During the COVID-19 pandemic, millions of Americans relocated from the crowded North to the warmer, more spacious South. Remote work and rising urban housing costs drew renters and investment toward high-growth Sun Belt markets, nowhere more clearly than Florida, which became a symbol of this shift.
Five years later, the story has settled into a new balance. Along the Eastern Seaboard, two distinct markets now define the post-pandemic multifamily landscape: New York City, driven by scarcity, stability and a renewed office presence, and Florida, fueled by demographic momentum but increasingly constrained by supply and affordability. What many saw as a one-way migration has developed into an emerging investment corridor defined by an interconnected system where capital and demographic energy flow