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St. Pete Home Guide

Best St. Pete Neighborhoods for Rental Property

Looking for the best St. Petersburg, FL neighborhoods for rental property? Luke Salm breaks down cap rates, rents, flood risk, and top picks for 2026 investors.

By Luke Salmยท7 min readยทUpdated May 16, 2026

The best St. Petersburg, Florida neighborhoods for rental property in 2026 are Allendale, Historic Kenwood, and Old Northeast โ€” each for different reasons and different investor profiles. Allendale and Kenwood deliver the strongest cash-flow potential for long-term landlords, while Old Northeast and Snell Isle attract premium tenants willing to pay top-of-market rents. Before you buy anything, you need to underwrite flood insurance costs, because post-Hurricane Helene rate increases have quietly killed the cash flow on dozens of deals that looked great on paper.

Why St. Pete Still Makes Sense for Rental Investors

St. Petersburg's rental market remained tight through early 2026. Vacancy rates in stabilized rental properties across the city hover around 4โ€“6%, per local property management data, and median asking rents for a 3-bedroom single-family home range from $2,100 in Central St. Pete to $3,400+ in Old Northeast and Snell Isle.

The city's population base is diversifying โ€” USF St. Pete downtown campus, the emerging innovation corridor near Tropicana Field's redevelopment zone, and sustained in-migration from high-cost metros keep renter demand healthy. I'm still seeing multiple qualified applications within days of listing a well-priced rental unit.

The catch: purchase prices remain elevated. The median sale price for a St. Pete single-family home was approximately $430,000 in Q1 2026, per Stellar MLS data, which means penciling a positive-cash-flow deal requires either a significant down payment, a value-add play, or targeting the right neighborhoods.

Neighborhood-by-Neighborhood Breakdown

Here's how the main investor-relevant neighborhoods stack up as of mid-2026:

| Neighborhood | Median Home Price | Typical 3BR Rent | Est. Gross Yield | Flood Risk | Best For | |---|---|---|---|---|---| | Allendale | $285,000 | $2,050โ€“$2,300 | 7โ€“8% | Low (X zone mostly) | Cash flow, buy-and-hold | | Historic Kenwood | $340,000 | $2,200โ€“$2,500 | 7โ€“8% | Low to moderate | Value-add, appreciation | | Old Northeast | $620,000 | $3,100โ€“$3,500 | 5.5โ€“6% | Moderate (some AE) | Premium tenants, appreciation | | Shore Acres | $480,000 | $2,600โ€“$3,000 | 6โ€“6.5% | High (AE zone) | Appreciation, but watch insurance | | Snell Isle | $900,000+ | $4,000โ€“$5,500 | 5โ€“5.5% | High (AE/VE) | Luxury long-term holds only |

Based on Stellar MLS Q1 2026 data and active rental listings. Verify current conditions before underwriting.

Allendale: The Cash-Flow Workhorse

Allendale sits in ZIP code 33710 in west-central St. Pete, and it's the neighborhood I point most first-time investors toward when they ask where the numbers actually work. Homes here are solidly built 1950sโ€“1970s concrete block, which keeps maintenance costs manageable. Entry prices in the $260,000โ€“$320,000 range allow a 25% down payment investor to generate meaningful monthly cash flow after PITI and management fees.

Most of Allendale falls in FEMA Flood Zone X โ€” meaning no mandatory flood insurance requirement โ€” which is a meaningful cost advantage over waterfront neighborhoods. That single factor can be worth $3,000โ€“$6,000/year in saved premiums. See the which St. Pete neighborhoods don't need flood insurance page for the full map breakdown.

Renter demand is driven by proximity to Tyrone Square, easy access to I-275, and 30-minute commutes to both downtown St. Pete and the beaches. Tenant quality is strong in the workforce/professional segment.

Historic Kenwood: Value-Add and Appreciation

Historic Kenwood is where I'd look if you want both a reasonable yield and real appreciation upside. The neighborhood's bungalow stock attracts tenants who genuinely love where they live โ€” lower turnover, less vacancy, fewer headaches.

The value-add angle here is real. Unrenovated bungalows still trade in the $310,000โ€“$360,000 range. Put $40,000โ€“$60,000 into the kitchen, baths, and systems, and you can push rents to $2,400โ€“$2,600/month while also lifting ARV toward $450,000+. That's a forced-equity play with a rental income floor โ€” a structure I like in a market where purchase prices are still elevated.

Flood risk is low to moderate depending on the specific block. Run the address through FEMA's flood map service center before you close.

Old Northeast: Premium Tenants, Compressed Yields

Old Northeast (ZIP 33704) is one of the most desirable rental addresses in the city. Walking distance to Coffee Pot Bayou, the Pier, and downtown St. Pete means tenants pay a premium โ€” and stay. I've seen well-maintained 3-bedroom homes rent for $3,200โ€“$3,500/month without breaking a sweat.

The yield math is tighter. Median home prices north of $600,000 mean your gross yield lands around 5.5โ€“6%, and your cap rate after expenses is closer to 4โ€“4.5%. This is an appreciation and quality-of-tenant play, not a pure cash-flow play. If you're building a long-term portfolio and prioritize stability over maximum yield, Old Northeast makes sense.

Some blocks in Old Northeast sit in FEMA AE flood zones, particularly closer to Coffee Pot Bayou and Tampa Bay. Always check the specific parcel. The flood insurance cost in St. Petersburg page breaks down what AE zone coverage actually costs post-Helene.

Shore Acres and Snell Isle: Waterfront Math Is Harder Now

I want to be straight with you about Shore Acres and Snell Isle: both are excellent neighborhoods with strong tenant demand, but the post-Hurricane Helene flood insurance environment has fundamentally changed the investment math.

Shore Acres is almost entirely in FEMA AE flood zones. Under FEMA's Risk Rating 2.0 methodology, flood insurance premiums on older Shore Acres homes regularly run $4,000โ€“$9,000 annually โ€” and some owners have seen quotes north of $12,000 for structures with lower base flood elevations. That cost lands entirely on your NOI as a landlord, because tenants don't care about your insurance bill when setting their rent budget.

When I sold a place in Snell Isle last year, the seller's flood insurance renewal quote was $8,400/year. That's $700/month off your cash flow before you've paid the mortgage. Models that ignored that number looked great; models that included it did not.

If you're considering either neighborhood, read the flood insurance after Hurricane Helene page and the specific is Shore Acres a good investment analysis I put together.

What to Underwrite Before You Buy Any St. Pete Rental

Whether you're buying in Allendale or Snell Isle, run these numbers before you make an offer:

  1. Flood insurance quote โ€” Get an actual quote from a licensed Florida agent, not an estimate. Premiums vary by elevation certificate, foundation type, and structure age.
  2. Property tax โ€” Pinellas County Property Appraiser records show assessed values; non-homestead investment properties are taxed at full assessed value with no Save Our Homes cap. Budget 1.8โ€“2.1% of purchase price annually.
  3. Insurance (non-flood) โ€” Wind and homeowners insurance in Pinellas County has spiked post-Helene. Add $3,000โ€“$6,000/year for a typical SFR.
  4. Management fees โ€” 8โ€“10% of gross rent if you're using a property manager.
  5. CapEx reserve โ€” Budget 5โ€“10% of gross rent for repairs, vacancy, and capital expenditures.
  6. Market rent verification โ€” Pull actual comparable leases from Stellar MLS, not Zestimate rent estimates.

The deals that look best on a pro forma are often the ones that collapse when you add real insurance numbers. Don't let that be you.

The Bottom Line for St. Pete Rental Investors in 2026

St. Petersburg remains a fundamentally sound rental market โ€” population growth, strong employment diversity, and persistent undersupply of quality rental housing all support long-term demand. The best opportunities in 2026 are in Allendale for cash flow and Historic Kenwood for value-add, with Old Northeast for investors prioritizing tenant quality and long-term appreciation over immediate yield.

Avoid letting elevated purchase prices push you into flood-risk properties without fully pricing that insurance cost into your underwriting. The numbers have to work on day one, not just in an optimistic scenario.

If you want a straight conversation about specific addresses, rental comps, or how a particular deal pencils out, reach out directly. That's what I'm here for.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Real questions Luke gets from buyers and sellers in this area.

Allendale and Historic Kenwood consistently offer the strongest gross rental yields for long-term rentals in St. Pete, with median home prices in the $280,000โ€“$370,000 range and rents that support 7โ€“8% gross yields in some cases. Shore Acres and Old Northeast attract higher-income tenants but come with higher purchase prices that compress yields closer to 5โ€“6%.
Luke Salm, licensed Florida real estate agent at RE/MAX CHAMPIONS serving Tampa Bay

Thinking about a move in St. Pete?

I'm Luke. I live in Shore Acres, I sell across Tampa Bay, and I'm here to help when you're ready.

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