2025 Manhattan Office Leasing: Key Stats and Context
More than 40M SF of Manhattan office space was leased in 2025, marking the market’s busiest year in at least five years.
By some counts, it was the strongest year since 2014.
Estimates ranged from 39.8M to 43M SF, with Q4 leasing up 25% quarter over quarter.
Key Market Disruption
Year-end availability tightened to 13.9% from 16.5% in December 2024.
Even so, 73.6M SF remained available.
January 2026 registered 13.5%, extending 23 consecutive months of stability or decline.
Pricing and Deal Context
Average asking rent reached $76 per SF by year end and $77 in January.
This remained below March 2020 levels.
Trophy Midtown asking rents climbed to $191 per SF, up 12% year-over-year.
Sublet dynamics improved as supply fell to 10.7M SF.
Lease incentives remained central on major transactions, such as Burlington’s 206K SF lease at 1400 Broadway.
What Drove Demand: Class A Flight-to-Quality in Manhattan
The 2025 leasing surge was not evenly distributed across Manhattan’s inventory.
Class A captured 74.2% of Q4 volume while accounting for only 64.4% of total stock.
That imbalance emerged as Manhattan’s overall market tightened, with 22.0% vacancy recorded in Q3 2025.
Disruption: Demand Concentrated in Top-Tier Towers
Trophy buildings leased 36.0% above the pre-COVID average.
This pushed Midtown Class A availability below 12%.
One Vanderbilt, Hudson Yards, and Manhattan West neared full occupancy.
Overall availability fell to 17.7%.
What Tenants Bought
Leasing decisions also reflected hybrid work needs, with companies prioritizing versatile office setups that can flex across attendance patterns.
- Amenities prioritization centered on wellness design, rooftop terraces, fitness, and flexible layouts.
- Sustainability investments accelerated under Local Law 97, including efficient HVAC, solar, green roofs, and smart systems.
Industry Pull: Who Drove Absorption
Financial services generated 37% of 1H 2025 leases.
This reinforced the momentum.
Tech and media firms consolidated footprints but upgraded into experiential space.
Class A+ attendance reached 85% daily.
Midtown Manhattan Office Rents: Where Pricing Jumped in 2025
As leasing volume surged in 2025, Manhattan’s rent reset accelerated in corridors with the tightest Class A supply.
Midtown: Stability Masks Pressure
Midtown asking rents held at $75.58 per square foot in Q3.
2025 leasing reached 19.32 million square feet, the strongest since 2018.
New York City office foot traffic posted a 1.3% rise as return-to-office mandates took hold.
Park Avenue, supported by headquarters demand and tax incentives, helped keep concessions from widening.
This held even as corridor quotes hit record highs.
Downtown also firmed overall.
It remained lower than Midtown.
Midtown South Spillover Distorts Pricing
Midtown South led the jump, with Q3 asking rents up $1.75 to $83.06 per square foot.
Gains were buoyed by One High Line’s premium deliveries.
Those high-end blocks created pricing anomalies.
They pushed more $150-plus and $200-plus deals into the year.
The shift lifted Class A rents to $81.89 year to date.
Major Manhattan Office Leases: Moody’s, Burlington, and More
Several block-sized Manhattan office leases in 2025 signaled a decisive shift toward large-scale commitments and tighter top-tier supply.
Shockwave Deals
New York University took 1,067,383 sf at 770 Broadway.
Jane Street Capital leased 1,000,000 sf at 250 Vesey Street.
Citadel signed for 502,528 sf at 660 Fifth Avenue.
Bloomberg renewed 496,000 sf at 120 Park Avenue, sharpening the tenant mix.
Renewals and Expansions
Moody’s anchored Downtown at 200 Liberty Street with roughly 460,000 sf.
The deal underscored flight-to-quality tied to sustainability upgrades.
Millennium Management renewed 438,000 sf at 399 Park Avenue.
The New York State Attorney General expanded to 378,438 sf at 28 Liberty Street.
Ropes and Gray extended 376,903 sf at 1211 Avenue of the Americas.
This came amid continued Midtown tightening overall.
2026 Manhattan Office Outlook: Rents, Supply, and Sales Activity
While new supply remains muted, Manhattan’s office market is entering a higher-rent, tighter-availability phase heading into 2026.
Rents Escalate
Trophy Pricing Disruption
Asking rents rose 3.5 percent to $76 PSF in 2025, up 4Q25.
Trophy Class A exceeded $250 PSF at One Vanderbilt.
Hudson Yards and the Plaza District are projected at $200 to $250 PSF in 2026.
Downtown asking rents reached $59.05 PSF.
Midtown trophy direct availability fell to 3.7 percent.
Direct and sublet space also retreated sharply from cycle peaks.
Supply and Sales Stress
Only 257,655 SF delivered in 2025, with 298,702 SF expected in 2026.
Conversions totaling 15.5M SF are advancing.
These projects are supported by tax incentives.
Strengthening rents are lifting leverage, but wider financing spreads are disrupting deal pricing.
They are also constraining refinancing volume.
Recent refinancing scrutiny in markets like Cleveland highlights how mezzanine debt can amplify refinancing risk even for landmark, anchor-tenant office assets.
Assessment
Conclusion
Manhattan’s 2025 leasing rebound relied on large Class A commitments, highlighted by Burlington’s 206,000-square-foot deal and other headline transactions.
Rent growth concentrated in Midtown corridors where premium space remained scarce and tenants prioritized quality, efficiency, and amenity depth.
Looking into 2026, the market faced a split outlook, with tight top-tier supply supporting pricing while older inventory struggled with concessions, refits, and uncertain exit values.
Sales activity depended on clearer financing conditions and stabilized cash flows.














