As anticipated, the vacancy rate for rental units dropped again in the second quarter of 2011 according to the Residential Vacancies and Homeownership Report from the U.S. Census Bureau.  The data is derived from the Housing Vacancy Survey, a supplement to the Current Population Survey.

The vacancy rate for rental units was 9.2 percent while for homeowner housing it was 2.5 percent.  Rental vacancies were down 1.4 percentage points from the rate in the second quarter of 2010 and 0.5 percentage points lower than in the first quarter of 2011.  Homeowner vacancies were essentially unchanged from both earlier dates.

The homeowner vacancy rate is the proportion of the inventory which is vacant and for sale while the rental vacancy rate is the proportion of the rental inventory which is vacant and for rent.  A housing unit is vacant if no one is living in it at the time of the interview, unless its occupants are only temporarily absent. In addition, a vacant unit may be one which is entirely occupied by persons who have a usual residence elsewhere (URE).

Quick Recap....

Type

Q2 2010

Q2 2011

Change

Percent of Total (2011)

All housing units

130,517

131,173

656

100

 

  Occupied

111,667

112,473

806

85.7

    Owner

74,735

74,131

-604

56.5

    Renter

36,933

38,342

1,409

29.2

  Vacant

18,850

18.700

-150

14.3

    Year-round

14,419

14,165

-254

10.8

       For rent

4,423

3,918

-505

3.0

       For sale only

1,958

1,945

-13

1.5

       Rented or sold

953

1,009

56

0.8

       Held off market

7,085

7,293

208

5.6

         For occasional use

2,133

2,292

159

1.7

         Temp occ. by URE

1,227

1,159

-68

0.9

         Other

3,725

3,843

118

2.9

   Seasonal

4,431

4,535

104

3.5

(All numbers are in thousands)

Despite the lessening of vacancies in the rental market, rents for vacant units have actually declined in the last year from just over $700 to a current median rent of $684.  The median asking sales price for vacant sale units was $138,400.  This is essentially unchanged from one year earlier although there was a slight and shirt-lived bump during the intervening months.

The national homeownership rate is 65.9 percent, 1.0 percentage points lower than one year earlier and 0.5 points lower than the first quarter.  Homeownership rates were also down in every region. In the Northeast the rate is 63.0 compared to 64.2 percent a year earlier; the Midwest dropped from 70.8 percent to 70.0 percent; the South was at 68.2 percent compared to 69.1 and the South 60.3 against 61.4.

The homeownership vacancy rate in principal cities was 2.9 percent compared to 2.4 percent in the suburbs and 2.3 percent outside of Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs).  These numbers are not statistically different than those in the second quarter of 2010.  The rental vacancy rate in principal cities was 9.6 percent compared to 10.6 in Q2 2010 and in suburbs 8.6 percent compared to 10.2 percent.  In areas outside of MSAs the rate was 9.1 percent, statistically unchanged from 2010.

Homeownership rates declined among all age groups except those over 65 years; that rate increased from 80.4 in 2010 to 80.8.  Those under 35 years of age now have a rate of 37.5 percent compared to 39 percent a year ago.  In the 35 to 44 cohort the rate went from 65.6 to 63.8; for those 45 to 54 is declined to 72.3 percent from 73.6; and among the 55 to 64 age group it dropped from 78.7 to 77.8. 

The Black community accounted for most of the recent attrition in homeownership.  The rate among Blacks, already the lowest of any ethnic group, has dropped 4 full percentage points in the last year to 44.2 percent.  The rate in the Hispanic community is down from 47.8 to 46.6 percent and among whites 74.4 to 73.7 percent.  Homeownership in the "all other races" category actually rose from 55.7 percent to 56.0 percent.