County FMR · HUD FY2026
Adams County Fair Market Rent
HUD's FY2026 Fair Market Rent for Adams County, CO — 83% above the US average.
- $1,754
- 1-bedroom FMR
- $2,089
- 2-bedroom FMR
- -2.0%
- YoY change
- +83%
- vs US avg
FY 2026 HUD Fair Market Rent for Adams County, CO. Verify with HUD →
The Fair Market Rent for a 1-bedroom apartment in Adams County, Colorado is $1,754 per month in FY 2026, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). A 2-bedroom costs $2,089/mo and a studio is $1,643/mo.
This is 83% higher than the national average of $959 and 51% above the Colorado average of $1,161. Rent decreased2.0% from FY 2025 ($1,789), declining against the trend. To afford rent here, a household needs at least $70,160/year based on the 30% affordability rule.
FY 2026 HUD Fair Market Rents in Colorado. Population: 520,149.
What these rents mean for Adams County
HUD's FY 2026 Fair Market Rent schedule sets the Adams County Colorado 1-bedroom at $1,754, with a studio at $1,643, 2-bedroom at $2,089, 3-bedroom at $2,734, and 4-bedroom at $3,049. These figures represent the 40th percentile of gross rents — meaning 60% of standard-quality rental units in this HUD area cost more. The Adams County FMR area applies to all ZIP codes inside the county boundary, and Colorado's housing authorities use it as the baseline when setting Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher payment standards (typically 90%–110% of FMR).
Compared to the rest of the country, a 1-bedroom here is 83% above the US average of $959 and 51% higher than the Colorado state average of $1,161. Year-over-year, the 1-bedroom FMR moved from $1,789 in FY 2025 to $1,754 in FY 2026 — a change of -2.0%, which is unusual and suggests softening demand or revised HUD sampling.
For budgeting, the traditional 30% affordability rule says rent should not exceed 30% of gross household income. At the FY 2026 1-bedroom FMR of $1,754, that implies a household income of $70,160 per year (about $5,847/month) to stay affordable — a 2-bedroom at $2,089 pushes that threshold even higher. With a population of 520,149 and a county median household income of $91,387, the arithmetic here directly shapes which wage earners can rent without being cost-burdened. Rent-burdened households (paying more than 30% of income) and severely burdened households (above 50%) face a sharply higher risk of housing instability, and this county's numbers set the benchmark for assessing that risk.
Fair Market Rents (2026)
Year-over-Year Comparison
| Bedrooms | FY 2025 | FY 2026 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio | $1,639 | $1,643 | +$4 (+0.2%) |
| 1 Bedroom | $1,789 | $1,754 | $-35 (-2.0%) |
| 2 Bedroom | $2,140 | $2,089 | $-51 (-2.4%) |
| 3 Bedroom | $2,794 | $2,734 | $-60 (-2.1%) |
| 4 Bedroom | $3,127 | $3,049 | $-78 (-2.5%) |
Affordability Snapshot
Based on the standard that rent should not exceed 30% of gross income:
Rent Burden Analysis
How much of household income goes to rent in Adams County. The 30% threshold indicates cost burden.
How Adams compares on 1-bedroom rent
1-bedroom FMR vs other Colorado counties
- Adams
Adams County
$1,754 1BR FMR / mo
- Denver
Denver County
$1,754 1BR FMR / mo
- Arapahoe
Arapahoe County
$1,754 1BR FMR / mo
- Jefferson
Jefferson County
$1,754 1BR FMR / mo
- Douglas
Douglas County
$1,754 1BR FMR / mo
- Larimer
Larimer County
$1,537 1BR FMR / mo
- El Paso
El Paso County
$1,464 1BR FMR / mo
What this shows Adams is highlighted. Bars are FY2026 HUD 1-bedroom Fair Market Rents.
Can Common Jobs Afford Rent Here?
How a 1-bedroom at $1,754/mo compares to Colorado salaries for popular occupations (30% rule).
| Occupation | CO Salary | Rent Burden | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| Software Developers | $134,540 | 15.6% | Affordable |
| General & Operations Managers | $130,340 | 16.1% | Affordable |
| Registered Nurses | $96,520 | 21.8% | Affordable |
| Police & Sheriff's Patrol Officers | $96,100 | 21.9% | Affordable |
| Accountants & Auditors | $90,030 | 23.4% | Affordable |
| Paralegals & Legal Assistants | $73,380 | 28.7% | Affordable |
| Electricians | $62,090 | 33.9% | Stretched |
| Elementary School Teachers | $61,550 | 34.2% | Stretched |
| Heavy & Tractor-Trailer Truck Drivers | $60,260 | 34.9% | Stretched |
| Pharmacy Technicians | $48,070 | 43.8% | Stretched |
| Customer Service Representatives | $46,020 | 45.7% | Stretched |
| Janitors & Cleaners | $37,270 | 56.5% | Unaffordable |
| Retail Salespersons | $36,960 | 56.9% | Unaffordable |
| Fast Food & Counter Workers | $35,440 | 59.4% | Unaffordable |
| Teaching Assistants | $31,390 | 67.1% | Unaffordable |
Rent Trends (2020–2026)
7-year Fair Market Rent history for Adams County. Shows how HUD rental rates have changed over time.
| Year | Studio | 1 BR | 2 BR |
|---|---|---|---|
| FY 2026 ↓2.0% | $1,643 | $1,754 | $2,089 |
| FY 2025 ↓2.5% | $1,639 | $1,789 | $2,140 |
| FY 2024 ↑19.3% | $1,658 | $1,835 | $2,201 |
| FY 2023 ↑12.8% | $1,390 | $1,538 | $1,856 |
| FY 2022 ↑4.6% | $1,236 | $1,364 | $1,659 |
| FY 2021 ↑3.5% | $1,179 | $1,304 | $1,605 |
| FY 2020 | $1,114 | $1,260 | $1,566 |
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the average rent in Adams County? ▼
How does Adams County rent compare to the national average? ▼
What income do I need to afford rent in Adams County? ▼
Is rent going up or down in Adams County? ▼
Which jobs can afford rent in Adams County? ▼
How much has rent changed in Adams County over time? ▼
How does Fair Market Rent affect Section 8 vouchers in Adams County? ▼
What does Fair Market Rent mean for Adams County? ▼
Rental Guides
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More HUD Fair Market Rent tools and rankings for Adams County and beyond.
Data Sources
Primary source: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), FY 2026 Fair Market Rents. FMRs represent the 40th percentile of gross rents for standard quality units in each area.
Affordability data: Income-to-rent ratios calculated using the 30% affordability standard. Population and income data from U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) estimates.
Salary data: Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics, used for job affordability analysis.
Disclaimer: This information is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Data is sourced from the U.S. Census Bureau and HUD Fair Market Rents. Consult a qualified professional before making decisions based on this data.
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.
All federal data sources used on this page
- HUD Fair Market Rents (FMR) — county-level fair-market rent estimates by bedroom count. huduser.gov/datasets/fmr
- HUD Income Limits — area median income for affordability calculations. huduser.gov/datasets/il
- HUD Comprehensive Housing Affordability Strategy (CHAS) — rent burden and housing-cost distribution. huduser.gov/datasets/cp
- U.S. Census Bureau ACS — county and metro housing characteristics + median rent. census.gov/programs-surveys/acs
- BLS Consumer Price Index — Rent of Primary Residence — rent inflation by metro. bls.gov/cpi
- IRS Migration Data (SOI) — interstate migration aggregates affecting county demand. irs.gov/statistics/migration