While rents in six metro-area suburbs are rising faster than in Denver proper at present, prices are still going up in most city neighborhoods, and costs remain on the high side. Median rent for a two-bedroom apartment in Denver's tenth-most-expensive neighborhood exceeds $1,600, and that's just over half the nearly $3,000 tag in the part of the city at the top of the scale.
As these numbers suggest, the latest report from RentJungle.com shows a wide range of prices from place to place within Denver's limits.
Last month, the average two-bedroom rent within the city was $1,801. Moreover, that price represented a 2.9 percent increase over the prior six months. The result was a cost increase that averaged out to $50 per month across all of Denver's neighborhoods.
Here are the latest median rents for a two-bedroom apartment in the ten most expensive Denver neighborhoods, ranked in descending order.
Number 10: City Park
Median rent for a two-bedroom apartment: $1,633
Number 9: Jefferson Park
Median rent for a two-bedroom apartment: $1,739
Number 8: Washington Park
Median rent for a two-bedroom apartment: $1,774
Number 7: Baker
Median rent for a two-bedroom apartment: $1,879
Number 6: Five Points
Median rent for a two-bedroom apartment: $1,902
Continue to see the five Denver neighborhoods with the most expensive rent for a two-bedroom apartment right now.
Number 5: Stapleton
Median rent for a two-bedroom apartment: $1,903
Number 4: Highland
Median rent for a two-bedroom apartment: $1,907
Number 3: LoDo
Median rent for a two-bedroom apartment: $1,938
Number 2: Cherry Creek
Median rent for a two-bedroom apartment: $2,849
Number 1: Golden Triangle
Median rent for a two-bedroom apartment: $2,979