With 2023 AMI up nearly 6%, allowable "affordable" rents rise (& middle-income targets more unrealistic). City adjustment--after error?--lowers studio rents.
The relentless rise of Area Median Income (AMI) for New York City continues, which means allowable "affordable" rents continue to skyrocket, even if AMI bears little relation to the incomes of the city's renters.
That means that, as described below, middle-income units at 130% of AMI--including those in Atlantic Yards/Pacific Park--are typically marketed below the astoundingly allow allowable rents, such as $3,443 for a 1-BR.
A nearly 6% increase
At 100% of AMI, which qualifies as moderate-income, the 2023 AMI for the New York City region is $127,100 for a three-person family and $141,200 for a four-person household 100% AMI, according to the city's Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD).
That's a 5.7%-5.8% increase over 2022, when the corresponding figures were $120,100 and $133,400. And those represented an 11.8% increase over the previous year, as I wrote in April 2022.
Note that HPD does not disclose its new calculations at the beginning of the calendar year.
Rather, the 2022 figures for affordable rents and AMI persisted until at least May 23 of this year, according to the Wayback Machine, and the 2023 figures were posted no later than June 5.
Permissions, and reality
So developers of such income-linked housing, offering middle-income units at 130% of AMI--as permitted with projects built thanks to the state's 421-a tax break--could theoretically set rents at $2,756 for a studio, $3,443 for a 1-BR, $4,130 for a 2-BR, and $4,772 for a 3-BR.
Note that the City Department of Housing Preservation and Development tends to use the 100% AMI figure for a three-person household, while, throughout the approval stages of the Atlantic Yards project, the figure for a four-person household was used.
For example, when in 2005 the (nonbinding) Affordable Housing Memorandum of Understanding was signed by original developer Forest City Ratner and housing advocacy group ACORN, 100% of AMI for a family of four was $62,800.
Today that would not be moderate-income but low-income, at 44.5% of AMI. And low-income units at that AMI are hardly guaranteed, since that category now goes up to 80% of AMI.
New adjustments: 130% of AMI studio
The city apparently adjusted rents that were distorted--erroneously?--in last year's calculations.
From 2021 to 2022, the guideline rent for a studio at 130% of AMI went from $2,263 to $3,035, an astounding 34.1% increase, well beyond the 11.8% increase in AMI. (In other words, it should've been $2,688.44, by my calculation.)
For 2023, the rent for a studio at 130% of AMI has been cut to $2,756, which represents only a 2.5% increase--not a 5.8% rise--over what I think should've been the 2022 rent.
I suggested that that related to a reconfiguration of the formula. In 2021, a single person at 130% of AMI could earn $108,680. At 30% of income, spread over 12 months, rent for a studio could be $2,717, but instead was $2,263.
No adjustments: 130% of AMI 1-BR & 2-BR
From 2021 to 2022, the guideline rent for a 2-BR went from $3,397 to $3,903, a 14.9% increase. For 2023, it's $4,130, also a 5.8% increase.
The city lowered rents for studios across the board, apparently making up for that 2022 math. As shown in the mash-up image below, the maximum rents for studios in 2023, outlined in blue below, actually decreased from 2022, outlined in red below.
Otherwise, rents went up, as did AMI.
As noted above, at 130% of AMI, maximum rents for studios went from $3,035 in 2022 to $2,756 in 2023.
Also, at 165% of AMI, maximum rents for studios went from $3,852 in 2022 to $3,498 in 2023.
2023 statistics
2022 statistics
2021 statistics
The vertical columns are for studios/1-BR/2-BR/3-BR, respectively.
The vertical columns are for households of 1/2/3/4/5/6/7/8 people, respectively.
2020 statistics
The vertical columns are for studios/1-BR/2-BR/3-BR, respectively.
The vertical columns are for households of 1/2/3/4 people, respectively.
2019 statistics
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