St. Louis Rents Are Going Down

by The Realtor.com Team

Rents in the St. Louis metro are easing as 2025 comes to a close, offering renters some relief after several years of uneven price growth going into the new year.

The Realtor.com® November 2025 Rental Report shows that asking rents in St. Louis are now lower than they were a year ago, placing the metro within the broader national rental cooldown.

While the trend is encouraging, affordability remains a concern for many households across the region.

St. Louis rents decline, easing pressure modestly

St. Louis posted a 1.3% year-over-year decline in median asking rent for 0- to 2-bedroom units in November, with the average rent coming in at $1,305.

Lower rents are helping at the margins, but affordability challenges persist. Two minimum-wage earners in the St. Louis area would each need to work about 38 hours per week to afford the median rental while keeping housing costs at 30% of income. While workload remains within the standard full-time schedule, the hope is that St. Louis rental listings will continue to drop to keep affordability within reach..

Still, the decline suggests renters may have slightly more negotiating power than in recent years.

National rents keep falling, reinforcing the broader reset

St. Louis’ rent decline mirrors a sustained national trend. Across the 50 largest U.S. metros, the median asking rent fell to $1,693 in November, down 1% from a year earlier. That marked the 28th consecutive month of year-over-year rent declines nationwide.

The slowdown has been consistent across unit sizes. Studio rents are down 0.4% year over year, while 1-bedroom and 2-bedroom units each declined about 1%. Economists note that studios often respond first to shifts in demand, so their near-flat performance may signal stabilizing renter interest, even as larger units continue to soften.

Despite falling rents, prices remain elevated compared with pre-pandemic levels. National asking rents are still 17.2% higher than they were in November 2019, reinforcing why affordability remains the defining theme of the rental market in 2025. The current cooldown has helped, but it has not erased years of cumulative growth.

Minimum-wage affordability highlights how uneven conditions remain. Only five of the 50 largest metros allow two minimum-wage earners to afford the median rental without overtime. St. Louis is not among them, showing how falling rents alone are often not enough to fully close the affordability gap.

Is renting cheaper than buying in St. Louis?

Even as rents fall locally, renting remains cheaper than buying a home on a monthly basis. Nationally, the median rent of $1,693 in November sits well below the typical monthly mortgage payment of about $2,040, keeping renting the lower-cost option for many households and reinforcing the broader rent-versus-buy dynamic.

That gap is narrowing, however. Lower mortgage rates are improving affordability for buyers, even as rents continue to correct from their pandemic-era surge. “Rent continues to fall in many of the major metros across the United States for a variety of reasons,” says Joel Berner, senior economist at Realtor.com®, pointing to the ongoing adjustment after the dramatic rent increases of 2021 and 2022.

For St. Louis-area renters, the decision between renting and buying often comes down to financial readiness and long-term planning. Renting still offers the lower monthly commitment, while improved financing conditions may encourage some households to explore homeownership. Tools like a mortgage vs. rent calculator can help compare current rent with potential mortgage payments.


This article was produced with editorial input from Dina Sartore-Bodo and Gabriella Iannetta.

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Fred Dinca

Fred Dinca

Realtor® | License ID: 0995708101

+1(318) 408-1008

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