Rental Competition Is Rising in Chicago and Atlanta

Rental competition remains fierce in 2026. Major cities like Chicago and Atlanta see rising demand, bucking the national cooling trend.
Rental competition remains fierce in 2026. Major cities like Chicago and Atlanta see rising demand, bucking the national cooling trend.
  • Rental competition cooled slightly nationwide but rose sharply in Chicago, Atlanta, and San Francisco.
  • Chicago posted the nation’s largest RCI jump, with nine renters per available apartment, trailing only Miami.
  • Midwest cities saw the highest rental competitiveness, led by tight supply and high renewal rates.
  • Small markets like Wichita and Amarillo also experienced steep increases in rental competition.
Key Takeaways

Rental Market Overview

The start of 2026 saw a minor cooling in the US rental market, with the national Rental Competitiveness Index (RCI) dipping from 75.7 to 75.4, reports RentCafe. While this points to slightly easier conditions for renters on average, significant regional disparities remain. Large urban centers such as Chicago, San Francisco, and Atlanta now stand out as hotspots for rental competition, each moving against the nationwide trend.

Rental Competitiveness Index at 75.4 in early 2026, indicating a moderately competitive US rental market

Major Metros Defy Cooling Trend

Rental competition in Chicago surged more than in any major metro. The city’s RCI climbed 9.5 points year over year to 88.8. Limited new construction is driving the squeeze. Only 0.06% of total stock was added. As a result, nine renters now compete for each unit. Occupancy has reached 95.2%. Meanwhile, San Francisco and Atlanta also saw sharp increases. Both markets face shrinking new supply. Similar dynamics are playing out in other major metros, where tightening inventory and sustained demand continue to push competition higher across key urban markets. At the same time, local economies continue to support steady or rising demand.

Comparison of US rental market metrics in early 2026 vs 2025, showing fewer renters per unit, slower lease-up times, lower new supply, slightly lower renewal rates, and reduced occupancy levels

Midwest Leads in Rental Competition

Regional analysis reveals the Midwest as the most competitive US rental region in 2026, averaging an RCI of 81.2. Cities in this region, including Chicago, suburban Chicago, and suburban Twin Cities, are marked by low vacancy, high occupancy exceeding 93%, and robust renewal rates. Few new units have entered the market, reinforcing tight conditions as affordability draws in-migration from pricier coasts.

Small Cities Heat Up

Rental competition is also escalating in smaller markets. Wichita, KS, posted a 14.6-point year-over-year surge in RCI and now leads all small markets at 91. Amarillo, TX, and El Paso, TX, also registered double-digit increases, spurred by stagnant new construction and strong demand, often linked to local industries and higher education.

What’s Next

While national rental competition has eased only marginally, localized bottlenecks in supply—especially in key Midwest metros and select small markets—are expected to sustain above-average pressure for new and renewing renters. Cities tied to job growth and limited new construction will remain especially competitive as 2026 progresses.

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