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Americans Are Staying Put in These 5 Cities—and Flocking to These 5 Others Las Vegas leads the nation in renters looking close to home, while Raleigh tops the list for out-of-town interest. Here’s what’s driving the shift. New trends in American mobility are emerging in the post-pandemic housing market. After the remote-work boom drove many residents out of cities in search of larger homes and lower costs, patterns are now stabilizing into clearer rhythms. A new Realtor.com report analyzes online rental searches across major U.S. metros, revealing where renters are shopping locally versus looking elsewhere. The data highlights cities where strong job markets and affordable rents are keeping people in place—and those drawing significant interest from outsiders. One encouraging sign: rents continue to ease. Across the 50 largest metro areas, the median asking rent fell 1.5% year-over-year in May, reaching $1,686. This marks nearly three years of declining prices. “Combined with pricing trends, these data not only signal how competitive a rental market is, but they show whether that rental demand is homegrown or coming from outside of the market,” said Realtor.com Chief Economist Danielle Hale.  Cities Where Renters Are Staying Put **Las Vegas** topped the list in Q1 2026, with 70% of online rental searches originating locally among the nation’s 50 largest metros. It was followed by Austin, San Antonio, Houston, and San Diego. These markets stand out as particularly renter-friendly. Softening rents, higher vacancy rates, robust job growth, and appealing climates give residents strong reasons to stay. Houston, for example, saw an 11% increase in local rental searches from 2020 to 2026. Cities Drawing Outsiders On the other side of the ledger, several East Coast cities are seeing strong interest from out-of-town renters. **Raleigh** led the nation with nearly 70% of rental views coming from outside the metro area in early 2026—a 10% jump from 2020. Hartford, Providence, Richmond, and Baltimore rounded out the top group. Many of these markets are attracting renters priced out of nearby high-cost hubs like New York, Boston, and Washington, D.C. They also offer solid hiring opportunities in healthcare, financial services, and tech. Detroit, while not in the top five, saw out-of-town interest double over the same period.  San Francisco Breaks the Pattern San Francisco continues to defy broader trends. Rents in the city rose 1.2% year-over-year, yet local rental searches have declined as more residents transition to homeownership. “Two things appear to be happening in San Francisco’s rental market,” said Realtor.com Economist Jiayi Xu. “First, rising wealth tied to the AI boom may be enabling more renters to transition into homeownership, pulling them out of the rental search pool altogether. Second, the renters who remain are showing more settled behavior—less likely to be browsing other markets, and more focused on staying put. The post-pandemic reshuffling, it seems, has run its course.” Broader Affordability Challenges Despite recent declines, rents remain a strain for many Americans. Last year, the Department of Justice sued Greystar and other large corporate landlords, alleging they used algorithmic coordination to artificially inflate prices. Greystar, the nation’s largest landlord, manages approximately 950,000 units. By 2024, half of U.S. renters were spending more than 30% of their income on rent and utilities—crossing the threshold for being considered “cost-burdened” and making other essentials harder to afford. As the market continues to evolve, these shifts offer a window into where Americans see the best balance of opportunity, cost, and quality of life.

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