Austin Exposes New York City’s Broken Housing Market

Here’s something that would have seemed pretty much inconceivable two years ago: According to Zillow, home prices have now risen more in New York City and its environs since the beginning of 2020 than in metropolitan Austin, Texas.

new york home

The trajectory looks a bit different for rents but ends up in almost exactly the same place.

new york rents

New York City was the epicenter of Covid-19 in the early days of the pandemic in the US and experienced an exodus of population in 2020 that has since slowed but not stopped entirely, according to Census Bureau estimates through mid-2023. Many of those who fled didn’t get farther than the city’s suburbs, but the metropolitan area’s population declined, too, and has continued to drop. Austin, on the other hand, was a pandemic boomtown, with its metro-area population growing an estimated 8.3% from April 2020 to July 2023.

Since the start of the pandemic, though, housing has turned out to be a better investment in New York than Austin. One can — correctly — interpret this as evidence that New York is not in fact “dead forever,” as was famously proclaimed in 2020. But it’s also an indication that the Austin area built more than enough new housing to meet all that pandemic-era demand, while the New York area continued to not build much at all.

austin built