Immigration raids are hitting multifamily operators. Here’s how they’re responding.

Immigration raids are hitting multifamily operators. Here’s how they’re responding.

Immigration raids are hitting multifamily operators. Here’s how they’re responding.


In late 2025, the management team at Minneapolis-based Centerspace took stock of where immigration enforcement actions were in its home city.

The crackdown, which drew national scrutiny after the January killings of Renée Good and Alex Pretti, had actually started a few months before. Despite the turmoil in the city, Centerspace President and CEO Anne Olson said the REIT has seen very few interactions with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents at its properties so far.

“We have a system where [enforcement actions are] reported,” Olson said. “And it’s really limited to just a couple of communities where we’ve seen some interruption, and that interruption would be from leasing all the way to resident skips. But so far, it has had a really minimal impact.”

However, Olson noted that in January, Minneapolis had low turnover and few people looking for apartments. So far, it’s “hard to tell if there’s any real impact,” Olson said. “We would see that more once we have leasing season underway.”

While Minneapolis has been the most recent hot spot for ICE’s immigration surge, it hasn’t been the only city affected by the crackdown. And, as the numbers are beginning to show, the apartment industry has not been immune to the agency’s actions. At certain product types and certain locations, the impact has been far from minimal, forcing some operators to take steps to educate their employees and residents.

Population impacts

Household formation drives apartment demand. And right now, fewer people are entering the country to fill apartments, especially at the lower end of the market.

From mid-2024 to 2025, U.S. population growth was only half of the prior year’s, rising by just 1.8 million people over the 12 months, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. The foreign-born population grew by 1.3 million over the period, a 54% drop from the same period the year before. 

“Information from a variety of sources shows either notably slowed growth in the foreign-born population or actual backtracking in the immigrant population,” LeaseLock Chief Economist Greg Willett told Multifamily Dive in emailed comments.

According to Willett, national housing numbers don’t yet show slowing housing formation and rental demand. However, individual neighborhoods with a heavy immigrant population reveal deteriorating conditions.

“Apartment vacancies began rising rapidly during the last half of 2025 in select submarkets across Texas, Florida, Arizona and Southern California,” Willett said. 

A recent survey from Irvine, California-based John Burns Research & Consulting shows similar trends. In Florida, 67% of apartment operators said that immigration impacts on leasing and occupancy were somewhat negative, according to data reviewed by Multifamily Dive. 

Headshot of a man in a suit.

Jay Lybik

Permission granted by Jay Lybik

 

In Texas, 26% of respondents reported a somewhat negative impact, and 21% reported a significant negative impact. In the Southwest, 17% noted a significant negative impact and 22% saw a somewhat negative impact.

Jay Lybik, senior director of market research at Continental Properties, told Multifamily Dive that he believes the weakness in the Sun Belt is being impacted by lower immigration both legal and illegal, plus the financial stress on lower-income households.

“Everyone keeps talking about how oversupply at the top of the market is helping lower rents for Class C in Phoenix, Austin, and San Antonio,” Lybik said. “I don’t believe it. I say, the Class C rents are going down in those markets because many households in that price point can’t afford the rent or in the case of immigrants some are just straight out leaving the United States.”

Class C concerns

In 2025, the team at John Burns suspected that small multifamily properties and scattered-site single-family homes would be most affected by the immigration crackdown. However, what it found was that larger properties, namely older, class C assets, are also seeing occupancies fall after ICE raids.

Willett said he is seeing similar trends, adding that issues in the sector could make Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac hesitant to finance property transactions.



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