Beth Burnham Mace headshot
Beth Burnham Mace

Growth for asking rates for independent living, assisted living and memory care each hit “near record highs” in the first quarter, National Investment Center for Seniors Housing & Care Chief Economist and Director of Outreach Beth Burnham Mace wrote Friday in a blog post.

The finding is based on data from the NIC MAP Vision Actual Rates Report for the quarter.

Independent living saw the biggest year-over-year rate growth among senior living segments, at 9.6% in March, Mace noted. For those already residing in independent living communities, rent increased 7.5% year over year, on average.

“These were nearly the highest rates of growth [since NIC MAP Vision began tracking] for these rates, except for January 2022, when many rates rose with lease renewals and annual adjustments,” she said.

In February, average asking rates for assisted living hit a high rate of growth of 11.5%, which according to Mace was the biggest year-over-year jump since NIC MAP Vision began tracking. Asking rate growth reached 9.1% in March.

“Of the three tracked memory care rate categories (in-place, asking and initial/move-in), the fastest pace of growth occurred in asking rates, which were up by 9.1% from year-earlier levels in March 2023. In-place rates were up by 9.0% from year-earlier levels in March 2023 and initial rates were up by 7.4%,” she noted.

According to the data, occupancy among all segments of senior living — independent living, assisted living and memory care — averaged 83.2% in the first quarter, marking a 30-basis-point increase from the first quarter.  The occupancy rate for independent living held steady quarter over quarter at an average of 85.2%. Assisted living and memory care properties’ average occupancy rose 70 basis points to 81.2% quarter over quarter.

Meanwhile, skilled nursing saw the biggest jump in occupancy from the prior quarter, with a 130-basis-point surge from 80% in the fourth quarter of 2022 to 81.3% in the first quarter of 2023.