By: Keycrew.co
June 30, 2026
Is Sioux Falls, South Dakota a Good Place to Invest in Rental Property Right Now?
Investors evaluating secondary and tertiary Midwest markets for multifamily capital deployment tend to screen on population size first. By that measure, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, with a metro population of approximately 300,000, typically does not make the cut. What that screen misses is a market that has produced consistent rent growth for four decades, near-zero bad debt across its rental stock, and development economics that are difficult to replicate in larger metros.
The instinct to dismiss smaller markets based on headline population figures has become more expensive in recent years as Sun Belt and Southern markets that cleared those screens have worked through significant oversupply and stalling absorption. Sioux Falls, and the Midwest, have not seen those types of large-scale issues that dramatically reduce values.
What the Fundamentals Actually ShowTwo and a half percent annual rent growth, sustained over four decades, does not generate headlines. For investors evaluating multifamily on a full cycle basis rather than peak-to-peak, that consistency matters more than the headline growth figures that characterized Phoenix or Austin in 2021 and 2022.
The bad debt picture is equally striking. In distressed urban markets, bad debt can run 30 to 40 percent of gross potential rent in underperforming assets. Across the Sioux Falls workforce housing market, operators report bad debt running at or near zero. The rare missed payment resolves within a month. There are no extended delinquency cycles and no prolonged eviction timelines.
Dusten Hendrickson, a Sioux Falls-based apartment developer who has delivered more than 1,300 units in the market over nearly two decades, puts it plainly. “There’s almost no bad debt here. People feel like they should pay the rent. That’s not something you can say about a lot of markets.”
The city sits at the intersection of I-29 and I-90, a factor Hendrickson considers structurally important. “You have to be on an interstate these days. If you’re off the highway, it’s very hard to have growth. Sioux Falls is on two major interstates and it’s close to Minneapolis, Omaha, and Des Moines.”
The Misconceptions That Keep Capital OutThree assumptions consistently keep outside capital from looking seriously at this market.
The first is population size. The Sioux Falls MSA at 300,000 reads as sub-institutional to most screening models. The more relevant number is the city’s stated planning target of 500,000 residents, supported by four decades of uninterrupted population growth. Operators who build in the path of that expansion today own assets that will be closer to the urban core in ten years than they are now.
The second is wealth. Sioux Falls is the financial trust capital of the United States. South Dakota trust law allows perpetual trusts, an advantage no other state offers, which has drawn a significant concentration of financial firms and high-net-worth individuals to the market. The wealth does not announce itself the way it does in coastal metros. “People here go out of their way to buy a car that fits in with everyone else’s,” Hendrickson notes. “If they have money, they don’t show it off. But the wealth is here.”
The third is education. The assumption that a market of this size skews toward agricultural or blue-collar employment is not consistent with the data. The workforce is highly educated, income levels are above what the market’s size would suggest, and the civic culture around financial obligations is unusually strong.
The Development EconomicsIn Sioux Falls, a new ground-up workforce housing unit can be built for approximately $160,000 and commands $1,200 to $1,500 per month in rent. Those numbers produce a cost basis and rent coverage ratio that is difficult to achieve in primary markets or in the Sun Belt metros that attracted the most development capital in recent years.
South Dakota is a right-to-work state with no income tax, landlord-friendly statute, and minimal permitting friction relative to comparable markets. For developers and investors accustomed to regulatory complexity in other markets, the operational environment is a material advantage.
Mailbox Money Real Estate has been developing ground-up workforce housing in Sioux Falls and surrounding Midwest markets across that period. Projects in the market have refinanced ahead of underwritten timelines, in some cases at three years against a projected five, and economic occupancy has consistently outperformed initial models. A full overview of completed projects is available at mailboxmoneyre.com/portfolio.
Why the Market Deserves a Second LookSioux Falls is not without risk. The cold winters are real. The population base, while growing, is not large by institutional standards. Investors who need liquidity or are targeting headline appreciation in a short window will find better-suited markets elsewhere.
For investors evaluating where to place multifamily capital for stable, predictable performance over a full cycle, the combination of consistent rent growth, near-zero bad debt, below-replacement-cost construction economics, and a landlord-friendly regulatory environment makes Sioux Falls worth examining more carefully than most institutional screens currently allow.
About Mailbox Money Real Estate: Mailbox Money Real Estate is a ground-up apartment developer focused on workforce housing in secondary and tertiary Midwest markets, with operations concentrated in Sioux Falls, SD and surrounding areas.
This article is based on information provided by the expert source cited above. It is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or real estate advice. Readers should conduct their own research and consult qualified professionals before making any real estate or financial decisions.
Disclosure: Individuals or companies mentioned may have a commercial relationship with KeyCrew.
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