Long-Term Rentals · Market playbook

Buying Rental Properties in Pittsburgh, PA

Buying rentals in Pittsburgh is a 7.87% gross yield play at a $241k median entry — $1,578/mo rent gross before expenses. The math has to clear before the property does.

DATA · Zillow Research (via scrape.do) · AS OF APRIL 2026

Strong 83/100

Pittsburgh is one of the better buy-and-hold rental markets in the country right now.

TL;DR — data signals
  • Gross yield 7.87% — above national baseline
  • Rent $1,578/mo vs. national $1,930 — rent-weak
  • Cash flow expectation at 25% down / 7.5%: $200-400/door positive
  • Appreciation: flat — neutral

Long-term rentals in Pittsburgh sit at the intersection of two numbers: typical home value $240,538 and median rent $1,578/mo. That's a 7.87% gross yield — well above the national 4-5% baseline. Cash flow does most of the heavy lifting here, with appreciation as a bonus.

Run the cash-flow math. Assume 20-25% down on a 30-year conventional rental loan at 7.5%, plus taxes + insurance + 8% property management + 8% vacancy/maintenance reserve + 8% capex reserve. At those inputs you should clear $200-400/door positive cash flow on a well-bought property in Pittsburgh. The numbers work without heroic assumptions.

Rent demand context: Pittsburgh rents ($1,578) run 18% below the national median ($1,930). Rent is the constraint — operational discipline matters more than acquisition skill here.

Appreciation thesis: Pittsburgh home values are -0.5% YoY. Flat appreciation. Returns come from cash flow + pay-down + tax benefits, not price growth. Underwrite to that reality.

Net: Pittsburgh is a viable buy-and-hold rental market — yield does the work, appreciation is a bonus.

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Pittsburgh at a glance

The numbers behind the analysis.

$241k
Median value
-0.5%
YoY
$1,578
Median rent
7.87%
Gross yield
Full Pittsburgh market report
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