- Texas multifamily loans remain manageable despite high vacancy and concessions.
- Concessions in Texas metros are higher than the national average, led by Austin.
- Most Texas banks report healthy capital buffers against their multifamily loan books.
- Some properties are entering special servicing due to valuation and exemption issues.
Market Context: Construction Boom and Its Fallout
Multifamily Dive reports that Texas experienced a surge in multifamily construction during the pandemic, sharply increasing apartment supply. As a result, vacancy rates rose while concessions spread widely, especially in Austin and Dallas, according to the Dallas Fed.
Free rent offerings in major Texas metros now range from six to twelve weeks, exceeding national averages. The Dallas Fed expects these concessions to persist through mid-2026, which will keep rent growth muted despite strong demand from renters priced out of homeownership.
Loan Performance: Risks Remain Limited
Texas multifamily markets have faced downturns in past cycles, but current data shows stable loan performance. Since mid-2024, operators have reduced vacancy rates using aggressive leasing incentives. At the same time, population growth and limited for-sale housing continue to support demand. However, rent growth remains under pressure. Austin, San Antonio, and Dallas have seen the sharpest declines, as operators continue offering elevated concessions that shape leasing activity across major metros.
Delinquencies have risen, and lenders have increased loan modifications across the state. Still, most Texas banks have avoided heavy exposure to multifamily loans, according to the Dallas Fed. Only a small group of institutions reported balances exceeding their capital and loan loss reserves. Moreover, no surveyed banks expressed serious concern about multifamily loan performance.
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Challenges: Special Servicing and Tax Exemption Complexity
Recent problems have surfaced with specific assets. The Waterford Grove Apartments in Houston and The Riley in Richardson were both transferred to special servicing, driven in part by complex tax exemption requirements. With The Riley, a failed exemption triggered a cash trap, raising questions about further exposures tied to tax-specific financing structures.
What’s Next: Uneven Recovery Across Texas
The Dallas Fed anticipates slower normalization in Texas apartment fundamentals due to ongoing supply and discount pressures. Markets with slower job and population growth may lag in recovery, while supply-constrained metros could see quicker stabilization. For now, Texas multifamily loans generally remain stable, but rising special servicer transfers will keep lenders and investors cautious in the months ahead.



