logo
Austin apartment permits have plummeted since the pandemic

Austin apartment permits have plummeted since the pandemic

Axios04-06-2025
Permits for multifamily housing have dropped below pandemic -era levels across the country, according to Redfin, with Austin seeing among the most dramatic fall-offs.
Why it matters: Apartment construction influences housing affordability in Austin, where a wave of new apartments ultimately helped curb rent hikes.
The construction slowdown, which tariffs could prolong, risks reigniting rent inflation.
The big picture: The rise of remote work during the pandemic allowed Americans to relocate to Austin and other cities, leading to a surge in rental demand.
Builders ramped up construction in response — but now, rents are flattening and borrowing costs are high, making building less attractive.
By the numbers: Developers got permits to build an average of 64.5 multifamily units per 10,000 people in greater Austin from April 2024 to March 2025, according to Redfin's analysis of Census Bureau data.
That's down from the nearly 95 multifamily units per 10,000 people during the pandemic surge.
Reality check: Austin is still issuing more multifamily permits — buildings with five or more units — than any other metro Redfin analyzed.
The local rate of multifamily building permits granted outstrips the national rate of 12.4 multifamily units per 10,000 people in recent months.
State of play: The median asking rent in Austin dropped 10.7% year over year to $1,420 in March — $379 below its record high.
That was the largest decline in percentage among the 44 major U.S. metropolitan areas Redfin analyzed this spring.
Zoom out: 63% of major metros are seeing fewer units approved per 10,000 people compared to the pandemic era.
What they're saying: Builders nationwide are "pumping the brakes because elevated interest rates are making many projects prohibitively expensive," Redfin senior economist Sheharyar Bokhari wrote in the report.
What's next: Mayor Kirk Watson is offering a resolution at Thursday's City Council meeting ordering city officials to re-examine incentive programs that allow developers to build taller buildings in exchange for affordable housing.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

DeSantis picks state Sen. Jay Collins to be Florida's lieutenant governor
DeSantis picks state Sen. Jay Collins to be Florida's lieutenant governor

San Francisco Chronicle​

time11 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

DeSantis picks state Sen. Jay Collins to be Florida's lieutenant governor

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis tapped Republican state Sen. Jay Collins to be his next lieutenant governor Tuesday. It's a closely watched appointment by the two-term governor, who can't run for reelection in 2026 and has been working to cement his legacy as his time leading the state winds down. If Collins, an Army combat veteran and nonprofit executive, decides to launch a bid to succeed DeSantis, the move could tee up another proxy fight between the popular GOP governor and President Donald Trump, who has already endorsed U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds for the job. 'What I was looking for is someone that can be lieutenant governor that will help us deliver more wins for the people of Florida — and then also that is capable of serving and leading as governor, if that need were ever to arise,' the governor said during the news conference in Tampa, which Collins represents. Collins was sworn in minutes after the announcement, with his wife Layla and their two young sons at his side, while the governor and first lady Casey DeSantis looked on. Collins pledged to help deliver on DeSantis' agenda, which he said has made Florida the country's 'conservative proving grounds." "The goal is to help him finish the mission and keep Florida strong," Collins said of DeSantis, adding, 'you don't flinch when the next mission comes up. You just say, 'Yes, sir. Let's go.'' Born in Montana, Collins has talked openly about personal challenges he has overcome, including experiencing homelessness while in high school. He went on to join the Army Special Forces and ultimately lost a leg, but continued to serve five more years as a Green Beret using a prosthetic leg post-amputation, according to a campaign biography. Taking the stage Tuesday, Collins made light of the injury he sustained, saying he was proud to serve the country that afforded him so many opportunities. 'I want you to know that I've got my sleeves rolled up, I've got my running leg on, and we are ready to get things done,' Collins said. In recent years, Collins has served as the chief operating officer of Operation BBQ Relief, which deploys cooks and mobile kitchens to deliver hot meals in the aftermath of natural disasters. In June, Collins also flew to Israel to help support state-funded flights to evacuate Americans as Israel and Iran traded missile strikes. "Why would you want to go in to Israel when Iran is raining rockets down? Most people would take a pass on that," DeSantis said of Collins, calling him 'the Chuck Norris of Florida politics.' The seat had been vacant since February, when then-lieutenant governor Jeanette Nuñez was appointed to lead one of the state's public universities. In Florida, the lieutenant governor position is largely ceremonial with few official responsibilities, apart from taking over if the governor cannot serve. Collins was first elected to Florida's Republican-dominated state Senate in 2022 and has been seen as one of DeSantis' key allies in the Legislature. In recent months, GOP legislators loyal to the president have increasingly sparred with the governor, who challenged Trump for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. The appointment is seen as a way for DeSantis to elevate a potential successor in 2026, though the governor has repeatedly talked up his wife, Casey DeSantis, for the job, while taking shots at Trump's pick. ___

Schumer favorability at lowest point in 20 years among New Yorkers: Poll
Schumer favorability at lowest point in 20 years among New Yorkers: Poll

The Hill

time11 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Schumer favorability at lowest point in 20 years among New Yorkers: Poll

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer's (D-N.Y.) favorability is at its lowest point among New Yorkers in the past 20 years, according to a new survey. The Siena College poll, released Tuesday, found that Schumer — who was first elected to the Senate in 1998 — is underwater among Big Apple voters, with 39 percent having a favorable view of the lawmaker. About 46 percent said the opposite. Overall, the Democratic leader's favorability rating in the state is at the lowest point since February 2005, at 38 percent. Half of the respondents, 50 percent, had an unfavorable view of the New York senator. Some 13 percent did not have an opinion, the survey found. The last time the New York Democrat's favorability was net positive was in Sienna's February poll, when 45 percent of respondents had a favorable view of the Senate minority leader. At the time, 41 percent said they have an unfavorable view of him. Schumer's favorability has also dropped among Democrats, according to the poll, with 49 percent of Democratic Party voters having a favorable view of the leader. Nearly four-in-10, 39 percent, had an unfavorable view of the veteran senator, the results show. The gap has narrowed since June, when 55 percent had a favorable view of Schumer, compared to 35 percent who said otherwise, the pollsters noted. An Economist/YouGov poll from mid-April found that just 23 percent of U.S. adults had a favorable view of Schumer, while 51 percent of Americans had an unfavorable outlook of the lawmaker. Later that month, the Democratic leader was asked about a survey showing that he had the lowest approval rating of any congressional leader, which he dismissed. 'Polls come and go. Our party is united,' he said at the time. 'We're on our front foot, we're stepping forward, going after Trump and having real success.' The Sienna poll was conducted from August 4-7 among 813 New York state registered voters. The margin of error was 4.2 percentage points.

Trump's Truth Social AI ChatBot Keeps Fact-Checking Him
Trump's Truth Social AI ChatBot Keeps Fact-Checking Him

Newsweek

time12 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

Trump's Truth Social AI ChatBot Keeps Fact-Checking Him

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Truth Social's newly launched chatbot, Truth Search AI, has repeatedly returned answers that contradicted President Donald Trump on major topics including the 2020 election, tariffs and the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. The Perplexity AI–powered tool frequently cited conservative outlets such as Fox News while nonetheless producing answers that labelled the Jan. 6 events "insurrection," called the claim that the 2020 election was stolen "baseless," and described tariffs as a tax on Americans. Why It Matters Truth Social was created as an alternative social network for conservatives and for President Trump's communications, after he was removed from many of the largest social media platforms, including X (then Twitter) and Facebook, following January 6. This month, Truth Social promoted a new AI search feature as a way to deliver "direct, reliable answers" to the platform's users. The tool's tendency to cite conservative outlets while issuing responses that undercut the president's long-held assertions raised questions about whether platform control of AI can ensure friendly or partisan outcomes, and about how AI source-selection features will shape political information on networks aimed at specific audiences. What To Know In tests conducted by the Washington Post, the Truth Search AI described the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol as violent and linked it to what the tool called President Trump's "baseless claims of widespread election fraud." The bot also said that tariffs acted as a tax on Americans and that evidence did not support some of President Trump's assertions about tariffs driving stock-market gains. A smartphone displays a Truth Social post by U.S. President Donald Trump announcing the signing of an executive order to extend the tariff suspension on China for another 90 days, on August 12, 2025 in... A smartphone displays a Truth Social post by U.S. President Donald Trump announcing the signing of an executive order to extend the tariff suspension on China for another 90 days, on August 12, 2025 in Chongqing, China. More Getty Images In Wired's test of the tool, it frequently cited conservative outlets such as Fox News, Fox Business and The Washington Times as sources despite the fact that Perplexity AI draws from a range of publications, including those from the left and center. Perplexity, the developer of the underlying search technology, said that Truth Social had used a "source selection" feature to limit websites the tool relied on and that site selection was the platform's choice, Wired reported. Truth Search AI's answers did not always align with President Trump's public statements and posts on Truth Social, producing conclusions that undercut assertions the president had repeatedly advanced about the 2020 election being stolen by the Biden administration. It comes after Trump's reputation suffered at the hands of another social media AI, Grok, which is produced by the president's former political ally, Elon Musk. On Sunday, Grok replied to an X user who asked whether violent crime in D.C. was going down and to another user who asked who the "most notorious criminal" in the capital was, saying that the president was. In a since-deleted post, Grok wrote: "Yes, violent crime in DC has declined 26 percent year-to-date in 2025, hitting a 30-year low per MPD and DOJ data. As for the most notorious criminal there, based on convictions and notoriety, it's President Donald Trump—convicted on 34 felonies in NY, with the verdict upheld in January 2025." What People Are Saying Jesse Dwyer, Perplexity spokesman, told The Washington Post: "This is their choice for their audience, and we are committed to developer and consumer choice. Our focus is simply building accurate AI." What Happens Next Truth Media & Technology Group described the chatbot deployment as a public beta, and Perplexity said it supported developer choice over source selection, indicating that Truth Social could adjust the bot's configured sources or messaging as the platform received user feedback.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store