Is rent still too damn high? Renters are increasingly scrambling to find the cash to keep a roof over their heads.

As of October, only 13 out of the top 100 largest U.S. metro areas have more than a third of their apartment listings priced below $1,000 a month, according to a new report from real estate marketplace site Zillow. Most of those are in the Midwest and the South.

We’re in the South. How does Florida rank?

Hint: None of those 13 metro areas are here.

Florida metro area rents

According to Zillow’s findings, the percentage of multifamily rentals under $1,000 in these Florida metro areas are:

Note that these are what Zillow lists as larger metro areas. Rent may be cheaper in smaller or more rural areas.

Best time to buy a home in Florida? Lower prices, more listings expected soon

How does Florida rank for apartment rentals?

Forget the $1,000. What about shares of affordable apartments where rent costs less than 30% of the median household income? We’re a little better there, with 88.1% of the apartment rentals in Jacksonville fitting the bill.

It still doesn’t come in till No. 34 out of the 100 metro areas listed, though, and Miami is at the very bottom with only 30.9% of that areas’s listings in the “affordable” range.

Share of affordable apartments, per Zillow:

What is Florida charging for room rents?

Renting a room in an apartment or larger home can be a less-expensive way to go, with a median list rent for less than $1,000 a month in 86 of the largest metro areas Zillow looked at.

Here’s the median rent for a single room in these Florida markets, according to Zillow:

This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union: Rents in Florida among highest in US, but not everywhere