
Top 10 BRRRR-Friendly Markets in the US for 2026
We've analyzed the latest market data to identify the top 10 metros where BRRRR investors can still find deals that pencil out. These markets share common traits: affordable entry points, strong rental demand, and fundamentals that support both cash flow and appreciation.
Latest Articles

Philadelphia Housing Market Q1 2026: What SFR Investors Need to Know
Philadelphia enters 2026 as one of the most affordable major metros on the East Coast. With median prices 36% below the national average, strong healthcare and education anchors, and some of the best rent-to-price ratios in the Northeast, the City of Brotherly Love offers real cash flow opportunities—if you know where to look.

Huntsville Housing Market H1 2026: What SFR Investors Need to Know
Huntsville enters 2026 as one of America's most compelling growth stories. With a $6 billion Eli Lilly investment, NASA and defense anchors, and home prices still under $400K, the 'Rocket City' offers a rare combination of cash flow potential and appreciation upside.

Baltimore Housing Market H1 2026: What SFR Investors Need to Know
Baltimore enters 2026 at a genuine inflection point. After a decade of population decline, the city gained residents for the first time in 2024. But beneath these positives lies a complex picture: federal job cuts, a localized foreclosure crisis, and an uncertain path forward.

Jacksonville Housing Market H1 2026: What SFR Investors Need to Know
Jacksonville enters 2026 as a market in transition. NAR named it a top-10 housing hot spot, yet local data tells a more nuanced story: softening rents, rising foreclosures, and one of the highest institutional investor concentrations in the country.

2026 Mortgage Rate Outlook: What SFR Investors Need to Watch
Rates aren't going back to 3%. But they're probably not spiking to 8% either. For mom-and-pop SFR investors trying to pencil deals in 2026, that middle ground is actually workable—if you know what's driving it.

Trump's Wall Street Housing Ban: What It Actually Means for Investors
President Trump signed an executive order targeting institutional investors in single-family housing. The headlines sound dramatic—but the on-the-ground impact for most real estate investors will likely be minimal.