State ranking · HUD FMR

Rhode Island: County Rent Growth

Year-over-year change in 1-bedroom Fair Market Rent across Rhode Island counties, FY 2025 to FY 2026.

+6.3%
RI avg YoY change
+4.6%
US avg YoY change
+6.3%
Fastest riser - Bristol County

What rent growth tells you about Rhode Island

This page tracks the year-over-year percentage change in HUD's Fair Market Rent for each county in Rhode Island, comparing the FY 2025 and FY 2026 1-bedroom FMR schedules. FMR is HUD's estimate of the 40th percentile of gross rents (utilities included, except telephone) for each county or metro FMR area, so year-over-year change here reflects HUD's revised sampling of the American Community Survey rent distribution plus a CPI adjustment, not street-level asking rents. The RI state-average 1-bedroom FMR changed by +6.3% from FY 2025 to FY 2026, compared with a national average change of +4.6%, putting Rhode Island1.7 percentage points above the US pace.

Inside the state, counties rarely move at the same speed. The biggest 1-bedroom FMR increase this year was in Bristol County at +6.3% year-over-year. Because FMR serves as the anchor for Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher payment standards, local housing authorities set standards between 90% and 110% of FMR, rising counties effectively lift voucher affordability for recipients, while falling counties can tighten the pool of units that accept vouchers at the new standard.

Use this data alongside inflation and wage benchmarks to understand whether rent in Rhode Island is accelerating, tracking, or falling behind the broader cost-of-living picture. A 1-bedroom FMR growing faster than local wages means more households will cross into the cost-burdened category (paying more than 30% of income for rent). A growth rate running below inflation can signal softening demand, new supply absorbing the market, or HUD's sample lagging true rents. Pair this page with Rhode Island's rent burden rankings to see which fast-growing counties are also the most burdened, and with the cheapest- and most-expensive-counties rankings to see where growth is changing the overall state picture.

RI Avg Change
+6.3%
FY 2025→2026
US Avg Change
+4.6%
National average
vs National Avg
+1.7 pp
Percentage points above/below US

Biggest Rent Increases in Rhode Island

Top 20 counties with the largest YoY 1-BR rent increase.

# County FY 2025 FY 2026 Change % Change
1 Bristol County $1,319 $1,402 +$83 +6.3%
2 Kent County $1,319 $1,402 +$83 +6.3%
3 Newport County $1,319 $1,402 +$83 +6.3%
4 Providence County $1,319 $1,402 +$83 +6.3%
5 Washington County $1,319 $1,402 +$83 +6.3%

Biggest Rent Decreases in Rhode Island

Top 20 counties with the smallest YoY 1-BR rent increase (or biggest decrease).

# County FY 2025 FY 2026 Change % Change
1 Bristol County $1,319 $1,402 +$83 +6.3%
2 Kent County $1,319 $1,402 +$83 +6.3%
3 Newport County $1,319 $1,402 +$83 +6.3%
4 Providence County $1,319 $1,402 +$83 +6.3%
5 Washington County $1,319 $1,402 +$83 +6.3%

Frequently Asked Questions

Where are rents rising fastest in Rhode Island?
The county with the biggest rent increase in Rhode Island is Bristol County with a +6.3% year-over-year change in 1-bedroom FMR from FY 2025 to FY 2026.
Are rents going up or down in Rhode Island?
Rhode Island's average 1-bedroom FMR changed by +6.3% from FY 2025 to FY 2026. The national average change was +4.6%.
What does Fair Market Rent growth mean for renters?
HUD Fair Market Rent (FMR) growth tracks changes in the 40th percentile of gross rents in a housing market. Rising FMR generally indicates tightening rental supply or increasing demand. For Section 8 voucher holders, FMR growth means increased payment standards, expanding housing options.
Which counties in Rhode Island have the lowest rent increases?
The county with the smallest rent increase (or biggest decrease) in Rhode Island is Bristol County with a +6.3% change from FY 2025 to FY 2026.

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Methodology

Rent growth is calculated as the year-over-year percentage change in 1-bedroom Fair Market Rents (FMR) published by HUD, comparing FY 2025 to FY 2026. FMR represents the 40th percentile of gross rents for standard quality units. Counties with fewer than 5 units of data or zero previous-year FMR are excluded. Individual county data may differ from state averages.