NIC Notes

Insights in Seniors Housing & Care

Market Trends  |  NIC MAP Vision  |  Skilled Nursing

Skilled Nursing Occupancy Continued Slow Recovery in December

By: Bill Kauffman  |  March 03, 2022

“The Omicron variant has challenged the skilled nursing recovery given the staffing shortages around the country as skilled nursing properties are unable to hire enough staff to admit more residents.” - Bill Kauffman NIC MAP® data, powered by NIC MAP Vision, released its latest Skilled Nursing Monthly Report on March 3, 2022. The report includes key monthly data points from January 2012 through December 2021.

Market Trends  |  NIC MAP Vision  |  Senior Housing

Asking Rates Grow: Takeaways from 4Q2021 NIC MAP Actual Rates Report

By: Anne Standish  |  March 01, 2022

Curious about what happened with asking rates and actual rate discounting in 2021 or how move-in patterns differed by care segment? Then read on for key takeaways from the recently released 4Q2021 NIC MAP® Seniors Housing Actual Rates Report, available to NIC MAP® subscribers.

CCRC  |  Market Trends  |  Senior Housing  |  Skilled Nursing

CCRC Care Segment Performance 4Q 2021

By: Lana Peck  |  February 17, 2022

The following analysis examines current conditions and year-over-year changes in inventory, occupancy, and same-store asking rent growth—by care segments within entrance fee CCRCs compared to rental CCRCs—to focus a lens on the relative performance of care segments within CCRCs during the fourth quarter of 2021. Overall CCRC occupancy by profit status and CCRC vs. non-CCRC occupancy differences by care segment will also be addressed.

Business Environment  |  Market Trends  |  Senior Housing

Senior Living Valuations: What’s the Outlook?

By: NIC  |  February 15, 2022

Stakeholders at 2021 NIC Fall Conference weigh in on the latest trends. Considering the dramatic impact of the pandemic on senior housing and care, it’s surprising how well valuations have held up over the last two years. Investors like what they see. The worst seems to be over as the Omicron variant subsides. Occupancy is recovering. Demand is projected to only get stronger from pent-up demand in the near-term and demographic trends in the longer term.

-->