Key Metrics Across All Property Types
Countywide averages across 10 OC markets as of April 2025. SFRs lead on rent, condos/townhomes lead on appreciation velocity.
Single-Family Home Rent Averages by Market
SFRs command OC’s highest rents and lowest vacancy. Coastal submarkets drive significant premiums over inland counterparts.
| OC Submarket | 3BD SFR Avg/Mo |
4BD SFR Avg/Mo |
Vacancy Rate |
Days to Lease |
YoY Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Newport BeachCoastal Premium | $6,100 | $7,850 | 2.1% | 11 | +4.8% |
| Laguna BeachCoastal Premium | $5,850 | $7,400 | 2.3% | 12 | +4.3% |
| IrvineMaster-Planned | $5,240 | $6,780 | 2.6% | 13 | +5.9% |
| Huntington BeachCoastal / Suburban | $4,420 | $5,680 | 3.0% | 16 | +3.4% |
| Costa MesaUrban / Mixed | $4,190 | $5,300 | 3.3% | 17 | +2.9% |
| Tustin / OrangeSuburban | $3,980 | $5,050 | 3.5% | 19 | +2.4% |
| Fullerton / PlacentiaSuburban Inland | $3,720 | $4,680 | 3.8% | 21 | +1.7% |
| AnaheimUrban Inland | $3,590 | $4,520 | 4.0% | 22 | +1.4% |
| Garden Grove / WestminsterSuburban Inland | $3,430 | $4,280 | 4.1% | 23 | +0.8% |
| Santa AnaUrban Inland | $3,180 | $3,960 | 4.5% | 25 | -0.2% |
Source: NextGen Coastal managed portfolio data and MLS comp analysis, April 2025. SFR rates include detached homes only; does not include attached townhomes.
Condo & Townhome Rent Averages Across OC
The fastest-appreciating property type in 2025, condos and townhomes bridge the gap between apartment living and SFR lifestyle at a mid-tier price point.
| OC Submarket | 1BD Avg/Mo |
2BD Avg/Mo |
3BD Avg/Mo |
Vacancy Rate |
YoY Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Newport Beach | $3,180 | $4,250 | $5,480 | 2.4% | +5.1% |
| Laguna Beach | $3,020 | $4,080 | $5,200 | 2.6% | +4.6% |
| Irvine | $2,840 | $3,620 | $4,680 | 2.9% | +6.4% |
| Huntington Beach | $2,460 | $3,120 | $3,980 | 3.4% | +4.0% |
| Costa Mesa | $2,340 | $2,990 | $3,760 | 3.7% | +3.6% |
| Tustin / Orange | $2,210 | $2,820 | $3,540 | 3.9% | +2.8% |
| Fullerton / Placentia | $2,080 | $2,640 | $3,310 | 4.1% | +2.1% |
| Anaheim | $2,020 | $2,560 | $3,180 | 4.3% | +1.7% |
| Garden Grove / Westminster | $1,920 | $2,420 | $3,010 | 4.5% | +1.0% |
| Santa Ana | $1,820 | $2,290 | $2,840 | 5.0% | -0.4% |
Includes attached condos and townhomes; excludes detached SFRs. HOA fees not included in rent figures — tenant may pay separately.
Apartment Rent Averages — Studio Through 3-Bedroom
Orange County apartment rents span a wide range from sub-$1,500 studios in inland markets to $4,500+ three-bedrooms along the coast. New supply has kept apartment rent growth more moderate than other types.
| OC Submarket | Studio Avg/Mo |
1BD Avg/Mo |
2BD Avg/Mo |
3BD Avg/Mo |
Vacancy Rate |
YoY Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Newport Beach | $2,420 | $3,140 | $4,180 | $5,240 | 3.1% | +3.8% |
| Laguna Beach | $2,280 | $2,990 | $4,010 | $4,980 | 3.3% | +3.3% |
| Irvine | $2,060 | $2,780 | $3,540 | $4,480 | 3.9% | +4.2% |
| Huntington Beach | $1,760 | $2,390 | $3,060 | $3,820 | 4.4% | +2.3% |
| Costa Mesa | $1,680 | $2,280 | $2,910 | $3,640 | 4.7% | +1.9% |
| Tustin / Orange | $1,560 | $2,140 | $2,740 | $3,420 | 5.0% | +1.5% |
| Fullerton / Placentia | $1,440 | $1,980 | $2,530 | $3,180 | 5.2% | +1.1% |
| Anaheim | $1,480 | $2,020 | $2,580 | $3,230 | 5.1% | +0.9% |
| Garden Grove / Westminster | $1,360 | $1,890 | $2,400 | $3,010 | 5.6% | +0.5% |
| Santa Ana | $1,270 | $1,730 | $2,210 | $2,780 | 5.9% | -0.5% |
Apartment figures represent market-rate units only. Subsidized and income-restricted units are excluded. New construction premium-tier apartments may exceed these averages by 12–20%.
Duplexes & Small Multifamily Rent Data
2–4 unit properties occupy a unique position in the OC market: higher yield potential than SFRs, but more management complexity. Here’s what to expect by unit type and submarket.
| OC Submarket | 1BD Unit Avg/Mo |
2BD Unit Avg/Mo |
3BD Unit Avg/Mo |
Typical Cap Rate |
Vacancy Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Newport Beach / Laguna | $2,680 | $3,580 | $4,620 | 3.4% | 3.8% |
| Irvine | $2,420 | $3,180 | $4,080 | 3.8% | 4.0% |
| Huntington Beach | $2,060 | $2,740 | $3,480 | 4.3% | 4.8% |
| Costa Mesa | $1,980 | $2,620 | $3,280 | 4.6% | 4.9% |
| Fullerton / Anaheim | $1,760 | $2,320 | $2,920 | 5.1% | 5.3% |
| Garden Grove / Santa Ana | $1,580 | $2,080 | $2,620 | 5.5% | 5.7% |
Cap rates are estimated based on current market acquisitions of 2–4 unit buildings; assume standard expense ratios and no value-add repositioning premium. Individual results vary.
What Amenities Add the Most Rent in OC?
Not all upgrades are equal. These are the features that consistently justify higher asking rents in Orange County’s competitive rental market — ranked by monthly premium relative to cost.
In-Unit Washer / Dryer
The single highest-ROI amenity in OC. In-unit laundry adds $100–$175/month over community or coin-op laundry. Install cost: $800–$1,500. Typical payback: 6–12 months. Demand is especially strong in condo and apartment markets where shared laundry is the alternative.
Private Garage (2-Car)
Covered garage parking is a priority for OC renters across all income tiers. A 2-car garage adds $150–$250/month over surface or street-only parking. For SFRs in coastal markets this premium can exceed $300/month. Single-car garage: $80–$150/month premium.
Renovated Kitchen
Updated countertops (quartz or granite), new hardware, and modern appliances consistently drive $125–$275/month in additional rent. Budget kitchen refreshes ($2,500–$5,000) targeting high-visibility surfaces deliver the strongest ROI — full gut renovations ($20,000+) are typically not warranted for rental properties.
Private Pool or Spa (SFR)
A private pool or spa on a single-family rental adds $200–$400/month in coastal and affluent inland markets (Newport Beach, Laguna, Irvine). The premium is highest in summer rental seasons and lower in inland market where pool maintenance costs ($150–$250/month) can partially offset the rental benefit.
Central A/C (vs. Window Units)
In non-coastal OC markets where summer heat is significant (Anaheim, Orange, Fullerton, Santa Ana), central A/C adds $75–$125/month over window unit properties. Coastal markets are more muted given the natural cooling effect. Central HVAC systems also reduce emergency maintenance calls and tenant complaints about summer conditions.
Private Outdoor Space
A private patio, balcony, or yard adds $50–$175/month depending on size and market. Ground-floor units with private yards can match or exceed upper-floor units without outdoor space in suburban SFR markets. For apartments and condos, a large private balcony is the primary differentiator over interior-facing units of equal bedroom count.
| Amenity / Feature | Monthly Premium | Typical Install Cost | Payback Period | ROI Tier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| In-Unit Washer / Dryer | $100–$175/mo | $800–$1,500 | 6–12 months | ★ High |
| Private 2-Car Garage | $150–$250/mo | Structural (n/a) | Immediate | ★ High |
| Renovated Kitchen | $125–$275/mo | $2,500–$5,000 | 12–24 months | ★ Medium |
| Updated Bathrooms | $75–$150/mo | $1,500–$4,000 | 18–30 months | ★ Medium |
| Central A/C (Inland Markets) | $75–$125/mo | $4,000–$8,000 | 36–60 months | ★ Medium |
| Private Pool / Spa (SFR) | $200–$400/mo | $40,000–$80,000 | 8–25 years | Low (enjoyment value) |
| Fresh Interior Paint | $25–$75/mo | $800–$2,000 | 6–18 months | ★ Medium (speed to lease) |
| Smart Home Tech (Thermostat, Locks) | $25–$75/mo | $300–$800 | 4–18 months | ★ Medium |
Payback periods assume full premium achieved in year 1 and maintained through typical 2–3 year tenancy. Actual results vary by market, condition, and tenant quality.
Vacancy Rate & Tenant Tenure by Property Type
Vacancy tells only half the story. Tenant tenure — how long renters stay — is equally important to effective annual yield. SFRs win on both metrics.
| Property Type | OC Vacancy Rate | Avg Tenancy (Mo) | Annual Turnover Cost Est. per unit |
Effective Vacancy Incl. turnover time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single-Family Home | 2.9% | 34 | $1,200–$2,400 | 3.4% |
| Townhome | 3.1% | 31 | $1,400–$2,600 | 3.7% |
| Condo | 3.6% | 28 | $1,200–$2,200 | 4.1% |
| Apartment (Large Complex) | 4.8% | 22 | $800–$1,600 | 5.6% |
| Duplex / Small Multifamily | 5.2% | 24 | $1,000–$2,000 | 5.9% |
Effective vacancy includes average time-to-lease on turnover and excludes scheduled vacancy for renovation. Annual turnover cost includes cleaning, minor repairs, and marketing; does not include renovation or lease-up concessions.
Which Property Types Are Appreciating Fastest in OC?
Year-over-year rent growth by property type and size tier, April 2024 to April 2025. Condos and townhomes are outpacing all other property types in 2025.
- Condo / Townhome +5.8%
- SFR (3–4 BD) +4.2%
- Apartment (2–3 BD) +2.7%
- Duplex / Small MF +2.1%
- Apartment (Studio/1BD) +1.4%
Property Type Profiles — The Full Picture
A head-to-head summary of each property type’s strengths, weaknesses, and ideal investor profile in the current OC market.
SFR: Premium Rents, Lowest Vacancy
Best for: Investors prioritizing tenant stability, low management intensity, and long-term appreciation. SFRs attract family tenants who treat the property as their own home, driving lower vacancy and maintenance call frequency. The trade-off is higher acquisition cost and limited scalability.
Condos: Fastest Appreciation, Mid-Tier Entry
Best for: Investors seeking strong current appreciation velocity with a lower acquisition cost than SFRs. HOA fees and rules introduce constraints; verify rental allowances before purchase. Condos in Irvine, HB, and Costa Mesa offer the best current risk-adjusted entry points.
Apartments: Highest Supply, Widest Range
Best for: Landlords seeking the highest volume of applicants (lower price point drives broader demand pool) and investors in large multifamily buildings targeting NOI optimization. Amenity investment (laundry, parking, smart home) is the key lever for above-market performance in this segment.
Small Multifamily: Best Cap Rate, More Complexity
Best for: Investors seeking the highest going-in yield in OC without entering the large multifamily space. Owner-occupied duplexes offer AB 1482 exemption options and low-cost entry into real estate investing. Central OC (Costa Mesa, Fullerton, Anaheim) offers the strongest duplex acquisition pipeline.
OC Rent by Property Type — FAQ
Answers to the most common questions about Orange County rent differences by property type, amenity value, and investment analysis.
What is the average rent for a single-family home in Orange County in 2025?
How much more do condos rent for compared to apartments in OC?
What is the vacancy rate difference between property types in OC?
Which property type is appreciating the fastest in Orange County?
What amenities add the most rent in Orange County?
Are duplexes a good rental investment in Orange County?
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