Raleigh Office Vacancy Dips to 6.75% on Tech Demand Surge
Raleigh's office market is showing signs of recovery, with vacancy dropping to 6.75% in recent TenantBase data, while neighboring Durham ticked up slightly to 8.0%. This contrasts with broader Triangle figures, where Cushman & Wakefield reported a Q4 2025 overall vacancy of 22.9%, up 20 basis points quarter-over-quarter but stabilizing after six quarters in a narrow range. Downtown Raleigh's Class A vacancy remains tight at 13.7%, supported by positive net absorption of 43,785 square feet in Q3 2025, contributing to a year-to-date total exceeding 132,000 square feet. Average asking rents held steady at $39.72 per square foot, reflecting sustained demand.
The rebound aligns with positive net absorption trends: Lee & Associates noted Raleigh absorbing 582,142 square feet in Q1 2025, reversing a Q4 2024 contraction of 87,441 square feet. Over the past 12 months, CoStar Group data shows Raleigh with 574,000 square feet of positive absorption, offsetting Durham's 480,000 square feet negative, for a blended market near equilibrium at 10.7% vacancy—well below the national 14.1% average. Submarkets like Downtown Durham improved to 16.7% vacancy in Q4 2025, gaining 31,000 square feet, while the RTP/I-40 Corridor lagged at 30.7%.
Tech influx and hybrid work models drive the shift, with tenants favoring high-quality spaces amid no new construction. Cushman & Wakefield's Q3 2025 report highlighted Class A vacancy falling 50 basis points year-over-year to 25.7%, with Downtown Raleigh and Six Forks submarkets dropping to 21.4% and 20.5%, respectively. A Triangle Business Journal update pegged Q4 vacancy at 16.4%, down from 16.7% a year prior, underscoring momentum into 2026.
Related Topics
Article Ratings
0 ratings submitted
How do you feel about this story?
National Desk
Sign in to follow this author from their profile.


Discussion (0)
Join the Conversation
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!