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Milwaukee-Waukesha, WI

The Fair Market Rent for a 2-bedroom in Milwaukee-Waukesha, WI is $1,338 per month, ranking #288 out of 693 areas nationwide. The area median household income is $76,404, meaning a household spending Fair Market Rent on a 2-bedroom would pay 21% of income on housing. The area has a population of 1.6M, with 39.6% of households renting.

21%
Moderately Affordable
of income → rent
$1,338
2BR Fair Market Rent
vs $1,250 national median
$76,404
Median Income
vs $71,049 national
$1,105
Actual Median Rent
Census ACS estimate
1.6M
Population
Census ACS
39.6%
Renters
of occupied housing
$283,800
Median Home Value
6.5%
Vacancy Rate
of housing units
12.4%
Poverty Rate
below poverty line

Fair Market Rent by Bedroom Size

$1,027
Studio
$1,119
1 Bedroom
$1,338
2 Bedroom
$1,648
3 Bedroom
$1,784
4 Bedroom

Fair Market Rents (FMRs) are set annually by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and represent the 40th percentile of gross rents for standard-quality units in an area. FMRs are used to determine payment standards for the Housing Choice Voucher program and other federal housing assistance.

Housing Affordability

In Milwaukee-Waukesha, WI, a household earning the area median income of $76,404 would spend 21% of their gross income on a 2-bedroom at Fair Market Rent. This falls below HUD's 30% cost-burden threshold, meaning housing is relatively affordable for median-income households in this area.

Income Needed for 2BR
$53,520
annual (30% threshold)
Hourly Wage Needed
$26
full-time (2,080 hrs/yr)
Actual Median Rent
$1,105
$233 below FMR

Minimum Wage Affordability

The minimum wage in Wisconsin is $7.25/hr. A minimum-wage worker would need to work 142 hours per week to afford a 2-bedroom at Fair Market Rent without exceeding 30% of income on housing. This means a single minimum-wage earner cannot afford a 2-bedroom working a standard 40-hour week. The poverty rate in Milwaukee-Waukesha is 12.4%, below the national average of approximately 12.4%.

State Min Wage
$7.25/hr
Hours/Week Needed
142 hrs
Poverty Rate
12.4%

Housing Market Context

The median home value in Milwaukee-Waukesha is $283,800. At a median income of $76,404, this represents a price-to-income ratio of 3.7x. 6.5% of housing units in the area are vacant, which is below the national average and suggests a tight housing market.

Rent vs. Buy
$1,987 est. mortgage
vs $1,338 FMR rent
Vacancy Rate
6.5%
of housing units

Other Areas in Wisconsin

Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington
$1,709/mo
2BR FMR · 20.9% burden
Madison
$1,694/mo
2BR FMR · 23.4% burden
Kenosha
$1,402/mo
2BR FMR · 21.2% burden
Janesville-Beloit
$1,246/mo
2BR FMR · 20.1% burden
Appleton
$1,236/mo
2BR FMR · 17.7% burden

Compare Milwaukee-Waukesha

vs Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, WIvs Madison, WIvs Kenosha, WI

Areas With Similar Rent to Milwaukee-Waukesha

Frequently Asked Questions

The HUD Fair Market Rent for a 2-bedroom in Milwaukee-Waukesha, WI is $1,338 per month. A studio is $1,027/mo, a 1-bedroom is $1,119/mo, and a 3-bedroom is $1,648/mo. The actual median gross rent from Census data is $1,105/mo.

Milwaukee-Waukesha has a rent burden of 21%, meaning a household earning the median income of $76,404 would spend 21% of income on a 2-bedroom at Fair Market Rent. This is below HUD's 30% cost-burden threshold, indicating relatively affordable housing. To afford a 2-bedroom without being cost-burdened, a household would need an annual income of at least $53,520.

Milwaukee-Waukesha's 2-bedroom Fair Market Rent of $1,338/mo is $88 above the national median of $1,250/mo. Milwaukee-Waukesha ranks #288 out of 693 areas for highest rent in the United States.

To afford a 2-bedroom at Fair Market Rent in Milwaukee-Waukesha without spending more than 30% of income on housing, you would need an annual household income of at least $53,520, or a full-time hourly wage of $26/hour. The area median income is $76,404.

Fair Market Rents represent the 40th percentile of gross rents for standard-quality rental units. Rent burden is calculated as annual 2BR FMR divided by area median household income. Census data (income, home value, population, vacancy) is from the ACS 5-Year estimates. Unemployment rates are from BLS Local Area Unemployment Statistics.