- Buyers flocked to the
Hamptons during thepandemic , pushing up home prices in the vacation hot spot. - New homeowners try to cash in by charging a ton for summer rentals — as much as $1 million a month.
Buyers flocked to the Hamptons during the pandemic, sending home prices soaring in the popular vacation hot spot.
To recoup their costs — and even turn a profit — homeowners have listed their tony mansions for astronomical rents over the last two summers. (Case in point: One oceanfront mansion, bought for more than $16 million last year, is now listed for $1.65 million for the month of July.)
But CNBC found that a glut of supply on the market after years of buying — and falling demand as summer travelers head abroad after two years of the pandemic — could mean Hamptons prices come crashing back to Earth this summer.
Some Hamptons homeowners are cutting their rental prices by "30% or more" to secure tenants for their properties, CNBC's Robert Frank reported.
According to CNBC, the collapse in Hamptons rental prices seen by some brokers is driven by two separate factors.
For one, a falling stock market, soaring inflation, and general economic uncertainty could be dampening demand for getaways in the Hamptons, long a home for Wall Streeters looking to escape New York City during the summer lull from Memorial Day to Labor Day.
A resurgence in trips abroad after a pandemic-driven surge in
This May, Insider reported that Airbnb hosts in the US face similar challenges as demand for short-term rentals wanes after two years of pandemic-driven growth. Airbnb owners told Insider's Dan Latu and Daniel Geiger that high inflation, a pick-up in global travel, and increased numbers of hosts and listings are all contributing to a slowdown in bookings.
CNBC also reported that the past two years of frenzied home buying in the Hamptons likely means that would-be renters in prior years are now owners themselves.
"The buyers removed themselves from the rental market," Douglas Elliman's Morabito told CNBC.
To be sure, high-dollar rentals still have a home in the Hamptons. According to CNBC, another Bridgehampton beachfront house, just down the street from from the property listed for $1.65 million for July, is back on the market this summer — for a monthly asking price of $1.25 million.