If you want to know how to solve America’s housing crisis, look no further than the deep divide playing out along the Hudson River.
In Manhattanwhere years of strict regulations, tough zoning laws and a sub-2 percent vacancy rate have stifled new development, rents just hit all-time highs. But in neighboring Jersey City, a massive post-pandemic construction boom has forced landlords to compete on price, driving local rents down from their 2024 highs and giving inflation-weary renters a much-needed break.
According to the last Zumper National Rent Reportthe median one-bedroom rent in Manhattan reached a record high of $4,680 in May 2026. But across the Hudson in Jersey City, rents have stabilized at a median of $2,860 – remaining 2.1% lower year over year.
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One-bedroom rents in Jersey City peaked at $3,430 in mid-2024 before a massive supply correction pushed costs down to $2,650 in August 2025.
As rents in New York continue to rise, rents on the Hudson in Jersey City represent “a major financial decision.” (Getty Images)
Zumper’s report shows that instead of stifling development, local housing supply has surged in Jersey City, giving renters rare negotiating leverage when thousands of units hit the market at once.
“Manhattan has largely stayed away from the city’s rental construction boom, with developers favoring condos over rental properties, and inventory has fallen for one of the longest periods on record,” the report said.
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“New Yorkers just aren’t moving,” Zumper said. “Nearly 90% of New York City renters remained in the same housing they were in a year earlier, which is well above the national average. With asking rents at record highs, the gap between what an existing tenant pays and what the free market charges has rarely been greater, turning a move across town into a major financial decision.
Two-bedroom units in New York and San Francisco are now tied for the title of most expensive in the country, at $5,500. Rent for a bedroom in San Francisco also exceeded $4,000 for the first time this month.
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On a macro level, U.S. renters are starting to feel the pressure again as the national median one-bedroom rent increased 0.7% month-over-month to $1,519 in May, and two-bedroom rents rose 0.4% to $1,903.
“National averages currently mask two very different real estate markets,” Zumper CEO Shawn Mullahy wrote in the report. “In coastal cities with limited supply, pricing power has returned quickly. In much of the Sun Belt, operators are still working off the wave of inventory delivered over the past few years. The demand is there, but supply still needs time to normalize.”
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