U.S. office buildings are selling for up to 90% off

Image Credit: Skynet

Curated by Paul Helmick

Commercial office values have reset sharply as refinancing costs rise and demand stays weak, forcing distressed sales at steep discounts.

Audit your real-estate exposure, stress-test debt maturities, and align space needs to hybrid work before you renew, refinance, or relocate.

Paul’s Perspective:

The office market’s repricing isn’t just a real-estate story; it’s a capital-structure and operating-cost story for any company with leased space, owned buildings, or landlord exposure.

Leaders need to treat facilities like a portfolio: match space to how work actually happens, and match financing timelines to realistic occupancy and cash-flow assumptions.

The opportunity is leverage—tenants can negotiate harder, upgrade space, or right-size footprints. The risk is getting trapped in the wrong lease term, location, or refinance window while values and lenders stay volatile.


Key Points in Article:

  • Deep discounts are most common in older, commodity buildings with high vacancy and large near-term loan maturities.
  • Higher interest rates and tighter bank lending standards are turning many 2024–2026 refinancings into forced sales or equity write-downs.
  • Flight-to-quality is widening the gap: newer, amenity-rich buildings hold up better while weaker assets face cash-flow shortfalls.
  • Lease decisions now have balance-sheet consequences; long commitments can lock in excess space and limit flexibility during a multi-year reset.

Strategic Actions:

  1. Inventory all leased and owned office locations, costs, and renewal dates.
  2. Model multiple occupancy scenarios based on hybrid work patterns and hiring plans.
  3. Stress-test leases and debt against higher rates, lower utilization, and slower revenue growth.
  4. Prioritize decisions by time sensitivity: near-term renewals and maturities first.
  5. Renegotiate with data: target rent reductions, tenant-improvement packages, and flexible terms.
  6. Evaluate consolidation, subleasing, or relocation where the economics justify it.
  7. Set governance for space planning so HR, finance, and operations stay aligned.

Dive deeper > Full Story:


The Bottom Line:

  • Commercial office values have reset sharply as refinancing costs rise and demand stays weak, forcing distressed sales at steep discounts.
  • Audit your real-estate exposure, stress-test debt maturities, and align space needs to hybrid work before you renew, refinance, or relocate.

Ready to Explore More?

If you’re weighing renewals, consolidations, or a refinance window, we can help you model the scenarios and negotiate a plan that fits your operating reality. Reply if you want a quick working session to map options and next steps.