Orlando Apartment Market Weathers Record Completions
DALLAS, February 14, 2001 – Record-setting apartment deliveries in Orlando
met with robust demand during the past year, according to the latest edition of
M/PF Research’s Orlando Apartment Report. Strong leasing in the last half
of the year pushed total demand in 2000 to 9,890 units, slightly ahead of
completions totaling 9,598 units.
The metro’s rapid building pace played a part driving demand to an all-time
high, the study reports.
“Orlando’s aggressive building program resulted in widespread availability of
desirable apartment product, and the competition from so many new properties in
lease-up helped keep rents at comparatively affordable levels,” said M/PF
Research editorial director Greg Willett. “Near-record employment growth and the
resulting substanial new household formation boosted overall housing demand in
Orlando. Apartments captured much of that general demand for housing when rising
home purchase costs raised affordability challenges for some households.”
Orlando ranked fourth nationally in new apartment completions last year,
behind the much larger Dallas/Fort Worth, Atlanta and Houston markets. The
area’s nearly 9,600 units of new supply grew the base of existing product by a
startling 8 percent in a single year.For comparison, construction in 2000
increased total apartment inventory by 3 percent in Houston, 4 percent in
Atlanta and 5 percent in Dallas/Fort Worth.
With demand for apartments slightly surpassing deliveries during 2000,
Orlando’s occupancy rate climbed to 94.8 percent by the end of the year, up 0.8
points from the late 1999 figure. In a notable neighborhood performance, the
South Orlando area managed to maintain above-average occupancy of 95.2 percent
despite adding the metro’s largest block of new supply, more than 3,300 units.
Pockets of sluggish occupancy do exist, however. Year-end occupancy dipped below
92 percent in both the Winter Park/Maitland and Winter Springs/Casselberry
submarkets.
While Orlando recorded impressive apartment demand recently, the metro was
one of the country’s weaker performers for rent growth. On average, existing
properties registered rent increases of just 2.5 percent during calendar 2000,
well below general consumer price inflation. The M/PF Research analysis measured
rent growth on a same-store basis, looking at the rates achieved by the same
apartment communities in December 1999 and December 2000 to eliminate shifts
that result simply from variation in the survey sample.
Monthly rents in metropolitan Orlando averaged $697 as of December. At the
top end of the scale, properties built during the past decade in Winter
Park/Maitland commanded rents averaging $864 per month.
Orlando again will rank among the nation’s most active apartment construction
centers during the coming year.
“The leasing environment in Orlando should remain quite competitive during
the near term, because ongoing construction remains very substantial,” Willett
said. “Product under way at the end of 4th quarter totaled more than 10,000
units, including significant volumes of new supply in the pipeline for
North/East Seminole County, Southwest Orange County and East Orange County.”
Orlando Apartment Market Profile 4th Quarter 2000
|
| Annual Employment Growth |
41,200 jobs |
| Annual Apartment Completions |
9,598 units |
| Annual Apartment Demand |
9,890 units |
Average Occupancy Change in Past Year |
94.8 percent 0.8 points |
Average Quoted Rent Change in Same-Store Rents |
$697 per month 2.5 percent |
M/PF’s Orlando Apartment Report is a quarterly report that includes
data and analysis addressing the local economy and trends in apartment demand,
supply, occupancy and rents. Information is summarized on the metro level and
detailed for 10 submarkets.
Since 1961, M/PF Research has been the trusted national expert in
apartment market research. M/PF is retained by investors, developers, owners and
lenders to prepare project-specific market studies and to produce broader,
strategic market selection analyses and reports. M/PF Research, located in
Carrollton, Texas, is a wholly owned subsidiary of RealPage, Inc., a leading
provider of property management software and web services.