.
Look at the columns marked as “Home-Share Eligible,” “Limited-Share Eligible,” and “Owner-Adjacent Eligible.”
If your unit has a “yes” under “Home-Share Eligible,” “Limited-Share Eligible,” or “Owner-Adjacent Eligible,” you can register your unit here.
If you find that your unit is listed as NOT eligible, and you would like to understand more about why, you can use the Short-Term Rental Eligibility Dataset to learn more. The following columns measure each of the six eligibility criteria in the following ways:
No affordability covenant restrictions
Compliance with housing laws and codes
No violations of laws regarding short-term rental use
A “yes” in the “Legally Restricted” column tells you that there is a complaint against the unit that finds
A legal restriction that prohibits the use of the unit as a Short-Term Rental under local, state, or federal law, OR
legal restriction that prohibits the use of the unit as a Short-Term Rental under condominium bylaws.
Units with legal restrictions found upon investigation are NOT eligible.
If the investigation of a complaint against the unit yields restrictions of the nature detailed above, we will mark the unit with a “yes” in this column. Until such complaint-based investigations begin, all units are marked with “no.”
NOTE: Currently no units have a “legally restricted” designation.
Owner-occupied
A “no” in the “Unit Owner-Occupied” column tells you that there is NO Residential Tax Exemption filed for that unit via the Assessing Department, and that unit is automatically categorized as NOT eligible for the following Short-Term Rental types:
Owners are not required to file a Residential Tax Exemption in order to be eligible to register a unit as a Short-Term Rental.
If you would like to apply for Residential Tax Exemption, you can apply here.
If you are the owner-occupant of a unit and you have not filed for Residential Tax Exemption, you can still register your unit by proving owner-occupancy.
It is recommended that you submit proof of residency in your short-term rental registration application to expedite the process of proving owner-occupancy (see
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Boston-Brockton-Nashua, MA-NH-ME-CT (CMSA) - Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: Owners' Equivalent Rent of Primary Residence in Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH (CBSA) was 490.66300 Index Nov 1982=100 in August of 2025, according to the United States Federal Reserve. Historically, Boston-Brockton-Nashua, MA-NH-ME-CT (CMSA) - Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: Owners' Equivalent Rent of Primary Residence in Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH (CBSA) reached a record high of 490.66300 in August of 2025 and a record low of 100.00000 in November of 1982. Trading Economics provides the current actual value, an historical data chart and related indicators for Boston-Brockton-Nashua, MA-NH-ME-CT (CMSA) - Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: Owners' Equivalent Rent of Primary Residence in Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH (CBSA) - last updated from the United States Federal Reserve on November of 2025.
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Graph and download economic data for Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: Services Less Rent of Shelter in Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH (CBSA) (CUURA103SASL2RS) from Nov 1982 to Sep 2025 about shelter, ME, Boston, NH, CT, MA, rent, urban, consumer, services, CPI, inflation, price index, indexes, price, and USA.
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Explore Boston, MA rental market 2025. The average long-term prices $3,342 and short-term $4,567, with trends shaping housing in a city of 663,972 residents.
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TwitterThis statistic shows the features which increased apartment rents in selected cities in the United States in 2017. In Boston, the rent for an apartment with a doorman cost *** U.S. dollars more than one without.
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TwitterThis dataset consolidates Rent prices in different towns and cities in Massachusetts, house prices and other relevant information. The main objective of the app is to prioritize towns in MA where house price and rent relationship is the most favorable for a potential investor.
Average Fair Market Rent Prices information was scraped from https://www.rentdata.org/states/massachusetts/ from 2006 to 2022. Massachusetts has the 3rd highest rent in the country out of 56 states and territories.
Annual Estimates of the Resident Population: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2019. U.S. Census Bureau Population Division. May 21, 2020. The data is available for 351 towns in MA.
Home prices in MA were scraped from Boston Magazine web portal: https://www.bostonmagazine.com/property/single-family-home-price-chart-2021/. SOURCES: Boston neighborhood and town median home prices, sales volumes, and days on market provided by the Massachusetts Association of Realtors (marealtor.com) and MLS Property Information Network (mlspin.com).
Massachusetts is the second wealthiest state in the United States of America, with a median household income of $77,378 (as of 2019). The income per household per town was retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Massachusetts_locations_by_per_capita_income.
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Boston's ordinance on short-term rentals is designed to incorporate the growth of the home-share industry into the City's work to create affordable housing for all residents. We want to preserve housing for residents while allowing Bostonians to benefit from this new industry. Starting on on January 1, 2019, short-term rentals in Boston will need to register with the City of Boston.
Eligibility for every unit in the City of Boston is dependant on the following six criteria:
The Short-Term Rental Eligibility Dataset leverages information, wherever possible, about these criteria. For additional details and information about these criteria, please visit https://www.boston.gov/short-term-rentals.
ATTENTION: The Short-Term Rental Eligibility Dataset is now available for residents and landlords to determine their registration eligibility.
NOTE: These data are refreshed on a nightly basis.
In June 2018, a citywide ordinance established new guidelines and regulations for short-term rentals in Boston. Registration opened January 1, 2019. The Short-Term Rental Eligibility Dataset was created to help residents, landlords, and City officials determine whether a property is eligible to be registered as a short-term rental.
The Short-Term Rental Eligibility Dataset currently joins data from the following datasets:
** Open** the Short-Term Rental Eligibility Dataset. In the dataset's search bar, enter the address of the property you are seeking to register.
Find the row containing the correct address and unit of the property you are seeking. This is the information we have for your unit.
Look at the columns marked as “Home-Share Eligible,” “Limited-Share Eligible,” and “Owner-Adjacent Eligible.”
A “yes” under any of these columns means your unit IS eligible for registration under that short-term rental type. Click here for a description of short-term rental types.
A “no” under any of these columns means your unit is NOT eligible for registration under that short-term rental type. Click here for a description of short-term rental types.
If your unit has a “yes” under “Home-Share Eligible,” “Limited-Share Eligible,” or “Owner-Adjacent Eligible,” you can register your unit here.
If you find that your unit is listed as NOT eligible, and you would like to understand more about why, you can use the Short-Term Rental Eligibility Dataset to learn more. The following columns measure each of the six eligibility criteria in the following ways:
No affordability covenant restrictions
The “Income Restricted” column measures whether the unit is subject to an affordability covenant, as reported by the Department of Neighborhood Development and/or the Boston Planning and Development Agency.
For questions about affordability covenants, contact the Department of Neighborhood Development.
Compliance with housing laws and codes
Learn more about how “Problem Properties” are defined here.
* A **“yes”** in the **“Problem Property Owner”** column tells you that the owner of this unit also owns a “Problem Property,” as reported by the Problem Properties Task Force.
Owners with any properties designated as a Problem Property are NOT eligible.
No unit owned by the owner of a “Problem Property” may register a short-term rental.
Learn more about how “Problem Properties” are defined here.
* The **“Open Violation Count”** column tells you how many open violations the unit has. Units with **any open** violations are NOT eligible. Violations counted include: violations of the sanitary, building, zoning, and fire code; stop work orders; and abatement orders.
NOTE: Violations written before 1/1/19 that are still open will make a unit NOT eligible until these violations are resolved.
If your unit has an open violation, visit these links to appeal your violation(s) or pay your code violation fine(s).
* The **“Violations in the Last 6 Months”** column tells you how many violations the unit has received in the last six months. Units with **three or more** violations, whether open or closed, are NOT eligible.
NOTE: Only violations written on or after 1/1/19 will count against this criteria.
If your unit has an open violation, visit these links to appeal your violation(s) or pay your code violation fine(s).
How to comply with housing laws and codes:
Have an open violation? Visit these links to appeal your violation(s) or pay your code violation fine(s).
Have questions about problem properties? Visit Neighborhood Service’s Problem Properties site.
a legal restriction that prohibits the use of the unit as a Short-Term Rental under condominium bylaws.
Units with legal restrictions found upon investigation are NOT eligible.
If the investigation of a complaint against the unit yields restrictions of the nature detailed above, we will mark the unit with a “yes” in this column. Until such complaint-based investigations begin, all units are marked with “no.”
NOTE: Currently no units have a “legally restricted” designation.
Limited-Share
If you are the owner-occupant of a unit and you have not filed for Residential Tax Exemption, you can still register your unit by proving owner-occupancy. It is recommended that you submit proof of residency in your short-term rental registration application to expedite the process of proving owner-occupancy (see “Primary Residence Evidence” section).
* **“Building Owner-Occupied”** measures whether the building has a single owner AND is owner occupied. A “no” in this column indicates that the unit is NOT eligible for an owner-adjacent short-term rental.
If you believe your building occupancy data is incorrect, please contact the Assessing Department.
Two- or three-family dwelling
The “Units in Building” column tells you how many units are in the building. Owner-Adjacent units are only allowed in two- to three-family buildings; therefore, four or more units in this column will mark the unit as NOT eligible for an Owner-Adjacent Short-Term Rental.
A “no” in the “Building Single Owner” column tells you that the owner of this unit does not own the entire building and is NOT eligible for an Owner-Adjacent Short-Term Rental.
If you believe your building occupancy data is incorrect, please contact the Assessing Department.
R4
If you believe your building occupancy data is incorrect, please contact the Assessing Department.
Visit this site for more information on unit eligibility criteria.
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Graph and download economic data for All Employees: Financial Activities: Real Estate and Rental and Leasing in Boston, MA (MD) (SMU25144545553000001) from Jan 1990 to Aug 2025 about Boston, leases, MA, real estate, rent, financial, employment, and USA.
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TwitterThe monthly median asking rent for unfurnished apartments in the United States in the first quarter of 2025 amounted to ***** U.S. dollars. This was an increase of about *** U.S. dollars in just five years. In 2020, the median rent stood at ***** U.S. dollars. The U.S. rental market As rental apartment vacancy rates fall, rents are on the rise. This makes it more difficult for Americans to, first, find an apartment to rent, and second, find an apartment which they can afford. Nevertheless, renting has become much more common in recent years, with the number of renter households having substantially increased in the past two decades. In 2025, there were approximately **** million renter households in the U.S. Rents in different states Of course, rents vary from state to state. The most expensive rents are found in Hawaii, California, District of Colombia, New Jersey, and Florida. Following the COVID-19 pandemic, growth was the strongest in the Sun Belt states, and especially in states with lower costs of living, such as Texas. In Austin, TX, the average rent soared by nearly ** percent in 2021, and remained elevated, despite a slight decline in 2023.
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TwitterCities in the United States dominate the list of cities with the highest rents worldwide. New York was ranked as the most expensive city to rent in, ahead of San Francisco, with an index score of ***. Boston followed in third.
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What are the top vacation rentals in New Boston? How many vacation rentals have private pools in New Boston? Which vacation homes in New Boston are best for families? How many Rentbyowner vacation rentals are available in New Boston?
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TwitterThis statistic presents the boroughs with the most expensive median rentals of ********* apartments in Boston in 2015, by borough. In that year, the apartment rental costs in Boston in the Chinatown/Leather District amounted to ***** U.S. dollars per month.
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This data, maintained by the Mayor’s Office of Housing (MOH), is an inventory of all income-restricted units in the city. This data includes public housing owned by the Boston Housing Authority (BHA), privately- owned housing built with funding from DND and/or on land that was formerly City-owned, and privately-owned housing built without any City subsidy, e.g., created using Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) or as part of the Inclusionary Development Policy (IDP). Information is gathered from a variety of sources, including the City's IDP list, permitting and completion data from the Inspectional Services Department (ISD), newspaper advertisements for affordable units, Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation’s (CEDAC) Expiring Use list, and project lists from the BHA, the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD), MassHousing, and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), among others. The data is meant to be as exhaustive and up-to-date as possible, but since many units are not required to report data to the City of Boston, MOH is constantly working to verify and update it. See the data dictionary for more information on the structure of the data and important notes.
The database only includes units that have a deed-restriction. It does not include tenant-based (also known as mobile) vouchers, which subsidize rent, but move with the tenant and are not attached to a particular unit. There are over 22,000 tenant-based vouchers in the city of Boston which provide additional affordability to low- and moderate-income households not accounted for here.
The Income-Restricted Housing report can be directly accessed here:
https://www.boston.gov/sites/default/files/file/2023/04/Income%20Restricted%20Housing%202022_0.pdf
Learn more about income-restricted housing (as well as other types of affordable housing) here: https://www.boston.gov/affordable-housing-boston#income-restricted
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2025 HUD Fair Market Rents (FMR) for Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program in Boston Cambridge Quincy, NH. Includes rent limits by zip code for studio through 4-bedroom units.
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Graph and download economic data for Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: Rent of Primary Residence in Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH (CBSA) (CUURA103SEHA) from Dec 1914 to Sep 2025 about ME, Boston, NH, CT, primary, MA, rent, urban, consumer, CPI, inflation, price index, indexes, price, and USA.