calculator.reRentIncreaseTitle
Szczegółowy przewodnik wkrótce
Pracujemy nad kompleksowym przewodnikiem edukacyjnym dla Rent Increase Affordability. Wróć wkrótce po wyjaśnienia krok po kroku, wzory, przykłady z życia i porady ekspertów.
The Rent Increase Affordability Check applies the standard '30% rule' for housing affordability — that rent should not exceed 30% of gross monthly income — to a proposed new rent. The 30% benchmark dates to the 1969 Brooke Amendment to federal housing law and remains HUD's official affordability standard. Households spending over 30% on housing are 'cost-burdened'; over 50% are 'severely cost-burdened' — categories used in federal housing policy and academic research. US housing reality: 47.5% of renter households are cost-burdened (over 30%) per 2022 Census American Community Survey — up from 38% in 2000. Severely cost-burdened renters grew to 23.4% (over 50% of income on rent). The 30% rule is increasingly aspirational rather than achievable in high-cost markets where median rent in cities like SF, NYC, LA, Boston, San Diego requires 50%+ of median household income. In contrast, mid-cost markets (Indianapolis, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, St. Louis) keep median rents under 25% of median income. The calculator inputs current monthly income (gross, before taxes), current rent, and proposed new rent. Computes current rent-to-income ratio, new ratio, percentage increase, and viability flag (under 30% = affordable, 30–50% = stretched, over 50% = severely burdened). Useful for evaluating lease renewal negotiations, deciding whether to accept proposed increase or hunt for new apartment, and planning relocation decisions. Negotiation context: rent increases over 5% annually are above typical CPI shelter inflation; over 10% is aggressive in most markets. Tenants facing >5% increases have leverage in soft rental markets — landlords prefer renewing existing tenant ($0 turnover cost) to finding new tenant ($1,000–3,000 turnover cost in vacancy, repairs, screening). Comparative market data from apartment search sites strengthens negotiation position. In markets with rent control (NYC, LA, SF, Berkeley, DC), increases are statutorily capped (1.5–10% depending on jurisdiction).
Ratio = Rent / Monthly Income × 100; Increase % = (New − Current) / Current × 100
- 1Step 1 — Enter monthly household income (gross, before taxes — HUD standard uses gross)
- 2Step 2 — Enter current monthly rent (include all fixed charges: parking, pet fee, mandatory amenity fees)
- 3Step 3 — Enter proposed new rent from landlord notice or apartment listing
- 4Step 4 — Calculator computes current rent-to-income ratio
- 5Step 5 — Computes new ratio at proposed rent
- 6Step 6 — Calculates percentage increase
- 7Step 7 — Flags affordable (<30%), stretched (30–50%), or severely burdened (>50%)
Just over the 30% line. Typical inflation-tracking renewal; most tenants accept.
Above market rent inflation — strong negotiation grounds
Already stretched; new rent crosses into severely burdened. Consider relocation or roommate.
Below 30% with plenty of margin. Accept renewal.
Lease renewal evaluation
Apartment hunting affordability filter
Negotiation strategy framework
Relocation cost-benefit analysis
Roommate household budgeting
Financial planning for stretched households
Is the 30% rule realistic in high-cost cities?
Increasingly aspirational. In SF, NYC, LA, Boston, Seattle, the median rent-to-income ratio for renters exceeds 35–45%. The 30% rule is more achievable in mid-cost markets (Indianapolis, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Memphis). For high-cost cities, treat 35–40% as the realistic stretched-but-viable threshold; above 50% is genuinely unsustainable long-term.
Should I include utilities in 'rent' for this calculation?
Some definitions include utilities (gas, electric, water, internet) in housing cost — making the threshold effectively 30% for total housing. Conservative approach: use rent + average $200–300 utilities to assess true housing burden. HUD historically uses rent only for the 30% threshold, but tenant advocacy groups recommend including utilities for accurate affordability.
What if I'm offered a multi-year lease with smaller increases?
Often a good deal in inflationary periods. A 2-year lease with 3% annual increase (locked in) beats a 1-year lease with 8% increase even though Year 1 looks worse — Year 2 protection is valuable. Calculate the 2-year total cost both ways before committing. Multi-year leases also reduce turnover hassle.
What are rent control protections?
Statutory rent caps in some jurisdictions: NYC rent stabilization (~2.75% allowed 2024), CA AB 1482 (CPI + 5%, capped at 10%), LA RSO (4% generally), Oregon SB 608 (CPI + 7%), Berkeley/SF (annual board decision). Check local rent control laws before assuming landlord can raise without limit. Violations can trigger refunds plus damages.
Can I negotiate the increase?
Often yes, especially in soft rental markets. Strategies: (1) cite comparable rents from Zillow/Apartment List, (2) emphasize your good payment history and low turnover cost, (3) accept moderate increase with 2-year lease in exchange for cap on Year 2, (4) trade rent stability for accepting non-cash concessions (no in-unit washer/dryer, less storage). Email negotiation works; many landlords give 30–50% of proposed increase back.
Wskazówka Pro
When negotiating renewal, propose a counter-offer at 50–70% of the proposed increase backed by comparable listings on Zillow or Apartment List. Landlords prefer keeping existing tenant — $0 turnover cost vs $1,000–3,000 to find a new renter. Most are flexible if you negotiate professionally and have data.