From Multi-Housing News, four markets in the Carolinas made the top 10:
#2: Greenville, NC
#4: Wilmington, NC
#6 Augusta, SC
#8: Winston-Salem & Greensboro, NC





From Multi-Housing News, four markets in the Carolinas made the top 10:
#2: Greenville, NC
#4: Wilmington, NC
#6 Augusta, SC
#8: Winston-Salem & Greensboro, NC





Distress includes any loan with a payment status of 30+ days, any loan actively with the special servicer, and includes non-performing and performing loans that have failed to pay off at maturity.


Charlotte is in the top 20 as well, with close to a third of workers staying home:

Other North Carolina cities making the list include Raleigh (#48), Durham (#64), Wilmington (#104), Winston-Salem (#150) and Greensboro (#172).
It’s fallen back in line with the 10 previous years (2004 – 2014), which averaged 93.4%.


Permits (+1.4%) and starts (+7.5%) were both up month-over-month, however, both were down from where they were a year ago (permits -26.6% and starts -9.5%).

South Carolina experienced the highest annual percentage growth in population and North Carolina ranked third.

Based on total population change, North and South Carolina were in the top four:


Monthly and annual rent changes through December:
| Source: | Month: | Monthly: | Annual: | Vacancy: |
| Apartment List | December | -0.80% | -1.00% | 6.50% |
| CoStar | December | 0.04% | 0.79% | 7.43% |
| Apartments Advisor | December | 0.12% | -3.03% | N/A |
| Apartments.com | December | 0.00% | 0.80% | 7.50% |
| Redfin | December | -0.20% | -0.80% | N/A |
| Zillow Single Family | December | -0.20% | 3.30% | N/A |
| Zillow Multifamily | December | -0.30% | 2.70% | N/A |
| Yardi Matrix | December | -0.23% | 0.30% | N/A |
| Rent.com | December | -0.11% | -0.78% | N/A |
| Realtor.com | December | -0.23% | -0.40% | N/A |
| Average: | -0.19% | 0.19% | 7.14% |




The National Multifamily Housing Council conducted a survey on tenant fraud and the results were alarming. 93.3% of owners reported experiencing fraud in the past twelve months and 70% said the cases are increasing. Within that group:
Respondents were required to write off an average of nearly $4.2 million in bad debt and a quarter (24.5%) of this bad debt, on average, could be attributed to nonpayment of rent due to fraudulent applications.
“There are entire online (tenant) communities that collaborate to discuss fraud,” said Daniel Berlind, who runs Snappt (a company that helps landlords identify fraud) as well as his own real estate firm, Berlind Properties. “There are videos on TikTok that have millions of views, showing how to edit documents. There are entire forums on Reddit that discuss properties and lease-up, what their concessions are and literally give walkthrough guidance to would-be fraudulent applicants and how they can circumvent the process.”
