REAL ESTATE NEWS
More Dallas homeowners are becoming 'accidental landlords,' study finds

An increasing number of Dallas homeowners are bcoming "accidental landlords"
Dallas homeowners unable to sell their properties are increasingly becoming “accidental landlords,” according to Zillow. The real estate marketplace’s newest analysis says that 3.4 percent of its local for-sale listings recently converted to rentals, making Dallas the eighth-worst U.S. city for the market trend.
In Texas, three cities rank higher than Dallas: Austin (4.1 percent), Houston (4.2 percent), and San Antonio (3.9 percent). Seven of the top 10 metros are in Texas or Florida. Denver (4.9 percent) ranks as the No. 1 city for the trend.
Zillow senior economist Kara Ng says today's dynamic is driven by choice rather than panic. Homeowners aren't being forced to sell; they're simply unwilling to accept what the market will actually pay.
"As the market continues to rebalance, sellers are facing a different reality than they did a few years ago," Ng said in a statement. "Bargaining power is tilting toward buyers, and homes are taking longer to sell, making renting out a property one way to buy time rather than compete aggressively on price. After all, today's sellers are rarely forced to sell, and it appears they are often unwilling to budge off of what their heart says their home is worth."
Nationally, the trend is nearing a record high. 2.3 percent of all Zillow rental listings were recently for-sale properties, second only to November 2022, when mortgage rates had doubled in a single year, and sellers were scrambling. That spike was shock-driven, but now stubbornness is likely fueling the shift.
Single-family homes make up the largest share of accidental landlord properties, but condos are seeing the fastest rise. Metros with the hottest buyer competition, including Boston, New York City, and Providence, Rhode Island, have the lowest accidental landlord rates.
For both local buyers and sellers, Goldilocks thinking is increasingly the norm. Sellers, especially those who bought during the COVID-19 boom, are holding their asking price firm to avoid taking a loss. Buyers, for their part, are refusing to compromise on concessions and repairs.
The 10 U.S. Metros with the highest share of accidental landlords are:
1. Denver: 4.9%
2. Houston: 4.2%
3. Austin: 4.1%
4. San Antonio: 3.9%
5. Portland: 3.7%
6. Tampa: 3.7%
7. Miami: 3.5%
8. Dallas: 3.4%
9. Jacksonville: 3.3%
10. Nashville: 3.2%
