If your rental has been sitting for two weeks or more with few inquiries, price is the most likely reason. When owners ask "why is my rental not renting," the answer usually traces back to rent set above what comparable units actually lease for, not to photos, copy, or condition.
Diagnose in order: price first, then photos, listing copy, showing friction, and condition. This guide walks through the six pricing mistakes Puget Sound owners make most, and the week-by-week fix.
A stale listing has a cause, and the causes are not equally likely. Work through them in this order, because each one explains fewer stale listings than the one before it:
Start at the top. Most owners start at the bottom, repainting and replacing fixtures while the actual problem is a rent figure $150 above the competition.
If you are earlier in the process, our full guide to renting out your house in Washington covers the entire leasing sequence from preparation through move-in.
Your mortgage payment is not a comp. Neither is your property tax bill, your insurance premium, or the rent you feel the property deserves after the kitchen remodel.
The market does not care what you need. Prospective residents are comparing your unit against every similar listing in the same school boundaries and commute radius, and they will rent the one that offers the most for the money.
If your costs require a rent the market will not pay, that is important financial information, but it is not a pricing strategy. Listing at a cost-based number just adds vacant weeks before the market wins anyway.
What your previous tenant paid tells you what the market looked like when they signed, filtered through however many years of modest renewals followed. It says little about what an identical unit leases for today.
Automated estimates have the opposite problem: they are built from broad data and do not know that your unit has no parking, or that the comp down the street includes a garage and a finished basement. Treat them as a starting range at best.
The reliable method is a true comparable analysis: recently leased units of similar size, condition, and location, adjusted for differences. We walk through that method step by step in our guide to setting market rent fairly and accurately.
Listing high "just to see" was always expensive. Under Washington's rent stabilization law it now cuts both ways, and precision matters more than ever.
Here is the legal backdrop. Under RCW 59.18.700, rent for most existing tenancies cannot increase at all during the first 12 months, and within any 12-month period increases are capped at 7 percent plus inflation or 10 percent, whichever is less. The Washington Department of Commerce publishes the exact figure each year; for calendar 2026 it is 9.683 percent.
The cap resets when a unit goes vacant, meaning you may set a new rent freely between tenancies. Any increase also requires at least 90 days written notice under RCW 59.18.140.
Two consequences for pricing at vacancy:
The at-vacancy listing price is the one moment you set the number freely. That is an argument for getting it right, not for guessing high or settling low.
Owners hold out for a higher rent without running the numbers on what the wait costs. Here is a round-number illustration.
Suppose comparable units lease at $2,400 per month and you list at $2,500, holding out for $100 more. Over a 12-month lease, winning that bet earns an extra $1,200. But at $2,400 per month, every vacant day costs you about $80.
If the higher price adds just three weeks of vacancy, you have lost roughly $1,680, more than the entire annual gain even if a tenant eventually pays your number. Two extra weeks costs about $1,120, nearly the whole premium.
The math almost never favors holding out. Small rent premiums are slow to earn back, and vacant weeks are expensive immediately.
Listings age in public. Prospective residents can see how long a unit has been on the market, and a listing that sits for weeks starts to carry a quiet stigma: people assume something is wrong with it, and the assumption compounds the longer it sits.
This is why the correction needs to come early. A meaningful price adjustment in week two, while the listing is still fresh, often re-triggers alerts for renters with saved searches and brings the unit in front of a price band of searchers who never saw it.
The same adjustment in week six fights stale-listing skepticism on top of the original pricing problem. Waiting does not preserve your negotiating position; it erodes it.
Sometimes the price is right and the listing still sits. Before cutting rent, check for friction that mimics a pricing problem:
Fix the friction first. It is cheaper than a rent cut and often resolves the "mystery" entirely.
If your rental is not renting, work the sequence on a calendar, not a feeling:
A price drop is usually the stronger move: it changes where your listing appears in filtered searches and reaches renters who never saw it, while a special only persuades people who already clicked.
That said, because future increases under the rent cap are calculated from the rent in the lease, a one-time concession that solves the vacancy while preserving the base rent can be worth considering. If the gap to market is real and ongoing, correct the price; if the unit is essentially at market and just needs momentum, a concession can make sense.
Big enough to register. Token cuts of $25 on a $2,400 listing change nothing about who sees it or how it compares. A meaningful correction is typically in the range of 3 to 5 percent, enough to move the listing into a different search band and re-trigger saved-search alerts.
One real correction beats three small ones, which read as a slow-motion decline and invite prospects to wait for the next cut.
Relist when the listing is several weeks old, the price and friction problems have been fixed, and activity still has not recovered, because at that point the listing's visible age is doing the damage. A relist works best when something has genuinely changed: new photos, rewritten copy, a corrected price, or completed condition work.
Relisting the identical unit at the identical price rarely fools anyone, including the platforms.
This article is general information for Washington rental property owners, not legal advice. For questions about your specific situation, consult a landlord-tenant attorney.
A vacant home is won or lost on speed and presentation, so we treat both as disciplines, not hopes. Every day a unit sits empty is income the owner never gets back, and the listing that responds first and looks best is the one that fills. Here is how we run it:
You set the goal, whether that leans toward top rent or fastest occupancy. We bring the market read, run the system, and report the numbers every week until the lease is signed.
Speed and presentation are not luck. They are how we shorten your vacancy.
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