However, owners of top-tier buildings and owners of lower-tier buildings are cutting back on concessions for different reasons
June 6, 2025 — The enticements that companies receive to sign new office leases declined last year, on average, for the first time since global commercial real estate services and investment firm CBRE began tracking concessions in 2019, according to a recent report.
This decline in concessions, which include months of free rent as well as money provided by landlords for companies to build out the interior of their offices, influences the rent that building owners can charge for their properties.
Owners of top-tier buildings, which generally are considered Class A and A+, are reducing concessions because healthy demand for and limited supply of top-quality buildings has lessened the need for such enticements. Many of those owners also raised the first-year base rents for their top-tier properties.
Meanwhile, demand isn’t as strong for lower-tier Class B and C buildings, and many of those landlords can’t continue to provide pricey concessions. Instead, many now are lowering their base rents to attract tenants.
A CBRE analysis found that the amount of free rent provided in new leases, averaged across top-tier and lower-tier buildings, declined to 8.9 months in 2024 from the peak of 9.6 months in 2023. Meanwhile, the average tenant-improvement allowance dropped to $87.51 per sq. ft. in 2024 from $97.55 in 2023. Despite this decline, concessions still are 30% higher than before the pandemic. CBRE’s analysis covered 4,350 new leases in 12 U.S. markets from 2019 to 2024.
The decrease in concessions last year is another sign of stabilization and nascent recovery in the office market. But this recovery isn’t uniform. The market is further bifurcating between top-tier buildings and lower-tier buildings.
Mike Watts, CBRE President of Americas Investor Leasing
That divergence is reflected in net effective rents, which discount building owners’ cost of providing concessions. Effective rents for top-tier buildings increased by 5.2% in 2024, partly because those landlords have cut concessions and partly because demand has allowed many to raise their base rents.
Year | Average Tenant-Improvement Allowance Per Sq. Ft. | Average Months of Free Rent |
2019 | $67.37 | 6.7 |
2020 | $68.34 | 6.8 |
2021 | $77.60 | 8.3 |
2022 | $84.32 | 8.5 |
2023 | $97.55 | 9.6 |
2024 | $87.51 | 8.9 |
Meanwhile, effective rents for lower-tier buildings declined by 1.2%, partly because many have lowered their base rents. That gap between top-tier and lower-tier net effective rents of 6.4 percentage points was wider last year than in 2023 (3.3 ppts).
Owners of top-tier properties are benefiting from strong demand for their spaces and a curtailed construction pipeline, allowing them to offer fewer concessions than in the past to attract tenants.
Jessica Morin, CBRE’s Americas Head of Office Research
See the Top-Tier Office Rents Continue to Rise, While Lower-Tier Rents Fall report at CBRE.