Dallas Is Relatively Affordable for Recent College Graduates Looking to Rent

Recent college grads have to pay just over 30% of their income to afford a typical one-bedroom apartment in Dallas – one of the lowest shares in the nation

Recent college graduates have a lot to look forward to. Their future is ahead of them as they hunt for a dream job and search for a great place to live. Unfortunately, that last part can be a sticking point. 

As rents have skyrocketed since the pandemic, college graduates have had a harder time finding an affordable place to live. In Dallas, recent grads must spend just over the recommended 30% of their income on rent. This is still one of the lowest shares in the nation, which goes to show how elevated asking rents are. 

So what’s happening in the rental market? Why is Dallas relatively affordable for recent college graduates? Read on to learn everything you need to know. 

Recent graduates in Dallas have to pay just over 30% of their income on rent to live alone

Recent college graduates have to spend 30.5% of their income to afford a one-bedroom apartment (“live alone”) in Dallas, TX. This is the fifth-lowest share in the nation. Affordability has steadily improved since 2019, when a graduate needed to spend 36.1% of their income on rent. 

Even though Dallas is affordable compared to most other large metros, recent grads still have to spend more than 30% of their income on housing, which qualifies as “rent-burdened.”

Dallas is relatively affordable because of its low asking rents and moderate median salary. The median rent in Dallas is below the national median, sitting at $1,347. The median salary is $66,305, well above the national median.

Dallas’ affordability gets better when looking at renting with a roommate (i.e. renting a two-bedroom apartment), where the typical grad needs to spend just 19.3% of their income on rent. 

However, even though Dallas is relatively affordable for recent college grads, a large percentage of the metro’s overall population can’t afford a median-priced apartment. Dallas has a 14.6% poverty rate, and 608,000 renters across the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area are rent-burdened.

Texas on the whole has gotten much more expensive since the pandemic, as swaths of coastal residents flocked to the state’s sunny and relatively affordable metros. This has put a massive strain on renters, who often have less accumulated wealth. Statewide, 51% (4.2 million) of renter households now spend more than 30% of their income on rent, and 1.1 million spend more than 50%. Dallas-Fort Worth is home to a majority of the state’s rent-burdened homes. 

Nationwide recent college graduate rental affordability

Nationwide, recent college grads have to pay 35.7% of their income to afford a one-bedroom apartment. This is down from 39% in 2023, underscoring how rents have stabilized and wages have increased in the past year. Let’s dig a bit deeper.

Generally, asking rents have held steady since late 2023, due to a surge of new construction buoying supply and waning pandemic-era migration hampering demand. This is a major reason why most metros became more affordable for recent college grads in the past year. An increase in wages, especially among low-income groups, has also helped improve affordability – even outpacing historic inflation. 

However, even though new apartment construction has helped satiate demand, much of it has been catered to higher-income renters. From 2012-2022, an additional 8.4 million units rented for more than $1,400/month, compared to a decrease of 2.1 million units renting for less than $600/month. $1,400/month is an unaffordable rent for a majority of Americans. And while wages have risen faster than inflation, rents climbed even faster in large metros from 2019-2023, seriously straining budgets. 

Even still, America’s renter population is growing three-times faster than its homeowner population, in part because house prices are at record highs. Nearly 40% of U.S. renters don’t believe they’ll ever own a home. Mortgage rates have been falling recently, though, providing a glimmer of hope. 

Metro-level highlights 

Nationwide, 29 out of the 33 metros analyzed require recent college graduates to spend more than 30% of their income on rent for a one-bedroom apartment. The four most expensive are New York (56.3%), Los Angeles (54.9%), Boston (54.8%), and Riverside (53.7%). 

These trends flip when looking at two-bedroom apartments: 27 out of 33 metros are affordable to recent grads, with just the most expensive coastal metros requiring more than 30% of a grad’s income.

One of the most interesting metros in the dataset is Austin, which went from unaffordable (35.2%) to affordable (28.3%) in one year. This makes sense; Austin was the poster child for booming metros during the pandemic, seeing a huge surge in migration from 2020 to mid-2022. This flood of new money and demand led to skyrocketing housing costs, large inflation increases, and a surge in new construction. However, once the sharp interest rate hikes and return-to-office mandates started in 2023, the city’s fortunes reversed, leading to price drops and population loss. Now, some property managers are having to compete for tenants.

San Jose is surprisingly affordable to new grads, despite having the highest rents in the country. This is because a lot of recent grads in the Bay Area are working high-paid Silicon Valley tech jobs, making six-figures right out of college. The median salary for recent grads in San Jose is $108,449, for example.

10 Most Affordable Metros for Recent College Graduates

Metro2024: Share of income college grads need to spend for 0-1 bedroom apartment2023: Share of income college grads need to spend for 0-1 bedroom apartment2024: Share of income college grads need to spend for 2 bedroom apartment2023: Share of income college grads need to spend for 2 bedroom apartmentEstimated median salary of recent college gradsMedian asking rent: 0-1 bedroomsMedian asking rent: 2 bedrooms
Houston, TX27.0%25.2%17.2%17.5%$60,277$1,142$1,449
Detroit, MI27.8%28.9%17.3%19.2%$60,277$1,193$1,148
Austin, TX28.3%35.2%17.2%21.2%$62,688$1,310$1,595
Cincinnati, OH29.9%28.9%16.9%16.9%$59,071$1,240$1,400
Dallas, TX30.5%35.4%19.3%22.6%$66,305$1,347$1,707
Charlotte, NC32.5%37.5%18.7%21.9%$57,866$1,371$1,580
Phoenix, AZ32.9%38.0%19.8%22.9%$56,660$1,369$1,647
Indianapolis, IN33.4%34.6%18.5%21.4%$54,249$1,317$1,460
Atlanta, GA33.4%38.0%19.6%21.2%$60,277$1,416$1,663
Jacksonville, FL34.0%45.8%20.0%25.5%$54,249$1,293$1,524

Table sorted by average share of 0-1 bedroom rentals affordable to recent college graduates

Methodology

According to a Redfin analysis analyzing rents in apartments with five or more units from Redfin.com and Rent.com through July 2024. The analysis estimated 2024 salaries for employed college graduates aged 22-29 (“recent college grads”) using U.S. Census Bureau’s 2022 American Community Survey data and 2023-2024 wage growth data from the Atlanta Federal Reserve. To be included, a grad must have had an annual income of at least $15,000 at the time of the survey. 

An “affordable” rental is defined as one where the asking rent is no more than 30% of the local estimated income for recent college grads. Graduates who rent apartments above the 30% cutoff are considered “rent burdened.”

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