Which Santa Clara CRE Properties Are Falling Fastest?
Across Santa Clara County, office properties are absorbing the sharpest valuation losses, with Mountain View posting the most severe hit.
Countywide, office declines stood out even as overall assessments rose 4.15 percent in 2024. Data showed the office sector recorded its slowest growth rate since 2012, underscoring unusual weakness. County Assessor Larry Stone called it the worst year in assessment roll growth. Strategic upgrades such as solar retrofits can help aging commercial buildings cut energy costs by up to 80% while improving long-term asset performance through solar retrofits.
Mountain View carried the largest single blow, with office values falling by $183.9 million. Across the county, total office property value losses reached $108 million, marking offices as the clearest source of commercial erosion.
Other Commercial Sectors Under Pressure
The hotel slump also deepened valuation stress across Santa Clara. Hotels, retail centers, mixed-use projects, and industrial properties all showed declining or softening values.
Those categories contributed to a broader slowdown in commercial assessment gains, with lower property metrics appearing across multiple segments.
Why Santa Clara Commercial Real Estate Is Slowing
Why is Santa Clara commercial real estate slowing?
Santa Clara’s slowdown reflects weaker office demand, rising vacancy trends, and fewer new deals. Tech layoffs pushed South Bay office vacancy to 18 percent in Q2 2023, while Santa Clara reached 26.1 percent.
At the same time, remote work and hybrid schedules reduced daily office use and cut the need for large leases.
Key Pressures Behind the Slowdown
Companies are shrinking footprints as office space per employee falls and excess space becomes too costly.
Leasing activity remains thin, with fewer than 100 regional transactions and far less square footage than pre-pandemic levels.
New construction has stalled, and several projects shifted from office plans toward industrial uses instead.
These conditions weaken property values, slow investment, and leave structural vacancies likely to persist for years ahead.
Similar pressures are visible in other West Coast markets, where a $400M funding gap has threatened major urban development plans and shaken investor confidence.
Why Mountain View and Cupertino Are Hit Differently
In Santa Clara County, Mountain View and Cupertino face the same commercial real estate drag, but the residential fallout diverges because their housing mix, urban form, and buyer premiums are not the same.
Mountain View ties more housing demand to downtown activity, transit access, and urban walkability. That makes nearby homes and condos more exposed when commercial zones near transit hubs weaken.
Its median single-family price is about $2.975 million, with condos at $675,000.
Cupertino absorbs CRE stress differently because more value sits in larger-lot single-family neighborhoods. Top school premiums also help insulate demand, even as suburban retail and office areas soften.
Its single-family median ranges from $2.7 million to $3.5 million, while condos reach $1.055 million.
The result is sharper neighborhood sensitivity in Mountain View and more buffered price behavior in Cupertino overall.
How Falling CRE Values Affect Santa Clara Taxes
Much of the pressure from falling commercial real estate values shows up not just on building balance sheets, but in Santa Clara County’s tax base.
The 2024–2025 assessed roll climbed to $696.8 billion. But growth slowed to a three-year low as office, hotel, and retail values weakened.
Fiscal Strain Spreads
Because property taxes are tied to assessed values, softer commercial pricing can restrain tax revenue for county, regional, and city agencies.
With $119 billion under dispute in 9,782 cases, assessment appeals add uncertainty to future collections. Most of those appeals are tied to non-residential owners.
- Lower valuations can trim revenue even when the total roll still rises.
- Commercial appeals are highly concentrated, with nearly half involving 10 companies.
- Proposition 8 reviews let owners seek reductions when market value falls below assessed value.
What’s Next for Santa Clara CRE Values?
As Santa Clara’s commercial real estate market resets, valuation models are shifting under pressure from weaker office, hotel, and retail performance.
Office values are down 18 percent since early 2024, hotel assessments fell 12 percent in the first quarter, and retail centers declined 9 percent from the prior fiscal year.
Next Catalysts
Future pricing will likely hinge on development timing in Tasman East and downtown feasibility.
New mixed-use supply may restrain near-term gains, while BART Phase II could support transit driven appreciation around station areas.
Market Pressures
Micro-markets near Mission Point may post moderated gains over three years as absorption limits faster price growth.
Mortgage rates, spring demand, and active competition will shape transaction activity.
But slower valuation growth and uncertain property tax trends suggest uneven commercial price discovery ahead.
Assessment
Santa Clara commercial real estate remains under pressure as office weakness, higher financing costs, and uneven demand continue to erode valuations.
The sharpest declines appear concentrated in older office assets. Local differences in tenant mix and redevelopment potential are also shaping outcomes in Mountain View and Cupertino.
Lower assessments are creating tax revenue strain for local governments.
Near-term conditions suggest continued volatility. Pricing is likely to remain stressed until leasing, capital markets, and broader technology employment stabilize.






















