AI workers are boosting rents across the US



The newest wave of tech workers isn’t just filling office towers — it’s bidding up apartments in cities already notorious for high housing costs.

Across the US and Canada, the number of workers with artificial intelligence skills has surged by more than 50% in the past year, topping 517,000, according to CBRE. 

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Much of that growth is clustered in the San Francisco Bay Area, New York City, Seattle, Toronto and the District of Columbia — areas where rents were straining households even before the AI boom.

The result: a fresh wave of demand that has helped push Manhattan rents up more than 14% between 2021 and 2024, Washington more than 12% in that same span, Seattle more than 7% and San Francisco nearly 6%.

Artificial intelligence is not just transforming technology, it’s driving up housing costs in the cities where it clusters. Kaikoro – stock.adobe.com
The number of AI-skilled workers in the US and Canada jumped more than 50% in the past year to 517,000, with the bulk concentrated in San Francisco, New York, Seattle, Toronto and Washington, according to CBRE. ihorvsn – stock.adobe.com
These talent hubs are seeing a double squeeze: office demand has rebounded as AI companies insist on in-person work, while an influx of high-paid workers is bidding up apartment rents. Getty Images

New York gained about 20,000 AI-skilled workers over the past year alone, while other hubs including Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth, Toronto and Washington each logged increases of 75% or more. 

High salaries in AI allow workers to shoulder those rents — CBRE found Manhattan’s AI professionals spend about 29% of their income on housing, while in San Francisco and DC the share drops closer to 19%.

That affordability for one group is adding to the squeeze on everyone else.

Manhattan rents climbed more than 14% between 2021 and 2024. Christopher Sadowski
DC rents rose 12% between 2021 and 2024. SeanPavonePhoto – stock.adobe.com
San Francisco rents climbed nearly 6%. Getty Images

Colin Yasukochi, executive director of CBRE’s Tech Insights Center, said San Francisco illustrates the trend. 

“With this AI revolution, it’s been a fundamental game changer for the city of San Francisco, because that’s really ground zero for the AI revolution and where most of these major high-profile firms like OpenAI are located,” he told CNBC.

Unlike other parts of the tech sector that turned to remote work, AI firms are filling office towers. In San Francisco, 1 out of every 4 square feet leased over the past two and a half years went to an AI tenant. 

For many renters, the surge is painful, but AI salaries cushion the blow for those in the industry Wanan – stock.adobe.com
CBRE found Manhattan’s AI workers still spend only about 29% of income on rent; in San Francisco and DC it’s closer to 19%. Allen.G – stock.adobe.com

“AI is predominantly in-office work, and they’re sort of back to the earlier days of tech innovation, where they’re in the office five, six days a week and for long hours,” Yasukochi said.


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