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James Bentwood

Beach Fanatic
Feb 24, 2005
1,546
634
I'd like to see a deeper dive in to stats. I think there was too much hype about people buying places and making short term rental income. People without a clue in tough markets.

As for our area, a better guage is the old reliable booking figures from our large bed tax collectors.
 

SUP Boarder

Beach Lover
Jun 12, 2019
124
77
Seacrest
This article specifically mentions Santa Rosa Beach, Florida...

Rental Market Shift

...but not sure if this is just a generally feeling or true reality (?) Although it seems SoWal is a bit more crowded this summer which may be a reflection of lower rental prices or more rental options. Don't know.
 

Matt J

SWGB
May 9, 2007
24,861
9,665
We have a huge glut of new units and newly purchased units that are now rentals.

The for sale listings have been interesting as investors seem to be trying to make a peak market exit and get out of rentals. Chiefly I'm noticing homes that are going to struggle to meet the new short term rental ordinance requirements.

The other two issues are the economy and customary use. The economy will always fluctuate and thus far there only seems to be missed opportunities and I haven't seen discounting just yet. Customary use will heavily impact rentals that aren't gulf front or in a gulf front community. Access will become the rental rate factor.
 

Dawn

Beach Fanatic
Oct 16, 2008
1,285
548
I suppose some of the marginal short term rentals could become long term rentals in SoWal? Or is that already happening?



National reports indicate that rent growth is declining and the market is shifting in tenants' favor. But in Florida, it may still be some time before prices level off or decrease.

With continuing population growth, Florida is an extreme version of what is happening in several strong rental markets in the country, said Anne Ray, manager of the Florida Housing Data Clearinghouse at UF’s Shimberg Center for Housing Studies.

“A slight cooldown would stop things from getting worse for renters looking for an affordable unit in Florida, but it can't make up for double digit percentage rent increases that already took place the last couple years,” Ray said. “This means the rental market is stabilizing at a really high rate.”

Experts with UF’s Shimberg Center for Housing Studies recently collected data on Florida’s affordable rental housing needs and discovered a number of key findings:

825,990 low-income households in Florida pay more than 40% of income for rent.
Florida added hundreds of thousands of rental units between 2012 and 2021 but lost units renting for $1,000 or less.
Florida added nearly 600,000 units with rents above $1,000 from 2012 to 2021.
More than one-third of low-income, cost-burdened renter households are headed by someone age 55 or older.
Renters at all income levels participate in the workforce. Most non-working renter households are made up of older adults or persons with disabilities.
The county with the largest number of low-income, cost-burdened renters in 2021 was Miami-Dade, followed by Broward county.

The data, collected for the period between 2012 and 2021, found large increases in rent and households paying more than they could afford, Ray said.

The state of Florida’s households of all types increased by 309,594 between 2020 and 2022, according to UF’s Bureau of Economic and Business Research (BEBR). All 67 Florida counties were estimated to have gained households between 2020 and 2022. Miami-Dade County had the largest increase in households between 2020 and 2022, growing by 24,040.

“We saw population growth of about 1,000 individuals moving to the state of Florida per day during the pandemic between 2020-2022,” said Richard Doty, GIS coordinator and research demographer at the Bureau. “Robust growth is still occurring within our state. While not at the same rates as during the pandemic, we’re still seeing notable increases.”

Led by Senate President Kathleen Passidomo, the Florida Legislature also took action during the 2023 legislative session to boost the state’s rental housing supply and drive down prices. The Live Local Act, which took effect July 1, includes tax breaks, incentives for development and a record $811 million in funding to help address the shortage.

“Tenants have a lot of ground to make up after years of hot rental markets in Florida,” Ray said. “Affordable housing will continue to be a challenge for quite a while.”
 

Kurt

Admin
Oct 15, 2004
2,305
5,012
SoWal
mooncreek.com
This article specifically mentions Santa Rosa Beach, Florida...

Rental Market Shift

...but not sure if this is just a generally feeling or true reality (?) Although it seems SoWal is a bit more crowded this summer which may be a reflection of lower rental prices or more rental options. Don't know.


I saw that on youtube, here's a screen grab from it below.

The source is AIRDNA which pulls data from "10 million airbnb and vrbo rentals" so take that for what it is worth.

Bed tax collections in Walton County were down 3.2% in May. Hardly a crash and could be due to several factors. Anecdotally local business revenues are down a bit. Perhaps people aren't spending as much. Number of heads in beds? Not sure. Could be more people going international as pent up demand from the last couple of years has been mentioned and sounds plausible.



2023-07-11 05.18.44-1-854.jpg
 
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