Multifamily Completions Climb Near a 40-Year High

Economics
Published

Multifamily units completed reached 608,000 in 2024 — their highest level since 1986, according to NAHB analysis of the Census Bureau’s Survey of Construction. For the eighth consecutive year, most (54%) were high-density buildings comprising 50 or more units — a relatively new trend compared to early estimates in the series.

Where Are Multifamily Units Being Built?

The South accounted for 292,000 completions (48%) in 2024, while the West held 163,000 (27%), the Midwest 87,000 (14%) and the Northeast 68,000 (11%). Completions in the South were weighted toward low-medium density buildings — a reverse on the overall trend — while high-density buildings in the Midwest and the Northeast were nearly double the amount of low-medium density completions.

For Rent vs. For Sale

Among multifamily units completed in 2024, 580,000 (95%) were built-for-rent. More than half of these units (55%) were in high-density buildings. This is a seismic shift towards high-density buildings, as this share was only 25% in 2004. Over the past 20 years, the share of units in buildings with 10-19 units has been consistently falling, dropping from 24% in 2004 to only 4% in 2024.

The number of multifamily units built-for-sale rose from 20,000 in 2023 to 29,000 in 2024. High-density buildings continued to be the primary type of building, comprising 40% of built-for-sale units. This share was up from 28% in 2023.

Jesse Wade, NAHB director of tax and trade policy and housing policy research, shares more details in .

Subscribe to NAHBNow

Log in or create account to subscribe to notifications of new posts.

Log in to subscribe

Latest Economic News

Jul 09, 2025

Jul 09, 2025

Jul 08, 2025