Home Reports Office Lease Concessions Like Free Rent and Tenant-Improvement Allowances Decline for First...

Office Lease Concessions Like Free Rent and Tenant-Improvement Allowances Decline for First Time in 4 Years

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Photo: CBRE

BOSTON–Office-leasing concessions – like months of free rent – began to decline in the first half of this year and may be near a peak, according to a new report from CBRE.

After four straight years of increases, the average length of free rent provided in new office leases declined in the first half of this year to 9.0 months from 9.6 months in 2023.

Similarly, the average tenant-improvement allowance – money that building owners provide occupiers to fit out their space – declined by nearly 3% to $94.69 per sq. ft. in this year’s first half from $97.55 in 2023. That decline, as with the decline in free rent, came after four years of gains.

CBRE’s findings came from its analysis of 3,900 lease transactions in 12 major U.S. markets since 2019, including 393 so far this year.

“This finding is an encouraging sign of better momentum in the market,” said Mike Watts, CBRE’s Americas President of Investor Leasing. “But it does not mean that the office market has fully turned a corner. Part of the pullback in concessions likely can be attributed to financially strapped building owners reining in previously generous allotments of TI and free rent.”

When factored into the cost of a lease, such concessions contribute to a difference between what building owners ask in rent for a given space and the lesser amount the occupier actually pays, called effective rent. Rising concessions have depressed effective rent for much of the past four years.

That influence is greater in lower-tier buildings, which often need to provide more concessions to entice tenants than top-tier buildings. CBRE’s analysis found that effective rents for lower-tier buildings declined by 1.2% since last year, while effective rents for top-tier buildings increased by 2.4%.

“We’re seeing some building owners turning to less costly concessions to attract tenants,” said Jessica Morin, CBRE Director of Americas Office Research. “That can include providing shared services such as conference rooms by reservation, or more flexible terms for expansion or contraction of their office space. Another option that many building owners are likely to consider is lowering their base rent.”

Base rent is the starting rent for the first year of a lease’s term.

The 12 markets in CBRE’s analysis are Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas/Fort Worth, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Manhattan, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Seattle and Washington, D.C.