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Daily Data Posts

Some receipts posted to the official DOGE website have been…unposted.

The data disappeared on Sunday. The total amount of square footage, annual lease, and amount saved fell from the total posted on February 28.

March 3rd saw the square footage cut fall by several hundred thousand — from 9.9 million to 9.6 million. The Annual Lease amount saved fell from $282.9 million to $269.7 million, and the amount saved dropped from $721 million to $659.8 million.

DOGE has been plagued by errors since it embarked on its cost-cutting mission. According to the New York Times, DOGE deleted some of its biggest cuts after media outlets pointed them out.

See the table for the latest:

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Elon Musk’s DOGE team is cutting, cutting, and cutting some more. Wednesday, DOGE employees added 157 lease cuts to their “Wall of Receipts” on the DOGE website.

The totals from Wednesday’s data dump claim 157 leases canceled, 1.5 million square feet axed, $35.9 million in annual lease amount terminated, and $110.7 million in savings.

This brings their grand total since the DOGE initiative started to 254 terminations, $114.7 million in annual lease value canceled, and total savings to $255.3 million. 

But that’s if their calculations are correct. The Real Deal and other news outlets have previously highlighted some oddities in their accounting.

For example, DOGE reported some leases with zero square footage but claimed millions of dollars in savings.

Some existing information has also changed — two leases that Monday were assigned to the Department of Justice now are assigned to the Bureau of Prisons. The location, square footage, annual lease amount and amount saved remain the same.

See below where DOGE has continued to make cuts.

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We also mapped out all the affected leases with the information provided (DOGE only lists the city and state for the cuts — not exact addresses).

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In January, rent growth for the off-campus housing at the 200 schools Yardi Matrix tracks slowed to 3.4 percent year over year from 3.8 percent in December, according to a new report released by the research firm

In January 2024, year-over-year rent growth was 6.5 percent, a further sign that rent growth in the student housing sector is dwindling.

Overall, this leasing season has seen an average of 4 percent rent growth, compared to 5.8 percent the year before. For the 2022-2023 season, growth was 6.9 percent.

This slowed rent growth comes amid growing enrollment at the schools Yardi tracks. However, new supply of beds has been falling. Last year, about 35,000 beds were completed, compared to around 44,700 the year before. Yardi expects this trend to continue in 2025 and 2026.

Pre-leasing of student beds also has been heating up. In January, pre-leasing came in at 54.6 percent, up from 48.2 percent the year before.

Rent per bed in January was on average $911. The University of Michigan had the highest rent last month, of $1,676 per bed. Rent had grown 10.3 percent year over year on that campus. But rents at Auburn University grew the most – 13.6 percent year over year – to $926 last month.

Here is the breakdown of rents for Yardi’s top schools with an enrollment of over 25,000 students and the most dedicated off-campus housing.

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In January, it took homeowners a median of 56 days to find a buyer for their properties, according to data from Redfin.

That’s the longest time frame since January 2020, before the pandemic, and seven days more than last year’s median.

Despite the prominence of the South Florida market in recent years, homes are trading hands the slowest in Fort Lauderdale  – where they spent 92 days on the market. Miami followed, with homes lingering for 89 days on the market.

Rounding out the top five were Austin (87 days on the market), West Palm Beach (87) and Honolulu (84).

Four of the top 10 slowest-selling locations are in Florida, and all except Hawaii are in the South.

Perhaps surprisingly, buyers are snapping up homes the fastest in Rochester, N.Y. Properties are lasting just 13 days on the market there. Nearby Buffalo is also a hot metro for home buyers, where homes are on the market for 16 days.

Allentown, Pa., Albany, N.Y., and Richmond, Va. fill out the rest of the top five fastest-selling metro areas, with deals closing in 24, 25, and 27 days, respectively.

Among the top 10 fast-selling locales, four are located in New York state.

Here is Redfin’s list of the top 10 slowest-selling metros:

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Here is Redfin’s list of the top 10 fastest-selling metros:

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Home sales in January hit a seasonally adjusted rate of about 4.1 million – up 2 percent from the year before, marking the fourth consecutive month of year-over-year increases, according to a new report from the National Association of Realtors.

Sales jumped in three regions across the country – the Northeast, the Midwest and the West – but remained flat in the South.

However, sales dropped 4.9 percent last month from December 2024, and they fell in the Northeast, the South and the West. Sales were the same in the Midwest.

Meanwhile, supply last month was up 3.5 percent from December, with about 1.2 million units on the market. This figure was about 17 percent higher year over year.

The median price for all home types was $396,900 – a 4.8 percent jump from last year.

Here is the complete regional breakdown of existing home sales.

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The Department of Government Efficiency expects to shed more than two million square feet of federal office space and reduce the government’s rent bill by over $144 million, according to The Real Deal’s analysis of data posted to what DOGE calls its “Wall of Receipts.”

Those cuts hit Washington, D.C., the hardest – about 1.4 million square feet of leases valued at $49 million were cancelled or restructured in that city, if the accounting is correct. But as The Real Deal analyzed the recently released list of affected leases, we found some holes.  

Some buildings list zero square feet of impacted office space, but place significant value on the leases. For example, two Department of Homeland Security offices in New York City, whose addresses were not listed, have zeroes under the “square feet” column but cite “true termination” of the offices and $1.3 and $2.3 million in savings respectively. 

The data claims that some leases would yield savings that are higher than the stated values of those leases, and others less. Those with higher savings totals seem to assume five-year continuations of the leases, and are often the annual value multiplied by five. The actual remaining terms on the leases are largely not listed. It also is unclear if the federal government had to pay any fees for breaking leases early.

Three lease terminations – for a Food and Drug Administration office in Atlanta, a Federal Trade Commission office in D.C., and a Geological Survey office in El Paso – would reportedly result in no savings. 

Other leases, like the Social Security Administration’s office in White Plains, N.Y., were set to expire this year regardless. One office in West Virginia is being closed “temporarily.” 

The New York Times also has identified issues with the Wall of Receipts.

The city with the second-most amount of targeted office space, per DOGE’s calculations, was Atlanta, with more than 153,000 square feet, valued at $3.3 million, for a savings of about $3.7 million. 

DOGE noted on its website that the data would be updated twice per week. The Real Deal will update our own analysis as more information becomes available. 

Here is the complete list of buildings and leases targeted by DOGE, along with their anticipated savings.

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Home prices across the country rose 0.6 percent last month compared to December 2024, according to the latest Redfin Home Price Index.

That is just slightly faster than the 0.5 percent increase seen over each of the prior three months.

One-fifth of the sales in the 50 most populous U.S. metros experienced price drops month over month in January. Tampa notched the largest decline of 1.6 percent. Meanwhile, Pittsburgh recorded the highest price growth of 3 percent.

Across the U.S., prices were up 5.4 percent compared to January 2024, the slowest year-over-year growth since August 2023 – a trend Redfin doesn’t expect to last long, since the index looks at properties that went into contract in December 2024 and there has been a subsequent drop in sales.

The index looks at home sales over a given period compared to the last time those properties sold. It’s like the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Home Price Indices but published about a month earlier.

Here are the changes (%) to the index month over month and year over year.

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Here is a breakdown of the changes by the top 50 metro areas (by population) in the U.S.

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Over the next three years, the Houston metropolitan area is expected to see a 2.9 percent growth in apartment rents, according to a new analysis of the city’s multifamily sector by Newmark.

Last quarter, rents ticked down 0.2 percent, and less than half of the 35 submarkets studied recorded positive rent growth during that time.

Still, the firm expects rents to grow from 2025 to 2028 – both in the metropolitan area overall and in every one of these 35 submarkets – as its population continues to grow along with its employment opportunities.

The submarket anticipated to notch the greatest rent growth of 4.3 percent is The Woodlands. Meanwhile, the Downtown/Montrose/River Oaks region is expected to see the smallest increase of just 0.9 percent, according to Newmark’s analysis, which used data from AxioMetrics, Real Page and Realty News Report.

Here are the effective rent growths in the fourth quarter of 2024 and the 2025-2028 projected growths in these 35 Houston submarkets.

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It was a rough month for New York renters last month.

In Manhattan, leasing activity fell and rents rose in January from the year before due to low inventory and vacancy rates, according to a new report from Corcoran.

There were 3,424 leases signed in the borough in January, down 13 percent from January 2024. However, activity was up 20 percent from December. Both doorman and non-doorman deals fell – by 11 percent and 17 percent, respectively – year over year.

Of the 13 neighborhood Corcoran tracks, leasing activity only rose in Midtown West, which saw a 9 percent year-over-year increase in deals inked. Gramercy experienced the steepest drop – 50 percent – of activity.

Meanwhile, rents jumped 5 percent year over year, and 1 percent from December. The median rent in Manhattan for doorman apartments was $4,972, a 2 percent year-over-year increase. The median rent for non-doorman leases soared 11 percent year over year to $3,650.

Here are how many leases were signed by neighborhoods in Manhattan last month:

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Asking rent across the United States ticked up per seasonal norms by 0.2 percent in January from the month before, and 3.5 percent year over year, a new analysis from property-listings firm Zillow shows.

That puts the typical asking rent at $1,968, according to the Zillow Observed Rent Index. Renters need to earn $78,722 a year to comfortably afford their leases.

Single-family home rents have been behind much of the growth in the rental market, with rents for these properties hitting $2,179 – about 20 percent higher than apartments. Since last year, single-family home rents have risen 4.4 percent. Meanwhile, multifamily rents have gone up by 2.7 percent during the same time frame.

Here is the data behind the Zillow Observed Rent Index for January 2025 for the top metro areas in the U.S.

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Interactive Data

New
The map and table below include sales and mortgage transactions over $100,000 for residential and commercial properties across Cook County over the past 60 days. It contains details including buyer/seller information, property address, transaction amount, and property type.
Chicago Sales for Residential and Commercial Properties
The New York City New Condo Development map and table offer detailed insights into ongoing and upcoming condo projects across the five boroughs over the past 3 years. The map provides a visual overview of development locations, while the table lists key project information such as developer, number of units, estimated completion, and project status. This tool is designed to help users easily track and filter through NYC’s condo development landscape for an up-to-date view of growth in the area.
NYC Condo Development Map Preview
The South Florida New Condo Development map and table offer detailed insights into ongoing and upcoming condo projects across Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and Palm Beach over the past 3 years. The map provides a visual overview of development locations, while the table lists key project information such as developer, number of units, estimated completion, and project status. This tool is designed to help users easily track and filter through South Florida’s condo development landscape for an up-to-date view of growth in the area.
South Florida New Condo Development
The map and table below includes sales and mortgage transactions over $250,000 for residential and commercial properties across New York City over the past 30 days. It contains details including buyer/seller information, property address, transaction amount, and property type.
New York City Sales Map
The map and table below includes sales and mortgage transactions over $5 million for commercial and residential properties in Miami, Palm Beach, and Broward Counties over the past 30 days. It contains details such as seller/buyer information, property address, transaction amount, and property type.
Priciest South Florida Sales map screenshot

Downloadable Annual Rankings

This dataset ranks the top 10 residential brokers and teams selling in the South Side of Chicago.

The source data for this ranking comes from The Real Deal’s analysis of both buy-side and sell-side deals exceeding $100,000 that closed from July 2023 to July 2024. Deals examined include condos, co-ops, townhouses, 2-4 family and single-family homes, and 2-4 multi-family properties. Off-market activity was excluded. 

This ranking includes only deals within Chicago neighborhoods located south of Interstate 55.

The dataset includes each firms’ rank, total volume, deal count and contact information.

This report includes:

Agent/Team NameTitle
Brokerage FirmPhone
No. of TransactionsEmail
Total Sales VolumeWebsite
Name
Fields included in the dataset

The Real Deal analyzed which brokers represented the buy-side, sell-side or both on residential deals that exceeded $100K closed within Palm Beach County from Jan. 3, 2024 to Jan. 3, 2025. TRD searched the top 25 agents to see if they belonged to a team and credited the team for all of the agents that represented them. Listings included condos, co-ops, 2-4 family homes, single-family homes, townhouses and 2-4 multi-family buildings. Off-market activity was not included. 

The dataset ranking the agents/teams includes their firm, deal count, total volume and contact information.

This report includes:

RankCompany Website
Agent/Team NameName
Brokerage NameEmail Address
Number of TransactionsTelephone Number
Transaction VolumeWebsite
Fields included in the dataset

This dataset ranks the top 20 general contractors based on the reported cost of their new construction and renovation projects in Chicago.

The Real Deal analyzed permit data filed with the city of Chicago from Jan. 1, 2024, to Jan. 27, 2025, examining both new construction and renovation/alterations.

The dataset includes the ranking of the top 20 firms, their total volume, project count and contact information, as well as the raw data on all 7,437 permits evaluated for the study.

This report includes:

Permit IDWork Description
Permit NumberReported Cost
Permit TypeProperty Pin
Application DateContact Type
Issue DateContractor Name
AddressContractor City/State/Zip

This dataset ranks the top 15 residential brokers and teams selling in the Dallas County.

The source data for this ranking comes from The Real Deal’s analysis of both buy-side and sell-side deals exceeding $200,000 within Dallas that closed from Sept. 2023, to Sept. 2024. Deals examined include condos, co-ops, townhouses, 2-4 family and single-family homes, and 2-4 multi-family properties. Off-market activity was excluded. 

TRD searched the top 15 agents to see if they belonged to a team and then credited the team for all of the agents that represented them.

The dataset includes each firms’ rank, total volume, deal count and contact information.

This report includes:

Agent/Team NameTitle
Brokerage FirmPhone
No. of TransactionsEmail
Total Sales VolumeWebsite
Name
Fields included in the dataset

This dataset ranks the top 20 most active residential property managers in New York City for 2024.

To rank the city’s top property managers, The Real Deal analyzed the number of units under each firms’ management using building data from the Department of Housing Preservation and Development from all five boroughs. 

The dataset includes the top 20 ranking, plus a tally of how many properties and units each firm manages, plus the ranked firms’ contact information. It also includes details on the over 39,251 properties examined for the ranking.

This report includes:

Borough/Block/LotBuilding Class
Building CountNumber of Residential Units
Property AddressTotal Number of Units
Building IDProperty Manager Name
NeighborhoodProperty Management Company
BoroughProperty Management Address
Fields included in the dataset

This dataset ranks the top 10 brokerage firms by headcount in the Greater Dallas area. The ranking is based on The Real Deal's analysis of license data from the Texas Real Estate Commission, covering brokerage activity in Collin, Dallas, Denton, Ellis, Hunt, Kaufman, Rockwall, Hood, Johnson, Parker, Somervell, Tarrant, and Wise counties.

This report includes:

Brokerage FirmCompany License No.
Agent HeadcountAssociated DBAs
WebsiteContact Name
Fields included in the dataset

This dataset ranks the top 25 residential brokers and teams in Miami-Dade County for 2024.

The source data for this ranking comes from The Real Deal’s analysis of deals exceeding $100,000 where brokers were represented on the buy-side, sell-side or both from May 2023 to May 2024 in Miami-Dade County. Listings include condo, co-op, 2-4 family, single-family home, townhouse and 2-4 multi-family homes. Off-market activity and new development sales were excluded.

The dataset includes each agent or team’s rank, firm, deal count, total volume and contact information.

This report includes:

RankName
Agent/Team NameWebsite
Brokerage NameTelephone Number
Number of TransactionsEmail Address
Transaction Volume
Fields included in the dataset

A TRD Data analysis identified 25 properties slated for conversion from office to residential across New York City, with filings submitted between 2020 and 2024.
 
The downloadable information below includes property address, developer, number of housing units and square feet, job filing number, job cost and zoning information.

This report includes:

Job Filing NumberExisting Dwelling Units
AddressProposed Number of Stories
BoroughProposed SqFt
NeighborhoodEstimated Job Cost
Borough/Block/LotDeveloper
Filing DateZoning Link
Proposed Dwelling Units
Fields included in the dataset

This dataset ranks the top 20 residential brokers and teams selling in the Golden City.

The source data for this ranking comes from The Real Deal’s analysis of both buy-side and sell-side deals exceeding $200,000 within San Francisco that closed from May 2023, to May 2024. Deals examined include condos, co-ops, townhouses, 2-4 family and single-family homes, and 2-4 multi-family properties. Off-market activity was excluded. 

TRD searched the top 20 agents to see if they belonged to a team and then credited the team for all of the agents that represented them.

The dataset includes each firms’ rank, total volume, deal count and contact information. 

This report includes:

Agent/Team NameTitle
Brokerage FirmPhone
No. of TransactionsEmail
Total Sales VolumeWebsite
Name
Fields included in the dataset

This dataset ranks the top 20 residential brokerages most active in the Windy City in 2023. 

The source data for this ranking comes from The Real Deal’s analysis of both buy-side and sell-side deals priced above $100,000 closed within Chicago from July 1, 2023, to July 31, 2024. Deals examined include condos, co-ops, townhouses and 2-4 family and single-family homes. Off-market activity was excluded. 

The dataset includes the ranking, with each firm’s total volume, deal count and contact information.

This report includes:

RankContact Title
Brokerage NamePhone Number
Total Transaction VolumeEmail Address
Total Number of TransactionsWebsite
Contact Name
Fields included in the dataset

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