South Dakota was the U.S. state with the highest vacancy rate index in January 2025. Conversely, New Jersey, New York, and Illinois had the lowest vacancy rate index during that period. All three states had an index value of under five percent. Overall, apartment vacancies in the U.S. have increased since 2021, due to the increase in new supply.
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domainhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domain
Graph and download economic data for Rental Vacancy Rate for Texas (TXRVAC) from 1986 to 2024 about vacancy, rent, TX, rate, and USA.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer was developed by the Research & Analytics Group of the Atlanta Regional Commission, using data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey 5-year estimates for 2013-2017, to show age, type, vacancy rates, and owner/renter tenure of housing units by Zip Code Tabulation Area in the Atlanta region.
The user should note that American Community Survey data represent estimates derived from a surveyed sample of the population, which creates some level of uncertainty, as opposed to an exact measure of the entire population (the full census count is only conducted once every 10 years and does not cover as many detailed characteristics of the population). Therefore, any measure reported by ACS should not be taken as an exact number – this is why a corresponding margin of error (MOE) is also given for ACS measures. The size of the MOE relative to its corresponding estimate value provides an indication of confidence in the accuracy of each estimate. Each MOE is expressed in the same units as its corresponding measure; for example, if the estimate value is expressed as a number, then its MOE will also be a number; if the estimate value is expressed as a percent, then its MOE will also be a percent.
The user should also note that for relatively small geographic areas, such as census tracts shown here, ACS only releases combined 5-year estimates, meaning these estimates represent rolling averages of survey results that were collected over a 5-year span (in this case 2013-2017). Therefore, these data do not represent any one specific point in time or even one specific year. For geographic areas with larger populations, 3-year and 1-year estimates are also available.
For further explanation of ACS estimates and margin of error, visit Census ACS website.
Naming conventions:
Prefixes:
None
Count
p
Percent
r
Rate
m
Median
a
Mean (average)
t
Aggregate (total)
ch
Change in absolute terms (value in t2 - value in t1)
pch
Percent change ((value in t2 - value in t1) / value in t1)
chp
Change in percent (percent in t2 - percent in t1)
Suffixes:
None
Change over two periods
_e
Estimate from most recent ACS
_m
Margin of Error from most recent ACS
_00
Decennial 2000
Attributes:
Attributes and definitions available below under "Attributes" section and in Infrastructure Manifest (due to text box constraints, attributes cannot be displayed here).
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Atlanta Regional Commission
Date: 2013-2017
For additional information, please visit the Census ACS website.
Vacancy rates across the office real estate sector in the U.S. increased in the second quarter of 2025. This was in line with a general trend of rising vacancies that started in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. In the second quarter of 2025, about **** percent of office space across the country was vacant. In some major U.S. markets, vacancies exceeded ***percent. With a considerable part of the workforce working from home or following a hybrid working model, businesses are cautious when it comes to upscaling or renewing leases. Workplaces may never be the same again The COVID-19 pandemic has changed the way that companies operate, with working from home becoming the new normal for many U.S. employees. The function of the office has evolved from the primary workplace to a space where employees collaborate, exchange ideas, and socialize. That has shifted occupiers’ attention toward spaces with modern designs that can accommodate the office of the future. Many businesses used the pandemic time to revisit their office guidelines, remodel, or do a full or partial fit-out. With so much focus on quality, older buildings with poorer design or energy performance are likely to suffer lower demand, resulting in a two-speed market. What do higher vacancy rates mean for investors? Simply put, if landlords do not have tenants, their income stream is disrupted, and they cannot service their debts. April 2023 data shows that several U.S. metros had a significantly high share of distressed office real estate debt. In Charlotte-Gastonia-Concord, NC-SC, more than one-third of the commercial mortgage-backed securities for offices were delinquent, in special servicing, or a combination of both. As of March 2025, offices had the highest delinquency rate in the commercial property sector.
Our extensive database contains approximately 800,000 active rental property listings from across the United States. Updated daily, this comprehensive collection provides real estate professionals, investors, and property managers with valuable market intelligence and business opportunities. Database Contents
Property Addresses: Complete location data including street address, city, state, ZIP code Listing Dates: Original listing date and most recent update date Availability Status: Currently available, pending, or recently rented properties Geographic Coverage: Properties spanning all 50 states and major metropolitan areas
Applications & Uses
Market Analysis: Track rental pricing trends across different regions and property types Investment Research: Identify high-opportunity markets with favorable rental conditions Lead Generation: Connect with property owners potentially needing management services Competitive Intelligence: Monitor listing volumes, vacancy rates, and market saturation Business Development: Target specific neighborhoods or property categories for expansion
File Format & Delivery
Organized in easy-to-use CSV format for seamless integration with data analysis tools Accessible through secure download portal or API connection Daily updates ensure you're working with the most current market information Custom filtering options available to narrow results by location, date range, or other criteria
Data Quality
Rigorous validation processes to ensure address accuracy Duplicate listing detection and removal Regular verification of active status Standardized format for consistent analysis
Subscription Benefits
Access to historical listing archives for trend analysis Advanced search capabilities to target specific property characteristics Regular market reports summarizing key trends and opportunities Custom data exports tailored to your specific business needs
AK ~ 1,342 listings AL ~ 6,636 listings AR ~ 4,024 listings AZ ~ 25,782 listings CA ~ 102,833 listings CO ~ 14,333 listings CT ~ 10,515 listings DC ~ 1,988 listings DE ~ 1,528 listings FL ~ 152,258 listings GA ~ 28,248 listings HI ~ 3,447 listings IA ~ 4,557 listings ID ~ 3,426 listings IL ~ 42,642 listings IN ~ 8,634 listings KS ~ 3,263 listings KY ~ 5,166 listings LA ~ 11,522 listings MA ~ 53,624 listings MD ~ 12,124 listings ME ~ 1,754 listings MI ~ 12,040 listings MN ~ 7,242 listings MO ~ 10,766 listings MS ~ 2,633 listings MT ~ 1,953 listings NC ~ 22,708 listings ND ~ 1,268 listings NE ~ 1,847 listings NH ~ 2,672 listings NJ ~ 31,286 listings NM ~ 2,084 listings NV ~ 13,111 listings NY ~ 94,790 listings OH ~ 15,843 listings OK ~ 5,676 listings OR ~ 8,086 listings PA ~ 37,701 listings RI ~ 4,345 listings SC ~ 8,018 listings SD ~ 1,018 listings TN ~ 15,983 listings TX ~ 132,620 listings UT ~ 3,798 listings VA ~ 14,087 listings VT ~ 946 listings WA ~ 15,039 listings WI ~ 7,393 listings WV ~ 1,681 listings WY ~ 730 listings
Grand Total ~ 977,010 listings
What makes your data unique? - We have our proprietary AI to clean outliers and to calculate occupancy rate accurately.
How is the data generally sourced? - Web scraped data from Airbnb. Scraped on a weekly basis.
What are the primary use-cases or verticals of this Data Product? - Tourism & DMO: A one-page CSV will give you a clear picture of the private lodging sector in your entire country. - Property Management: Understand your market to expand your business strategically. - Short-term rental investor: Identify profitable areas.
Do you cover country X or city Y?
We have data coverage from the entire world. Therefore, if you can't find the exact dataset you need, feel free to drop us a message. Our clients have bought datasets like 1) Airbnb data by US zipcode 2) Airbnb data by European cities 3) Airbnb data by African countries.
https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/34746/termshttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/34746/terms
Summary File 1 (SF1) Urban/Rural Update contains summary statistics on population and housing subjects derived from the responses to the 2010 Census questionnaire. Population items include sex, age, race, Hispanic or Latino origin, household relationship, household type, household size, family type, family size, and group quarters. Housing items include occupancy status, vacancy status, and tenure (whether a housing unit is owner-occupied or renter-occupied). The summary statistics are presented in 333 tables, which are tabulated for multiple levels of observation (called "summary levels" in the Census Bureau's nomenclature), including, but not limited to, regions, divisions, states, metropolitan/micropolitan statistical areas, counties, county subdivisions, places, congressional districts, American Indian Areas, Alaska Native Areas, Hawaiian Home Lands, ZIP Code tabulation areas, census tracts, block groups, and blocks. There are 177 population tables and 58 housing tables shown down to the block level; 84 population tables and 4 housing tables shown down to the census tract level; and 10 population tables shown down to the county level. Some of the summary areas are iterated for "geographic components" or portions of geographic areas, e.g., the principal city of a metropolitan statistical area (MSA) or the urban and rural portions of a MSA. With one variable per table cell and additional variables with geographic information, the collection comprises 2,597 data files, 49 per state, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the National File. The Census Bureau released SF1 in three stages: initial release, National Update, and Urban/Rural Update. The National Update added summary levels for the United States, regions, divisions, and geographic areas that cross state lines such as Combined Statistical Areas. This update adds urban and rural population and housing unit counts, summary levels for urban areas and the urban/rural components of census tracts and block groups, geographic components involving urbanized areas and urban clusters, and two new tables (household type by relationship for the population 65 years and over and a new tabulation of the total population by race). The initial release and National Update is available as ICPSR 33461. ICPSR supplies this data collection in 54 ZIP archives. There is a separate archive for each state, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the National File. The last archive contains a Microsoft Access database shell and additional documentation files besides the codebook.
Rents for industrial real estate in the U.S. have increased since 2017, with flexible/service space reaching the highest price per square foot in 2024. In just a year, the cost of, flex/service space rose by nearly *****U.S. dollars per square foot. Manufacturing facilities, warehouses, and distribution centers had lower rents and experienced milder growth. Los Angeles, Orange County, and Inland Empire, California, are some of the most expensive markets in the country. Office real estate is pricier Industrial real estate is far from being the most expensive commercial property type. For instance, average rental rates in major U.S. metros for office space are much higher than those for industrial space. This is most likely because office units are generally located in urban areas where there is limited space and thus higher demand, whereas industrial units are more suited to the outskirts of such urban areas. Industrial units, such as warehouses or factories, require much more space because they need to house large, heavy equipment or serve as a storage unit for future shipments. Big-box distribution space is gaining in importance Warehouses and distribution may currently command the lowest average rent per square foot among industrial space types, but the growing popularity of the asset class has earned it considerable gains over the past years. In 2021 and 2022, high occupier demand and insufficient supply led to soaring taking rent of big-box buildings. During that time, the vacancy rate of distribution centers fell below ****percent. The development of industrial and logistics facilities has accelerated since then, with the new supply coming to market, causing the vacancy rate to increase and the pressures on rent to ease.
https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/34764/termshttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/34764/terms
The United States Virgin Islands Summary File contains data on population and housing subjects compiled from questions on the 2010 United States Virgin Islands Census questionnaire. Population subjects include age, sex, children ever born, citizenship status, foreign-born status, disability status, educational attainment, race, Hispanic or Latino origin, family type, grandparents as caregivers, group quarters population, health insurance coverage status, household type and relationship, employment status, work experience, class of worker, industry, occupation, place of work, journey to work, travel time to work, language spoken at home and ability to speak English, marital status, nativity, year of entry, place of birth, parents' place of birth, earnings, income, poverty status, residence in 2009, school enrollment, vocational training and veteran status. Housing subjects include acreage, agricultural sales, business on property, computer ownership, internet service, kitchen facilities, cooking fuel, mortgage status, number of rooms, number of bedrooms, occupancy status, occupants per room, plumbing facilities, purchase of water from water vendor, gross rent, condominium status and fee, mobile home costs, selected monthly owner costs, sewage disposal, source of water, telephone service available, tenure, units in structure, vacancy status, value of home, vehicles available, year householder moved into unit and year structure built. The data are organized in 548 tables, one variable per table cell, which are presented at up to 21 levels of observation, including the United States Virgin Islands as a whole, islands, census subdistricts, places (census designated places and towns), estates, census tracts, block groups, blocks and 5-digit ZIP Code Tabulation Areas. Altogether, 110 tables are presented at the block level and higher, 288 at the block group level and higher and 150 at the census tract level and higher. Additionally, the tables are iterated for the urban and rural geographic components of islands and 21 geographic components of the United States Virgin Islands as a whole: 15 urban components (total urban, urbanized areas, urban clusters, and urbanized areas and urban clusters of various population sizes) and 6 rural components (total rural, rural areas outside places, rural areas inside places and inside places of various population sizes). Due to problems in the initial version, the Census Bureau ultimately issued the Summary File as two data products. The first or main release comprises 50 data files with all the tables except 11 tables on selected monthly owner costs, the tables HBG66, HBG67, HBG68, HBG69, HBG70, HBG71, HBG72, HBG73, HCT19, HCT20 and HCT21. The second, supplemental release consists of a document file with the 11 tables on selected monthly owner costs. ICPSR provides each product as a separate ZIP archive. The archive with the supplemental release also includes additional technical documentation prepared by the Bureau.
https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/34761/termshttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/34761/terms
The American Samoa Summary File contains data on population and housing subjects compiled from questions on the 2010 American Samoa Census questionnaire. Population subjects include age, sex, children ever born, citizenship status, foreign-born status, disability status, educational attainment, ethnic origin or race, family type, grandparents as caregivers, group quarters population, health insurance coverage status, household type and relationship, employment status and subsistence activity, work experience, class of worker, industry, occupation, place of work, journey to work, travel time to work, language spoken at home and frequency of language usage, marital status, nativity, year of entry, place of birth, parents' place of birth, earnings, income, remittances sent abroad, poverty status, residence in 2009, reason for moving, school enrollment, vocational training, military dependents and veteran status. Housing subjects include air conditioning, battery-operated radio ownership, computer ownership, gross rent, internet service, kitchen facilities, cooking facilities, mortgage status, number of rooms, number of bedrooms, occupancy status, occupants per room, plumbing facilities, condominium fee, selected monthly owner costs, sewage disposal, water supply, source of water, telephone service available, tenure, type of building materials, units in structure, vacancy status, value of home, vehicles available, year householder moved into unit and year structure built. The data are organized in 405 tables, one variable per table cell, which are presented at up to 19 levels of observation, including American Samoa as a whole, districts (including two separate atolls), counties, villages, census tracts, block groups, blocks and 5-digit ZIP Code Tabulation Areas. Fifty tables are presented at the block level and higher, 250 at the block group level and higher and 105 at the census tract level and higher. Additionally, the tables are iterated for the urban and rural geographic components of districts/atolls and 21 geographic components of American Samoa as a whole: 15 urban components (total urban, urbanized areas, urban clusters, and urbanized areas and urban clusters of various population sizes) and 6 rural components (total rural, rural areas outside places, rural areas inside places and inside places of various population sizes). Due to problems in the initial version, the Census Bureau ultimately issued the tables as three data products. The first or main release comprises 32 data files with all the tables except PBG7 (Nativity by Citizen Status by Year of Entry), PBG9 (Year of Entry for the Foreign-born Population) and ten tables on selected monthly owner costs, the tables HBG72, HBG73, HBG74, HBG75, HBG76, HBG77, HBG78, HCT17, HCT18, and HCT19. The second, called the American Samoa Year of Entry Summary File, consists of two data files with the tables PBG7 and PBG9. The third is a document file with the ten tables on selected monthly owner costs. This data collection comprises a codebook and three ZIP archives. The first archive contains the 32 data files in the main release, the second the two Year of Entry data files and the third contains the document file with the ten selected monthly owner costs tables and additional technical documentation.
https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/34762/termshttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/34762/terms
The Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Summary File contains data on population and housing subjects compiled from questions on the 2010 Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Census questionnaire. Population subjects include age, sex, children ever born, citizenship status, foreign-born status, disability status, educational attainment, ethnic origin or race, family type, grandparents as caregivers, group quarters population, health insurance coverage status, household type and relationship, employment status and subsistence activity, work experience, class of worker, industry, occupation, place of work, journey to work, travel time to work, language spoken at home and frequency of language usage, marital status, nativity, year of entry, place of birth, parents' place of birth, earnings, income, remittances sent abroad, poverty status, residence in 2009, reason for moving, school enrollment, vocational training, military dependents and veteran status. Housing subjects include air conditioning, battery-operated radio ownership, computer ownership, gross rent, internet service, kitchen facilities, cooking facilities, mortgage status, number of rooms, number of bedrooms, occupancy status, occupants per room, plumbing facilities, condominium fee, selected monthly owner costs, sewage disposal, water supply, source of water, telephone service available, tenure, type of building materials, units in structure, vacancy status, value of home, vehicles available, year householder moved into unit and year structure built. The data are organized in 411 tables, one variable per table cell, which are presented at up to 19 levels of observation, including the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands as a whole, municipalities, election districts, villages, census tracts, block groups, blocks and 5-digit ZIP Code Tabulation Areas. Fifty tables are presented at the block level and higher, 255 at the block group level and higher and 106 at the census tract level and higher. Additionally, the tables are iterated for the urban and rural geographic components of municipalities and 21 geographic components of the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands as a whole: 15 urban components (total urban, urbanized areas, urban clusters, and urbanized areas and urban clusters of various population sizes) and 6 rural components (total rural, rural areas outside places, rural areas inside places and inside places of various population sizes). Due to problems in the initial version, the Census Bureau ultimately issued the tables as three data products. The first or main release comprises 34 data files with all the tables except PBG7 (Nativity by Citizen Status by Year of Entry), PBG9 (Year of Entry for the Foreign-born Population) and ten tables on selected monthly owner costs, the tables HBG75, HBG76, HBG77, HBG78, HBG79, HBG80, HBG81, HCT18, HCT19 and HCT20. The second, called the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Year of Entry Summary File, consists of two data files with the tables PBG7 and PBG9. The third is a document file with the ten tables on selected monthly owner costs. ICPSR provides each product as a separate ZIP archive. The archive with the selected monthly owner costs tables also includes additional technical documentation prepared by the Bureau.
Not seeing a result you expected?
Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.
South Dakota was the U.S. state with the highest vacancy rate index in January 2025. Conversely, New Jersey, New York, and Illinois had the lowest vacancy rate index during that period. All three states had an index value of under five percent. Overall, apartment vacancies in the U.S. have increased since 2021, due to the increase in new supply.