Tampa bay skyline

Tampa Bay’s Office Market Closes 2025 with Power Moves and Rising Demand

If you’ve been wondering whether the Tampa Bay office market still has momentum after the last few years of national uncertainty, JLL’s newest Q4 2025 analysis has a clear answer: absolutely. Tampa Bay just wrapped its strongest performance since before the pandemic, marking one of the most impressive post‑recovery surges in the country.

The report — published by global real estate leader JLL and highlighted by the St. Pete Catalyst — reveals a powerful combination of rising demand, shrinking inventory, and firming rents. While many U.S. cities continue battling stubborn vacancies, Tampa Bay appears to be accelerating.

Record Absorption, Falling Vacancy & a Tightening Market

The headline number is stunning: Tampa Bay recorded 600,400 square feet of positive net absorption in 2025 — the highest total since 2016. This pushed the overall vacancy rate down 130 basis points to 15.7%.

Momentum snowballed throughout the year, with more than 150,000 square feet absorbed in each of the final three quarters. This performance places Tampa Bay among the top U.S. office markets for year‑end absorption.

The Plot Twist: Inventory Is Shrinking

Even though developers delivered 176,400 square feet of new office product, the region’s total inventory actually declined by more than 750,000 square feet in 2025. Older buildings were demolished or converted, tightening the pipeline and boosting competition for modern space.

By year’s end, total available space had dipped below 8.6 million square feet, reflecting a significant year‑over‑year contraction.

Big Leases Set the Stage for 2026

Two major commitments dominated headlines: Fisher Investments leased 322,000 square feet at Renaissance Office Park, while GEICO claimed 189,000 square feet at Corporate Oaks Office Park.

Neither tenant has fully occupied their space yet — meaning early 2026 could show even stronger absorption numbers.

Flight to Quality Reshapes the Region

Across Tampa CBD, Westshore, and downtown St. Pete, tenants continue gravitating toward modern, amenity‑rich offices. Trophy and Class A vacancy fell to 14.7% — the strongest since 2022 — with six of seven submarkets posting year‑over‑year improvements.

Absorption in top‑tier buildings reached roughly 368,000 square feet, driving vacancy down to just 12.9%. Rents followed, rising 7.1% to an average of $45.46 per square foot.

What It Means for Tenants, Investors & Professionals

Tenants are increasingly willing to pay premium rates for newer buildings, better amenities, and stronger locations. With downtown St. Pete offering limited inventory, competition is expected to sharpen.

For investors and landlords, rising rents and shrinking supply signal a long‑awaited swing toward leverage.

Looking Ahead: Rising Confidence in 2026

JLL’s outlook for 2026 is cautiously optimistic. With economic diversity, strong employers, and limited new construction, Tampa Bay’s office market seems poised for continued strength — and potentially higher rents.

Put simply, Tampa Bay isn’t just recovering — it’s redefining its trajectory.

Explore the full report and analysis at the original source: Read the complete St. Pete Catalyst article.

If this momentum inspires you to elevate your real estate career, consider sharpening your skills with Cameron Academy — Florida’s trusted hub for professional licensing education.

More Articles

Getting licensed or staying ahead in your career can be a journey—but it doesn’t have to be overwhelming. Grab your favorite coffee or tea, take a moment to relax, and browse through our articles. Whether you’re just starting out or renewing your expertise, we’ve got tips, insights, and advice to keep you moving forward. Here’s to your success—one sip and one step at a time!

Mortgage Rates Drop for the Holidays, but Homebuyers Aren’t Budging

The average 30-year mortgage rate slipped to 6.18% just before Christmas, offering a small break from last year’s higher levels. Yet despite the improvement, mortgage applications for purchases and refinances have fallen to a three‑month low as buyers remain cautious. With mixed rate movements, fluctuating Treasury yields, and affordability challenges still weighing on first‑time buyers, the market is showing signs of stability but not momentum. Real estate professionals who stay informed on these shifting conditions will be best positioned to guide clients in 2026.

Premium U.S. CRE Soars as Smaller Markets Slide: A New Two‑Tier Reality Takes Hold

New CoStar data shows a widening split in the U.S. commercial real estate market, with high-value office towers, industrial hubs and major retail assets posting steady gains while smaller properties in secondary markets continue to lose ground. Premium assets logged their sixth straight monthly price increase in November, boosted by falling interest rates and limited new construction, while lower‑tier properties saw continued price declines and weakening demand.

Microsoft’s New Licensing Overhaul Hits Healthcare Budgets: What Leaders Must Prepare For Now

Microsoft has eliminated long‑standing volume discounts on cloud services like Microsoft 365, Power BI, Intune and Defender, meaning healthcare organizations will soon pay the same price per seat whether they purchase 100 or 10,000 licenses. With the change taking effect at renewal, hospitals and health systems must begin auditing unused licenses, right‑sizing staff tiers, and re‑evaluating digital workflows to avoid major cost spikes. CDW is stepping in with advisory support, cost‑optimization tools, and flexible CSP options to help organizations navigate the transition before budgets tighten further.

Where America Is Building the Most Homes in 2026 — And Why It Matters to Your Career

America is still short nearly 2.8 million homes, and in 2026 the states driving the bulk of new construction are once again Florida and Texas. With the South producing more than half of all new building permits nationwide, these regions are shaping the future of inventory, affordability, and opportunity. For real estate, mortgage, insurance, and finance professionals, the surge in Southern homebuilding—especially in Florida—signals expanding career potential as new inventory enters the market and demand for licensed experts continues to rise.

Irondequoit Tops the List as America’s Most Competitive Housing Market

A new Redfin report crowns Irondequoit, New York as the nation’s most competitive housing market, with homes selling in just 8.5 days and often above asking. Priced at a median of $249,132, the lakeside suburb is drawing buyers seeking affordability and speed. The surprising lineup of competing markets—from Bay Area tech hubs to Rust Belt metros—highlights a shifting post‑pandemic housing landscape where affordability pressures and regional disparities continue to shape buyer behavior.

Alaska Tightens TPA Licensing Rules Ahead of 2026: Key Changes Professionals Must Prepare For

Alaska has overhauled its Third Party Administrator licensing rules, eliminating major long‑standing exemptions and pulling many previously exempt organizations into full licensing requirements starting January 1, 2026. Under Senate Bill 132 and Bulletin B 25‑09, TPAs must now review their operations, prepare documentation, and monitor upcoming state guidance as Alaska moves toward stricter oversight and stronger consumer protection.