FMR History — Kansas City, MO-KS HUD Metro FMR Area

Historical Fair Market Rents from FY2000 to FY2026. Current FMR page →

The 2-bedroom FMR in Kansas City, MO-KS HUD Metro FMR Area has changed from $652 in FY2000 to $1,358 in FY2026 — a +108.3% change over 26 years.

Fiscal Year Studio 1BR 2BR YoY 2BR 2BR in FY2026 $ 3BR 4BR
FY2026 (Latest) $1,095 $1,197 $1,358 +0.9% $1,358 $1,769 $2,103
FY2025 $1,074 $1,183 $1,346 +7% $1,381 $1,756 $2,078
FY2024 $985 $1,098 $1,258 +8.1% $1,327 $1,645 $1,931
FY2023 $885 $1,002 $1,164 +13% $1,264 $1,530 $1,777
FY2022 $762 $875 $1,030 +0.9% $1,165 $1,365 $1,569
FY2021 $731 $857 $1,021 +4.4% $1,247 $1,364 $1,552
FY2020 $678 $813 $978 +2.6% $1,251 $1,314 $1,490
FY2019 $640 $786 $953 +9.7% $1,234 $1,286 $1,457
FY2018 $568 $713 $869 -8.1% $1,145 $1,181 $1,340
FY2017 $609 $772 $946 -3.3% $1,277 $1,293 $1,463
FY2016 $723 $850 $978 +2.6% $1,349 $1,271 $1,447
FY2015 $705 $829 $953 +2.5% $1,331 $1,238 $1,410
FY2014 $688 $809 $930 +2.6% $1,300 $1,209 $1,376
FY2013 $670 $788 $906 +2.5% $1,287 $1,177 $1,340
FY2012 $654 $769 $884 +2.6% $1,274 $1,149 $1,308
FY2011 $637 $749 $862 +2.6% $1,268 $1,120 $1,275
FY2010 $621 $730 $840 +2.6% $1,275 $1,092 $1,243
FY2009 $606 $712 $819 +2.6% $1,264 $1,064 $1,212
FY2008 $590 $694 $798 +2.6% $1,227 $1,037 $1,181
FY2007 $575 $676 $778 +2.5% $1,242 $1,011 $1,151
FY2006 $561 $660 $759 +2.6% $1,246 $986 $1,123
FY2005 $547 $643 $740 +2.5% $1,254 $962 $1,095
FY2004 $534 $628 $722 +2.7% $1,265 $938 $1,068
FY2003 $520 $611 $703 +2.5% $1,265 $913 $1,040
FY2002 $507 $596 $686 +2.5% $1,262 $891 $1,015
FY2001 $495 $582 $669 +2.6% $1,250 $869 $990
FY2000 $482 $567 $652 $1,253 $847 $964

Related Pages

Understanding FMR Trends

Fair Market Rents are published each fall for the upcoming fiscal year (October through September). HUD adjusts FMRs annually based on local rental market surveys, American Community Survey (ACS) data, and Consumer Price Index (CPI) adjustments. Periods of rapid rent growth — such as the 2021–2023 period of post-pandemic inflation — are reflected in sharp FMR increases, while periods of market cooling may produce flat or modestly rising FMRs.

Historical data is useful for housing advocates, economists, and policymakers analyzing long-term trends in housing affordability. A rising FMR generally indicates a tightening rental market; a FMR that grows slower than household incomes suggests improving affordability, while one that outpaces income growth signals worsening cost burden.