For multifamily investors hoping 2026 would mark a clean turn in the cycle, the reality looks more like a long, flat stretch of highway than an on-ramp to the next growth phase. Despite solid demand and plenty of capital on the sidelines, the sector's recovery is dragging as an historic construction wave keeps rents and investment activity in check, according to Yardi Matrix's U.S. Multifamily Outlook 2026.
Yardi Matrix characterizes the national market as "muddling along" midway through 2026, with demand not strong enough to quickly burn off the glut of newly delivered units still in lease-up. Nearly 1.3 million apartments remain in lease-up nationally, equal to 6.9% of total inventory and far above the pre-pandemic norm of roughly 700,000 units, or 4.7% of stock. For owners, that translates into weaker pricing power and slower revenue growth, even in otherwise healthy metros.
Rent Growth Stuck Near Zero
The imbalance between new supply and absorption is evident in the rent forecasts. Preliminary Yardi Matrix data show that first-quarter 2026 apartment absorption totaled about 72,000 units, well below the roughly 136,000-unit quarterly average of the prior two years and below pre-pandemic norms. With that slowdown, Yardi Matrix now expects national rent growth of just 0.5% in 2026 and 1% in 2027, with a more meaningful acceleration pushed off to later in the decade as the current supply bulge finally works through.
For investors underwriting value-add or short-hold deals, those projections imply a much tighter margin for error. With rent growth barely outpacing inflation in the near term, returns will hinge more on basis, cost of capital and execution than on a rising tide of market fundamentals.
A Market of Clear Winners and Losers
Yardi Matrix underscores that rent performance has become highly market-specific, with results increasingly bifurcated between chronically undersupplied metros and those facing a flood of new units. Since the start of 2023, advertised rents have fallen 14.7% in Austin, 9.2% in Phoenix and 4.5% in Denver as new supply has outrun demand. Over the same period, rents have surged 18.4% in New York, 13.3% in Chicago and 11.8% in Kansas City.
Those divergences are expected to persist through 2026. Yardi Matrix forecasts the strongest rent growth this year in Minneapolis–St. Paul, Chicago, Detroit, Kansas City and Philadelphia, while Phoenix, Denver, Austin, Dallas and Orlando are projected to post some of the weakest performance. For investors, that split reinforces the need for true market-by-market underwriting rather than a broad "U.S. multifamily" thesis.
Sun Belt Supply Overhang
The report highlights the Sun Belt as ground zero for the supply overhang. Since 2023, inventory has expanded by 32% in Austin, 27% in Charlotte, 24% in Nashville and 23% in Phoenix. Those growth rates are extraordinary over a short time frame and help explain the softness in rents in some of the country's fastest-growing metros.
Even where leasing activity remains relatively strong, the volume of new product has forced owners to lean on concessions and slower rent increases to fill buildings. For operators that underwrote aggressive rent growth during the boom years, the gap between pro forma and reality is now playing out in cash flows and refinance risk.
Construction Wave Nearing Its Crest
If there is a silver lining for long-term investors, it is that the construction pipeline is finally shrinking. Multifamily starts have fallen sharply from recent highs, from more than 700,000 units in 2022 to roughly 460,000 annually in both 2024 and 2025, according to Yardi Matrix. The firm recorded approximately 80,000 multifamily starts in the first quarter of 2026, down 27% year over year and the lowest quarterly total since 2017.
That pullback suggests developers and lenders are already reacting to weaker fundamentals and higher borrowing costs. However, it will take time for fewer starts to translate into tighter conditions, as a large wave of units is still moving through the pipeline.
Deliveries Keep Pressure on Fundamentals
Despite the slowdown in starts, deliveries remain elevated and will continue to pressure fundamentals in the near term. Yardi Matrix expects roughly 488,000 units to be delivered in 2026 and another 454,000 in 2027. Including this year's expected completions, the market faces close to 1.8 million units that must be absorbed before owners can reclaim meaningful pricing power.
For investors, that math argues for patience and disciplined underwriting. The sector's long-term demand drivers remain in place, but the near-term environment calls for more conservative rent assumptions and a careful look at submarket-level supply risk.
Investment Sales Slow Under Rate Pressure
The operating backdrop is also weighing on transaction activity. Through the end of May, Yardi Matrix recorded 26.6 billion dollars in multifamily transactions, a 10.7% decline from the same period a year earlier. According to the report, many would-be sellers remain reluctant to meet current prices, while buyers are still seeking higher yields amid elevated interest rates.
This bid-ask spread is freezing portions of the market and limiting price discovery. For capital that can move, that dislocation may create selective opportunities, but it also means fewer clean comps and greater uncertainty around exit values.
© Arc, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to TMSalesOperations@arc-network.com. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.