Study reveals corporate landlords own 11% of metro Atlanta’s single-family rental homes

March 2, 2024

Georgia State University researchers unveil the ironclad grip of three corporate giants over a staggering 11% of the city’s rental properties.

As metro Atlanta continues to deal with a housing shortage and high rent, a recent study led by Georgia State University researchers unveils the ironclad grip of three corporate giants over a staggering 11% of the city’s rental properties.

Dr. Taylor Shelton, an assistant professor in the Department of Geosciences at Georgia State University, along with his collaborator Dr. Eric Seymour of Rutgers University, has shed light on the alarming concentration of single-family rental homes in metro Atlanta.

Keeping distance between tenants and rental companies

Shelton highlighted the layers of intermediaries, including property managers and regional supervisors, which often distance tenants from the decision-making entities, thereby complicating the resolution of issues.

“Layers of interaction that have to happen before you get to the person who’s ultimately making decisions are increased. You have to talk to your property manager,” Shelton said. “Then, the property manager has to talk to their supervisor, who talks to the local or regional manager. Then they have to run things up. It creates this distance where you don’t actually know who your landlord is, so you don’t actually know who to make demands of.”

Atlanta is the largest market for this kind of corporate landlord activity,  according to another study by Shelton and Seymour.

“You have to add up the next two or three largest markets in the U.S. together to have the same amount of corporate landlord investment that Atlanta has,” Shelton said adding that landlords like cheap housing and places that are continuation to grow.

“But the other box that Atlanta checks is that we have very lax tenant protections,” he said.

Shelton and his team have made their investigative methods accessible to the public, aiming to empower communities to scrutinize corporate landlord activity in their respective regions.

“We wanted to democratize this process, enabling anyone with access to relevant data to analyze corporate landlord ownership in their area,” Shelton remarked.

“The hope is that anybody can take this method and replicate it even if you don’t have significant technical skills,” Shelton said. “We wanted to get to the skeleton of the logic of this process so that anyone can do it for anywhere and any company. All you need to have is the right data and then you can go from there.”

13 WMAZ, March 2, 2024

Recent Posts

STEM Pathways are a Two-Way Street, Not a “Leaky Pipeline”

A new article in the Journal for STEM Education Research challenges the longstanding “leaky pipeline” narrative that has shaped U.S. education and workforce policy for decades. The article, “Reconceptualizing College STEM Pathways: Is ‘Leaving STEM’ the Problem?”, was...

NJSPL: New Jersey’s New E-Bike Laws – What Comes Next?

New Jersey’s New E-Bike Laws: Safety, Impact, and What Comes Next Leigh Ann Von Hagen & Gabrielle Cain In recent years, e-bikes have become an increasingly popular form of micromobility, which are small, lightweight transportation devices designed for short trips...

Heldrich: Aligning NJ’s AI Policy with Small Business Needs

Researchers at the Heldrich Center for Workforce Development, with funding from the New Jersey State Policy Lab, are currently engaged in a project to examine how New Jersey’s public Artificial Intelligence (AI) initiatives can better align with the evolving needs of...

EJB Talks: Planning, Policy, Politics, and the Path to Office

Planning, Policy, Politics, and the Path to Office with Assemblywoman Katie Brennan This week on EJB talks, Dean Stuart Shapiro talks to Bloustein alumnus Katie Brennan MCRP '12, now an Assemblywoman in New Jersey's 32nd District. Katie reflects on how her early...