Business

This New York City Apartment Went Up $1,100 a Month in Rent in One Year

Photo by CNBC Make It

In 2020, Thelma Rose Annan moved into her Manhattan apartment paying $1,882 per month in rent. By 2021, it was $2,400 per month. This year, it rose by another $1,100, bringing her monthly rent to a whopping $3,500.

β€œThis jump increase is too much and I simply cannot afford it,” Annan says.Β 

The price hikes led her to leave the city.Β β€œI’m going to put my stuff in storage and go to Europe and work remotely there,” she says. β€œAnd hope that housing calms down in New York.” 

Along with soaring rent prices, NYC renters face another challenge: a requirement that they earn 40 times the rent when applying for an apartment. With the median asking rent in Manhattan around $4,000, the minimum income to qualify for a median apartment is $160,000.

If an applicant doesn’t meet this requirement, they need to find a guarantor who makes at least 80 times the rent to cosign their lease.

β€œWhen I first moved into this apartment, it was $1,882 a month and I was making $65,000,” Annan says. β€œI was very privileged enough to afford that rent requirement. But because it wasn't 40 times that, I needed a guarantor.” Β 

She says it was something that was embarrassing to deal with as a 29-year-old with a master's degree. β€œI proved I can make it on my own. But here is a roadblock that doesn't make sense and seems to be very classist to push certain people out,” she says.

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