7.6% of Vegas apartments are now sitting vacant, the highest level in nearly 10 years.
(Triple the pandemic low of 2.4%).
4 years ago, rents were soaring, and there was no availability.
Now they're cutting rents aggressively and giving concessions just to get tenants through the door.
A potentially ominous sign for Vegas' overall housing market in 2026.
1) I like looking at a local area's rental market as an additional bellwether of where things are heading.
If vacancies are rising, and rents are getting cut, it's a suggestion that the broader housing market is oversupplied.
And that general housing deflation could be on the way (as if the case in Las Vegas).
2) Data from Apartment List shows that apartment rents in Vegas are down about 10% from their post-pandemic peak in 2022.
Back then, they were at $1,586 per apartment.
Now they're at $1,417.
(note that this is still 21% above pre-pandemic rents)
3) In some communities, the cuts could be even steeper.
Here is an apartment community that has 1-month free.
On 600 SF studios at $725/month base rent.
($664 net of concession)
4) The reason why this is happening is multi-fold.
First, Las Vegas is experiencing a slowdown in net migration after the pandemic, both from domestic and international sources. This is crimping housing demand.
Second, the affordability metrics in Vegas became skewed after the pandemic, and many local renters, especially those on the lower end of the income spectrum, became priced out.
Third, the local economy in Las Vegas is starting to struggle. Job growth in the metro just went into negative YoY territory for only the 4th time in the last 35 years.
5) Nevada non-farm payrolls hit -0.6% YoY in December 2025, which is the first negative reading since the pandemic.
And only the 4th since 1992.
Indicating how robust Vegas' job growth usually is.
6) But no longer. Slower job growth, due to reduced tourist demand and potentially lower immigration, is weighing the rental market.
At the same time, there's been a marked slowdown in migration from other U.S. states, which is causing a reduction in home sales and buyer demand.
In fact - demand to buy houses in Vegas in Jan 2026 was 43% below the pandemic peak.
7) Home values are now also officially dropping in Vegas' housing market. They're down -2.2% YoY.
But still up 35.8% over the last five years.
8) The value drops are getting especially intense in certain ZIP codes.
Some areas are down over 6% in the last year, according to Zillow's value index, which is a big drop for just one year.
9) To see our forecasts on the Vegas housing market, and to arm yourself with the right data before making a big purchase in 2026, head to and upgrade to a premium plan.
Forecasts are available for nearly every ZIP code in the U.S., and are updated monthly based on the underlying data in each market.reventure.app/mobile
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Corporate CEOs openly stating that white-collar jobs won't be necessary, and others acting on it with 40% layoffs.
I'm talking to people everyday who have good jobs, but are skeptical that their job will exist in 5 years.
And for good reason. Jack Dorsey is saying the quiet part out loud and going on record stating that he thinks "a majority of companies" will follow suit in the next year.
That's wild.
Block's stock jumped over 20% in response, indicating that Wall Street traders loved it.
If this becomes a "provable" model for success, other companies will follow suit.
Who would want buy a house right now?
1) For those that don't know - Block, formerly Square, is a payment processing company founded by Jack Dorsey, who also co-founded Twitter.
They do over $24 billion in revenue per year.
With over $3 billion in EBITDA. They're profitable, and their profit grew 20% YoY prior to these job cuts.
Yet they just cut 40% of their workforce (4,000) people due to "AI" and their CEO is going on record saying he thinks a lot of other companies will follow suit.
2) This quote, in particular, was striking:
“Within the next year, I believe the majority of companies will reach the same conclusion and make similar structural changes”
Some say that Dorsey and other tech CEOs are using AI as cover for job cuts they would "otherwise do".
Prices have dropped so much that Austin's housing market is now only 3% overvalued in early 2026.
This is how housing crashes can be a good thing. Prices are down nearly 25% from peak and wages have kept rising, and buyers in Austin now have significantly more affordability.
Reventure will be giving a "buy signal" on Austin once it crosses into undervalued territory.
That won't mean prices will immediately stop dropping.
But it will mean the worst is over.
And that buyers/investors can get in at a decent price point in a market that is still top of the table in organic demographic growth.
1) Here's the math on the graph from above:
Values in Austin are down roughly 15% from Dec 2021 to Dec 2025 (and they're down by 24% from May 2022 to today).
In the same span, incomes have risen by 17%.
That combination, combined with a rising base effect, has dropped Austin's overvaluation rate from 39% to 3% in the last four years.
2) The reason prices are dropping in Austin is due a combination of a) very high overvaluation during pandemic, b) excessive building and supply, c) a mini local economic recession, which has led to layoffs in the tech industry, and d) reduced inbound migration.
All of these factors have combined to result in aggressive price cuts (and rent cuts) across the market.
75% haircut in 3 years. And 50% over the last 10 years.
This condo building was built in the 1970s, and apparently has huge deferred maintenance and repairs. So existing condo owners / new buyers are getting stuck with the bill.
($326k special assessment on this unit, also needs renovation. So the buyer's all-in cost is probably closer to $700k).
In this ZIP code, condo values have dropped about 10% in aggregate the last 3 years. But clearly some units, in older buildings with huge assessments, are getting hit much worse than market average.
1) condos are an interesting asset class, because if you are in the wrong building, at the wrong time, the declines in value can be immense.
This condo would have likely sold for close to $900k-1 million in 2021/22.
Now its listed for $256k.
2) This is because in its building in Downtown St. Pete they found $45 million in needed repairs.
The building was built in 1975. And post-Surfside collapse, many of these older properties are being caught up on deferred repairs from the last couple of decades.