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Real estate professionals report renters, even singles, now demand two or three-bedroom units for home offices and side businesses
The studio apartment and one-bedroom rental may be going the way of the phone booth. Across residential markets, demand is shifting decisively toward larger units as remote work, side businesses, and evolving lifestyle needs redefine what renters consider adequate living space.
“Studios are a thing of the past,” says Larry Gotcher, co-owner of Resource Realty Group in Ann Arbor, Michigan. “Even one-bedrooms are really kind of hard. Most people want at least two or more bedrooms, even in apartments.”
The shift reflects a fundamental change in how Americans use residential space. What was once simply a place to sleep and store belongings has become a multi-functional environment accommodating work, entrepreneurship, storage, and lifestyle flexibility.
The Home Office Is Non-Negotiable
The driving factor behind larger unit demand is straightforward: remote and hybrid work arrangements have made dedicated workspace essential rather than optional.
“Even if it’s a single person, they tend to want privacy and they’ll pay for a second bedroom,” Gotcher explains. “Number one, they can have their home office or storage. Everybody usually has a side hustle, but maybe they have a small business running out of their place on top of their full time job.”
This isn’t limited to high-income professionals. The trend spans income brackets as gig economy participation, remote work options, and entrepreneurship have become normalized across employment sectors.
Three Bedrooms Emerging as the Sweet Spot
While two-bedroom units meet basic needs, three-bedroom apartments are increasingly viewed as optimal.
“Three bedrooms is kind of like the sweet spot,” Gotcher notes. “Let’s say you do have a family, you have that extra or spare bedroom. Or you do have a family and just need more space.”
The logic extends beyond families. Single renters and couples are choosing three-bedroom units to separate work, living, and storage functions, effectively creating dedicated zones within their rental homes.
Gotcher adds that storage needs have expanded significantly. “People collect more stuff now than they used to. Everybody wants either a basement or a garage or both.”
Investors Playing Catch-Up
The demand shift creates challenges for property owners and developers whose existing inventory skews toward smaller units built for pre-pandemic living patterns.
Resource Realty Group, which specializes in income-producing residential properties and closes $100-150 million annually in commercial transactions, reports that apartment complexes are currently the strongest performing asset class in their market.
However, buildings heavy on studios and one-bedrooms face weakening demand and potential conversion pressure. Some investors are exploring unit combination strategies, merging adjacent smaller units into larger configurations to match current tenant preferences.
The firm cites an example where modest renovations converting one-bedroom units to two-bedrooms through closet additions and layout modifications generated substantial return on investment, significantly increasing both occupancy rates and rental income.
Amenities Matter More Than Ever
Beyond bedroom count, renters are prioritizing features that support their expanded use of residential space.
“People want multiple baths,” Gotcher observes. Carports or garages, previously considered luxury amenities in many apartment markets, are becoming baseline expectations as renters accumulate vehicles, recreational equipment, and business inventory.
Single-family home features are increasingly expected in apartment living. Renters want privacy, outdoor access, and separation from neighbors, preferences that challenge traditional high-density apartment design.
Market Implications
For renters, the shift toward larger units comes with affordability trade-offs. Two and three-bedroom apartments command premium pricing, potentially forcing difficult choices between adequate space and budget constraints.
Developers face decisions about new construction priorities. Building codes, zoning regulations, and construction costs make larger units more expensive to develop, but tenant demand may make smaller configurations increasingly difficult to lease at viable rates.
The long-term question is whether this represents a permanent shift or a pandemic-influenced trend that will moderate as office work returns. Current indicators suggest the former, remote work flexibility has become an expected employment benefit, and side businesses launched during pandemic years show little sign of disappearing.
As residential real estate adapts to how people actually live and work in 2026, the studio apartment’s reign as an affordable entry point into urban living may be ending, replaced by a market where adequate space means room to both live and earn a living.
