Commercial Investors Plan to Buy More in 2026: Dallas Leads the Charge

Downtown skyline and campus scene representing growing real estate markets

A fresh CBRE survey has revealed a powerful trend shaping 2026: an overwhelming majority of commercial real estate investors across the country expect to buy more property this year. Investor confidence is quietly — but steadily — rebounding. Markets are stabilizing, capital is loosening, and long‑term strategic buying is back on the menu.

Dallas has secured its place once again as the most attractive commercial real estate market in the United States — marking its fifth consecutive year at the top.

Trailing close behind are powerhouse metros such as Atlanta and San Francisco, followed by high‑momentum cities including Miami, Charlotte, Raleigh‑Durham, Nashville, Tampa, Seattle, and New York City. These markets continue to draw serious investor attention as they experience robust population flows, economic expansion, and energetic development pipelines.

Why These Markets Are Winning in 2026

While the survey’s summary highlights do not give the full breakdown, several undeniable forces are pushing these cities into the spotlight:

  • Surging corporate relocations that stimulate fresh demand.
  • Growing tech, finance, and logistics ecosystems.
  • Population migration toward business‑friendly metros.
  • More attractive cap rates than many legacy coastal hubs.

Take Atlanta, for example — its booming tech footprint and powerful logistics infrastructure are propelling both office and industrial sectors. Meanwhile, Florida favorites like Miami and Tampa continue to shine as investor magnets, thanks to strong economic fundamentals and global appeal.

What This Means for Real Estate Professionals

Whether you’re a seasoned investor, an active broker, or a rising professional ready to break into the industry, 2026 is shaping up to be rich with opportunity. Expanding markets mean more clients, more transactions, more listings, and a growing demand for sharply trained talent.

That’s why real estate education — and ongoing professional development — plays a critical role in staying competitive and credible in a rapidly shifting marketplace.

Institutions like Cameron Academy continue to empower both new and established professionals across Florida and the nation with licensing programs, continuing education, and career‑focused training tailored for modern industry needs.

Source

Full article available at The Baltimore Sun: Survey: Most commercial real estate investors plan to buy more this year

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