Nashville’s Multifamily Market is a Prime Investment Opportunity

The gap between supply and demand in Nashville’s rapidly growing multifamily market is closing fast, boosting developer confidence.
  • Nashville’s skyline has transformed dramatically, with 68% of current units built in the past 10 years, leading to a high vacancy rate.
  • Nashville’s population has also surged, making it one of the fastest-growing metros in the U.S., with significant job growth from major companies.
  • Despite last year’s dip, multifamily investments in Nashville are showing signs of recovery in 2024, driven by strong fundamentals.
Key Takeaways

Nashville has enjoyed a multifamily construction boom in recent years, attracting new residents and jobs at an unprecedented rate, as reported by Commercial Observer. However, this surge has also led to an apartment oversupply and higher vacancy rates.

Construction Boom

Music City currently ranks fifth among the largest U.S. metros in terms of the number of apartment units under construction compared to the existing inventory. The Chamber of Commerce highlights that 68% of the city’s apartments were only built over the past 10 years (since 2014), the highest such construction boom in the country. 

This led to an inevitable oversupply problem, with Matthews Real Estate Investment Services reporting a 10.8% vacancy rate in 2Q23, the highest in 20 years. As a result, concessions to attract tenants are up, averaging around 8.8% of asking rents in December 2023. Yet just two years ago, only one out of every 20 apartment communities was offering concessions.

Correction Underway

Construction starts slowed down this year, with Nashville’s multifamily construction pipeline dropping to 20K units in Q1, 27% less than the city’s end-of-year 2022 pipeline.

Meanwhile, Nashville’s population has grown by 81K since 2020, making it the eighth-fastest-growing metro area nationwide. This growth includes more than 37K new residents in 2022 and over 31K in 2023.

Job Opportunities

Unsurprisingly, Nashville’s job market is thriving, with Oracle (ORCL) bringing 8.5K jobs and Amazon (AMZN) adding 5K jobs despite recent layoffs. 

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 2.1% job growth in November 2023, higher than the national average. RealPage forecasts even more job growth, boosting long-term optimism for the city’s multifamily market.

Future Outlook

In 2021 and 2022, multifamily accounted for the majority of the city’s real estate sales, with $6.1B in changing hands in 2022 alone. And although 2023 saw fewer transactions, 2024 is showing signs of a revival.

Many developers, like SomeraRoad and Southwest Value Partners, are confident in Nashville’s long-term prospects. They’re busy kicking off new projects, like Prima at Paseo South Gulch and Nashville Yards.

CoStar also reported 184% higher net absorption this year compared to the recent lows in early 2023. So, as the national economy stabilizes and renter demand inches up, the supply and demand gap should keep shrinking.

RECENT NEWSLETTERS
View All
Luxury Retail Booms Across the U.S. with $75B in Sales
September 16, 2024
READ MORE
Madison Closes $2.04B RE Debt Fund
September 13, 2024
READ MORE
MBA: CRE Mortgage Debt Hits $4.7T, Office Delinquencies Climb
September 12, 2024
READ MORE
Fed Rate Indicator Signals Potential Cuts Amid Recession Worries
September 11, 2024
READ MORE

podcast

No CAP by CRE Daily

No Cap by CRE Daily is a weekly podcast offering an unfiltered look into commercial real estate’s biggest trends and influential figures.

Join 65k+
  • operators
  • developers
  • brokers
  • owners
  • landlords
  • investors
  • lenders

who start their day with CRE Daily.

The latest news and trends in commercial real estate delivered to your inbox. Get smarter about what matters in just 5-minutes or less.