How Small Apartments in Big Buildings Became the US Norm

The US apartment-building boom that began about a decade ago appears to have ended last year, but it did so with a bang. It was the biggest year for apartment completions since 1986 and the biggest year ever for apartments in large buildings — that is, those with 30 to 49 and 50 or more units.

BB Apartment Building graph

The leap in apartment completions in 2024 was the product of:

  1. A boom in multifamily housing authorizations and starts — concentrated in Sun Belt metropolises that attracted lots of migration during the pandemic — that peaked in 2023, and
  2. Longer-than-usual construction times as builders struggled with shortages of materials and labor.

Overall housing starts began falling in 2022. The subsequent drop hasn’t been precipitous, but the historical record and the current combination of high mortgage rates, higher tariffs and increased deportations of construction workers point to continuing declines for a while.

BB Peak HOusing

What happened over the past few years doesn’t truly qualify as a housing boom. You may remember hearing in 2022 and 2023 that the number of housing units under construction in the US was at all-time highs, but that was mainly linked to long construction times, due both to the previously mentioned shortage-related delays and the fact that big apartment buildings take much longer to complete than single-family houses. Single-family starts came nowhere near their record 2006 peak and didn’t even make it back to their 1959-2006 average.