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    Home»Economy & Policy»Housing & Jobs»Manhattan Q4 office leasing was strongest in 6 years
    Housing & Jobs

    Manhattan Q4 office leasing was strongest in 6 years

    Money MechanicsBy Money MechanicsJanuary 6, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Manhattan Q4 office leasing was strongest in 6 years
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    Crowds walk through midtown Manhattan on Oct. 16, 2025 in New York City.

    Spencer Platt | Getty Images

    A version of this article first appeared in the CNBC Property Play newsletter with Diana Olick. Property Play covers new and evolving opportunities for the real estate investor, from individuals to venture capitalists, private equity funds, family offices, institutional investors and large public companies. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox.

    Office leasing in Manhattan surged substantially higher in the fourth quarter of 2025, driven by continued return-to-office and increased tech hiring, especially for artificial intelligence.

    Leasing increased by more than 25% from the third quarter to 11.87 million square feet, according to Colliers. Demand was 16% higher year over year, close to 52% above the five-year quarterly average and 43.5% above the 10-year average.

    It was the island’s strongest single quarter of leasing since the fourth quarter of 2019, Colliers found. For all of 2025, leasing volume was the highest since 2019 and just 2.4% below 2019’s pre-pandemic total. 

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    “Manhattan’s strong performance in 2025 was not out of the blue, but was instead the continuation of a recovery that we began to feel in 2024,” said Frank Wallach, executive managing director for New York research and business development at Colliers.

    “Demand in 2025 was a continuation of that trend, though greatly accelerated by factors such as tenant flight to quality to attract and retain talent, return-to-office trend implementation, sizeable expansions by major tenants – such as Amazon, NYU and BlackRock – and the emerging AI industry leasing space throughout Manhattan,” he said.

    Wallach also noted an uptick in demand from various industries, including finance, tech, legal, education, medical nonprofit and government. 

    The supply of available office space is still much higher, up nearly 37%, than it was at the start of the pandemic in March 2020, but much lower than the post-pandemic peak in February 2024, according to Colliers. As demand rises, the oversupply is slowly being absorbed, and Manhattan now has the tightest supply since November 2020.

    Tighter supply is helping to finally boost rents. Manhattan’s average asking rent was 1.5% higher in Q4 than the previous quarter and, at $76 per square foot, was Manhattan’s highest average since October 2020, Colliers found. For the highest level, so-called Class A product, which is newer construction, the average asking rent increased 1.6% to $83 per square foot, Colliers said. 

    Class B office product is older but tends to be in good locations. It is now seeing landlords invest in upgrades and renovations as demand increases. That helped rents in Q4 grow 1.1% to a record high of $68.61 per square foot, according to Colliers. 

    There continues to be a flight to quality, with 69% of all leased space in four- and five-star buildings, up from 66% in 2024, according to a separate report from CoStar. It found that every one of the 15 largest office leases signed during the year took place in four- or five-star properties. For example, Deloitte’s 800,000-square-foot commitment at 70 Hudson Yards, a premiere Manhattan office building, was the largest lease of the year.

    Quarterly net absorption overall, which is a measure of how much physical space tenants are actually occupying versus how much space they’re leaving, was positive by close to 4 million square feet, according to the Colliers report. For all of 2025, it was positive by 15.56 million square feet, including 2.14 million square feet of space removed from the market for planned conversion to nonoffice use. 

    “Critically, the recovery and strong demand in 2025 was also fostered by millions of square feet of building conversions to nonoffice use, spurring a wave of leasing by tenants relocating out of those buildings,” said Wallach.

    Despite the improvement in the market, there is still a lot more surplus office supply than there was before the pandemic. 

    “Despite the increased tenant demand and tightening availability in 2025, the Manhattan office market has only shed half of its post-pandemic excess available supply. The healthy demand recorded in 2025 and conversions of underutilized office assets must, therefore, continue in 2026 and 2027,” Wallach said.



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