Matthews Logo

Navigation Menu

Image of Tampa, FL Industrial Market Report Q1 2026 Success Story

Tampa, FL Industrial Market Report Q1 2026

Industrial fundamentals softened in Q1 2026, with vacancy rising to 7.3% as new supply continues to outpace demand . The market recorded 379K SF of positive absorption, though this has not been sufficient to offset elevated deliveries. Demand remains concentrated in newer buildings, while older product continues to experience move-outs.   Leasing activity has slowed from prior peaks, particularly among large-format users. Smaller-bay spaces continue to drive deal volume, providing some stability in occupancy. Asking rents reached $12.69/SF, with annual growth of 3.4%, a significant deceleration from recent highs. The market is in a normalization phase, with elevated vacancy likely to persist as supply is absorbed. Key Findings 322K SF of new deliveries and 2.6M SF under construction continue to pressure market fundamentals, extending the timeline for stabilization. Vacancy has climbed to 7.3%, reflecting supply outpacing demand despite positive absorption, as recent deliveries continue to outpace leasing velocity. Asking rents increased 3.4% annually to $12.69/SF, marking a notable slowdown from prior cycles as leasing activity moderates. Tampa Industrial Supply & Demand Dynamics Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Tampa Demographics Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Unemployment Rate: 3.9% Current Population: 3,469,619 Households: 1,402,622 Median Household Income: $81,316 Tampa’s population has expanded rapidly over the past five years, positioning it as one of Florida’s fastest-growing metros. While migration has slowed from its peak, the region continues to attract both retirees and working-age households, supporting steady demand growth. Industrial users remain active in the market due to its strong population base and distribution advantages. As a result, major occupiers such as City Furniture, Lowe’s, and Target have developed distribution centers exceeding 1 million square feet, reinforcing Tampa’s role as a key logistics hub. Top Tenant Leases Primo Brands Actron Engineering, Inc. Prime Furniture Chadwell Supply Population, Labor Force, & Income Growth Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Industrial Construction Tampa’s construction pipeline stands at 2.6M SF, reflecting a slowdown from peak development levels . Approximately 322K SF was delivered in Q1, continuing to add to available inventory. While development activity is moderating, the existing pipeline remains a key source of supply-side pressure. Much of the current pipeline is speculative, with a large share of space still available for lease. Competition is most pronounced in mid-size buildings, where product is largely undifferentiated. Development remains focused in outlying submarkets due to land constraints in core areas. New supply is expected to keep vacancy elevated in the near term. SF Construction Starts Source: CoStar Group, Inc. SF Under Construction Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Tampa Industrial Sales Industrial sales volume totaled $240M over the past year, reflecting steady but moderated investment activity . Pricing has stabilized, with average sale prices at $154/SF and cap rates at 7.6%. Private buyers remain active, often targeting value-add opportunities. Institutional capital is more selective but continues to pursue larger deals. Cap rate expansion has aligned with broader capital market trends, though Tampa remains attractive due to its growth fundamentals. Investor demand is strongest for modern, well-located assets. Overall, transaction activity is stable, with pricing expected to remain range-bound in the near term. Tampa Industrial Sales Volume Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   By the Numbers Q1 2026 | Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Sales Volume: $240M Price Per SF: $154 Cap Rate: 7.6% Vacancy Rate: 7.3% Rent Growth: 3.4% Asking Rent Per SF: $12.69 SF Under Construction: 2.6M SF Delivered: 322K SF Absorbed: 379K

Image of Tampa, FL Retail Market Report Q1 2026 Success Story

Tampa, FL Retail Market Report Q1 2026

Tampa’s retail market remained one of the tightest in the country during Q1 2026, with vacancy at approximately 3.7%, rising slightly as bankruptcies returned space to the market. Net absorption was negative over the period, totaling roughly 80,000 square feet, reflecting store closures rather than a pullback in tenant demand. Leasing activity improved as second-generation space became available, particularly for large-format users. Demand remained broad across grocers, discount retailers, fitness users, and medical tenants. Despite a modest increase in availability, competition for well-located space remained elevated. Asking rents continued to rise during the quarter, supported by limited supply, though growth has moderated from prior peaks. Overall, fundamentals remain landlord-favorable, with strong demand expected to stabilize absorption in the near term. Key Findings Vacancy reached 3.7% in Q1 2026, remaining near historic lows despite a modest increase from recent tenant move-outs. Asking rents averaged roughly $27.00/SF, with continued quarterly growth supported by limited availability. The construction pipeline remains constrained at approximately 800,000 square feet underway, with much of the space preleased. Tampa Retail Supply & Demand Dynamics Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Tampa Demographics Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Unemployment Rate: 3.9% Current Population: 3,469,290 Households: 1,402,387 Median Household Income: $81,296   Tampa’s economy remained strong in Q1 2026, supported by continued population growth and business expansion. The metro now exceeds 3.4 million residents, with Hillsborough and Pasco counties leading recent gains. While migration has slowed from prior peaks, Tampa continues to outpace national growth, driven by both retirees and working-age households. Companies such as GEICO and major financial institutions have maintained or expanded their presence, while industrial users continue to grow distribution networks to support the region’s expanding population. Education and healthcare remain key drivers, anchored by the University of South Florida and major hospital systems, keeping Tampa’s economy diverse and resilient. New Tenant Arrivals Publix ALDI EOS Fitness Nordstrom Rack Population, Labor Force, & Income Growth Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Retail Construction Retail construction activity in Q1 2026 remains limited, reflecting ongoing constraints from elevated costs and entitlement timelines. The active pipeline totals roughly 800,000 square feet, well below historical averages, with the majority of projects structured as build-to-suit. New speculative development remains minimal, limiting the amount of space available for lease upon delivery. A significant share of projects underway are already preleased, reinforcing the market’s ongoing supply constraints. Development activity is primarily concentrated in high-growth suburban areas, where population expansion continues to drive new retail nodes. Redevelopment projects are beginning to gain traction, particularly for larger infill sites, though most remain in early planning stages and will not impact near-term supply. As a result, new construction is unlikely to materially shift vacancy levels in the short term. SF Construction Starts Source: CoStar Group, Inc. SF Under Construction Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Retail Sales Investment activity remained active in Q1 2026, with annual sales volume reaching approximately $1.6 billion. Transaction activity continued to be driven by smaller single-tenant deals, while larger transactions increased, signaling growing interest in value-add opportunities. Pricing remained stable, with cap rates around 6.7%, supported by strong fundamentals and investor demand. Retail continues to be a preferred asset class in Tampa, benefiting from population growth and limited supply. Tampa Retail Sales Volume Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   By the Numbers Q1 2026 | Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Sales Volume: $282M Price Per SF: $273 Cap Rate: 6.7% Vacancy Rate: 3.7% Rent Growth: 1.1% Asking Rent Per SF: $26.81 SF Under Construction: 784K SF Delivered: 82.7K SF Absorbed: 80K

Image of Daniel Gonzalez Author

Daniel Gonzalez

First Vice President & Associate Director

Image of National Self-Storage Market Update: Current Performance, 2025 Trends, and H1 2026 Outlook Success Story

National Self-Storage Market Update: Current Performance, 2025 Trends, and H1 2026 Outlook

The U.S. self-storage sector in early 2026 is in a clear stabilization phase, following two years of supply-driven pressure.   Advertised/street rates nationally stand at $16.27 per square foot annualized (blended main unit types). This rate is down 0.2% year-over-year according to the February 2026 Yardi Matrix National Report, reflecting data through end-January.   Occupancy remains bifurcated, as REIT portfolios average rates from 84% to roughly 93%, while private/CMBS assets lag at ~82% on average according to TractIQ’s Q3 Occupancy Report.   REIT Portfolios Occupancy Trends NSA: 84.0% (end of Q4) CubeSmart: 88.6% SmartStop: 92.3% PSA: 91.0% Extra Space: 92.5%   Supply headwinds are persistent yet moderating, with 2.5% of existing inventory under construction nationally, down 0.1% month-over-month.   Demand Drivers & Demographic Trends Demand fundamentals have cooled materially. According to recent Census data, U.S. population growth slowed to just 0.5%, accounting for roughly 1.2 million people, from July 2024 to July 2025, reflecting the weakest pace since the pandemic.   State-to-state migration hit a 12-year low of about 550,000 people, with Florida’s net inflows down 93% from 2022 peaks, and Texas, Georgia, and Arizona each off more than 50%. This migration reset explains the reasoning behind Sunbelt rents experiencing sharp negative rates, while Midwest and Northeast metros posted modest gains.   Sunbelt vs Midwest & Northeast Year-Over-Year Rents Source: Yardi Matrix | As of Q4 2025   National home sales also remain subdued, with only 4.06 million existing homes sold in the last two years, in comparison to at least 5.3 million homes sold per year between 2016 and 2022.   2025: Year in Review Supply dynamics dominated 2025 performance. Early quarters showed continued deterioration from record-high deliveries in 2023 and 2024. However, Q4 delivered clear sequential improvement across the REIT cohort.   Same-store revenue growth improved marginally: NSA posted -0.7% in Q4 (in comparison to -2.6% in Q3), CubeSmart -0.1%, SmartStop 0.4%, PSA -0.2%, and Extra Space 0.4%. Realized rents reflected the pressure with the national average settling at $16.27 per square foot. Institutional operators continue to command a significant pricing premium, with Public   Storage reporting realized rents of $22.53 per square foot nationally, although exposure to weaker Sunbelt markets moderated overall portfolio performance.   Private operators have experienced more pronounced operational challenges. Storable’s report focusing on the South indicates realized rental rates ranging between $12.80 and $13.50 per square foot, alongside more aggressive promotional activity including 1 to 1.5 months half-off concessions.   Balance-sheet strength remained a bright spot across the sector in 2025. REIT leverage stayed conservative, averaging 4.2–4.8x net debt to EBITDA, with Public Storage at 4.2x and CubeSmart at 4.8x, while both maintained substantial liquidity positions ($2.4B at PSA and $1.2B at CubeSmart). SmartStop also benefited from geographic diversification, with its 49-store Canadian portfolio providing stability and consistent NOI growth.   Overall, 2025 marked the sector’s trough as operating fundamentals began to stabilize. Occupancy gaps narrowed sequentially (NSA closed another 70 basis points in Q4), move-ins turned net positive in most markets, and advanced revenue management tools, including AI-driven pricing at CubeSmart and Public Storage, started to gain traction.   H1 2026: Gradual Recovery with Regional Divergence The next six months point to continued stabilization and modest upside, supported by easing supply and early 2026 momentum signals. According to Yardi’s Q1 2026 Supply Forecast, national completions are expected to further decline, with the pace of new deliveries slowing most noticeably in previously overbuilt Sunbelt markets such as Atlanta, Tampa, Phoenix, and Orlando. The Radius+ 2026 Forecast reinforces this view, describing the current environment as a market “reset,” with moderating supply conditions expected to help stabilize rents and potentially return growth to positive territory by mid-year.   REIT guidance reflects cautious optimism, with most operators expecting modest improvement as supply pressures ease. CubeSmart projects same-store revenue growth of 0.5% to 2.0% (midpoint +1.25%) and FFO of $2.52–$2.60 per share. National Storage Affiliates (NSA) guides Core FFO of $2.13–$2.25 per share, with the midpoint slightly lower due to refinancing and insurance pressures, while still projecting same-store revenue growth of roughly +0.9% at the midpoint. Public Storage (PSA) issued the most conservative outlook, guiding same-store revenue between -2.2% and 0.0%, citing lingering softness across certain Sunbelt markets, though management highlighted potential upside from its “PS 4.0” digital and AI-driven initiatives. SmartStop provided the strongest growth outlook, targeting 1% to 2.5% revenue and NOI growth alongside 5% to 8% FFO growth, supported by its expanding managed platform, now 221 third-party stores, as well as continued tailwinds from its Canadian portfolio.   Rental activity trends should inflect positively in H1. Early improving move-in rates at Extra Space and NSA are starting to emerge, and national street rates are forecast to flatten or turn slightly positive by Q2 as concessions ease. Storable Pulse for the South shows discounts and move-in specials slowly decreasing.   Transaction velocity in 2026 is also expected to exceed 2025 levels as the acquisition and disposition environment becomes more favorable and buyers gain greater clarity around rental rates and near-term operating performance.

Image of Austin McLeod Author

Austin McLeod

Senior Vice President & Director

Image of Institutional Capital Returns To Multifamily Success Story

Institutional Capital Returns To Multifamily

After several cautious years, institutional investors, large, professionally managed funds such as private equity groups, pension funds, and insurance companies, are decisively returning to the multifamily market. In the first quarter of 2025 alone, U.S. multifamily investment totaled $28.8 billion, with institutions representing a substantial portion of that volume. Momentum accelerated through mid-year and into the fall, with apartment sales rising 13% year-over-year in the third quarter to $43.8 billion. Together, these figures underscore a renewed confidence in multifamily fundamentals and the broader capital markets.   Evidence of this institutional re-engagement is already visible across the public REIT landscape, where capital deployment has meaningfully increased. AvalonBay Communities (AVB) has completed $618.5 million in year-to-date acquisitions, including the purchase of six Dallas–Fort Worth communities totaling 1,844 units for $431.5 million, a clear signal that major operators are once again pursuing scale in high-growth markets.   Similarly, Equity Residential (EQR) executed one of the largest multifamily trades of 2025, acquiring a stabilized Atlanta portfolio of 2,064 units for approximately $533.8 million at a 5.1% acquisition cap rate. The move marks the company’s strategic re-entry into key Sunbelt markets and aligns with its thesis that fundamentals in select growth metros are strengthening.   These transactions validate what private-market investors are beginning to experience in real time: capital is flowing back into multifamily, underwriting is recalibrating to the new rate environment, and institutional conviction is returning. Setting the Tone for the Market   Institutional capital doesn’t just participate in the market, it helps define it. These investors establish pricing benchmarks, influence underwriting standards, and restore liquidity when they re-engage. As large funds return, their activity helps narrow bid-ask spreads, reprice assets more accurately, and reignite stalled deal flow.   They also serve as early indicators of sentiment. When institutions retreat, it often precedes a broader slowdown. When they return, it signals that investors once again see an opportunity worth pursuing. For 2026, this renewed participation suggests that the worst of the correction may be behind the multifamily sector.   Institutional activity effectively sets the tone for the entire industry. Their re-entry signals that confidence is rebuilding and valuations are stabilizing. As more funds re-engage, competition for quality assets will likely increase, gradually pushing prices upward, especially in markets with strong fundamentals.   This uptick in deal flow also clarifies pricing benchmarks, improves liquidity, and encourages reinvestment in property quality. Over time, that benefits not only investors but renters as well, through better-managed, modernized communities.   From Pullback to Reentry   Between 2022 and 2024, rising interest rates and tightening credit made financing more expensive and constrained deal flow. Sellers held out for 2021-level pricing, while buyers needed discounts to offset higher borrowing costs. Economic uncertainty, slower rent growth, and rising construction expenses compounded hesitation on both sides.   Transaction volumes fell sharply as many funds shifted from acquisitions to asset management. Some firms focused on operational improvements, while others simplified their portfolios, selling top-performing properties to raise liquidity. For a time, sitting on the sidelines felt safer than overpaying in an unpredictable market.   That caution began to ease as prices reset and underwriting discipline took hold. Property values adjusted to more sustainable levels, rent growth stabilized, and buyer competition thinned, giving patient, well-capitalized investors a clear window to re-enter. Today, institutions are positioning for long-term ownership, emphasizing stability over speculation. Where Capital Is Flowing   The map of institutional investment in 2025 looks more balanced than in previous cycles.   Sunbelt and Growth Markets: Metros such as Dallas, Atlanta, Tampa, and Nashville continue to draw attention for their job and population growth. However, investors are far more selective than in past years, steering clear of submarkets facing oversupply or softening rent trends.Several of the sector’s strongest performers are signaling improving fundamentals, with UDR’s CEO noting that “third-quarter operational results… exceeded our expectations and drove our second FFOA per share guidance raise of 2025.” This growing confidence reinforces why capital continues to gravitate toward markets where performance momentum is beginning to firm.   Secondary and Midwest Markets: Secondary metros including Kansas City, Columbus, and Raleigh are gaining traction for their relative affordability and resilient fundamentals. In the Midwest, places like Indianapolis, Minneapolis, and Omaha, stable performance, limited new supply, and strong occupancy are reinforcing investor confidence.   Coastal Gateways: Some institutions are cautiously returning to traditional gateway markets such as New York, Northern New Jersey, and Boston, but mainly for core, stabilized assets where pricing has reset and cash flow is durable. What’s notable about this cycle is how targeted that re-entry has become within the gateway universe. The PwC/ULI Emerging Trends 2026 rankings place the broader NYC ecosystem among the most institutionally favored areas in the country, with Jersey City emerging as a top national market to watch (ranked #2 overall) and Northern New Jersey also landing in the leading tier of U.S. markets. For multifamily, the survey sentiment skews positive toward apartment acquisitions in North Jersey, reinforcing that institutions see the North Jersey/Jersey City corridor as a near-gateway location where renter demand, commuter connectivity, and long-term liquidity still justify fresh allocations.   Institutional Priorities Within Multifamily   Class A: Core Strength and Stability Newer, high-quality properties in prime locations remain the cornerstone of institutional portfolios. Typically built within the last five years and supported by strong employment and income demographics, these assets offer consistent cash flow and low operational risk. Institutions value these assets for their predictability and inflation resilience, often using them as portfolio anchors. For example, a newly delivered high-rise in a prime urban employment corridor, featuring rooftop amenities, coworking suites, and EV-charging stations, can maintain exceptionally high occupancy and command premium rents due to strong demographic fundamentals.   Class B: Upside Through Execution Class B assets have become strategic targets for value creation. Pricing for this segment has corrected more sharply than for newer assets, allowing institutions to drive returns through operational execution rather than market timing. The focus is on steady repositioning over several years, moderate rent growth through modernization while maintaining affordability relative to new construction.   Workforce and Affordable Housing: Durable Demand, Lasting Impact Properties serving middle-income renters continue to attract institutional attention. Undersupply in this segment and limited new construction make it one of the most resilient asset classes. These investments align with ESG priorities while offering consistent performance across cycles. Recent REIT activity in Q3 2025 underscores the trend, with several public funds increasing exposure to workforce housing due to strong occupancy and dependable rent collections.   Looking Ahead In 2026, institutions are closely tracking interest rates, rent growth, employment trends, and new construction activity. With greater stability emerging across these indicators, the year is shaping up to be the next phase of capital deployment, defined by selective acquisitions, creative financing, and disciplined, fundamentals-driven expansion.   The overarching message remains clear: institutional investors are not pursuing quick wins. They are building portfolios engineered for resilience, emphasizing stable income and long-term value creation. Their renewed engagement reinforces a lasting truth, multifamily continues to be one of the most reliable asset classes in commercial real estate. Investment strategies are being anchored in fundamentals that outlast cyclical volatility. Markets with expanding job bases, steady population inflows, and limited new supply are capturing the most attention.   Institutions are also focused on durability, assembling portfolios that perform through full cycles rather than just during upswings. This requires prioritizing cash-flow consistency, maintaining prudent leverage, and emphasizing operational excellence. The mindset for 2026 is deliberate and measured: grow steadily, manage risk thoughtfully, and avoid the excesses that characterized the last expansion.

Image of David Ferber, CPA Author

David Ferber, CPA

Senior Vice President & Director

Image of Mobile Home Parks in 2026: Resilience, Scrutiny, and Strategy Success Story

Mobile Home Parks in 2026: Resilience, Scrutiny, and Strategy

For mobile home park owners and investors, access to accurate, market-specific data is now a competitive advantage. As affordability pressures reshape demand and institutional capital expands its footprint, informed decisions increasingly depend on understanding pricing, rent growth, expense trends, and buyer behavior at the submarket level.   Over the past decade, manufactured housing has transitioned from an overlooked niche into one of the most resilient asset classes in commercial real estate. Supported by durable demand and limited new supply, mobile home parks have emerged as a core solution within the broader affordable housing landscape.   Entering 2026, fundamentals remain strong. Premium communities are trading at cap rates in the 4%–5% range, while stabilized assets typically transact between 5% and 7%. Occupancy has climbed from approximately 86.5% ten years ago to nearly 94% nationally, reinforcing the sector’s structural demand and long-term relevance.   Florida continues to lead the market, as lot rent growth across the state has averaged 5.5%–11% annually, supported by population inflows and housing affordability constraints. In 2025, the Tampa market alone recorded population growth of approximately 1.9%. With median home prices exceeding $400,000 in many major metros, demand for attainable housing remains firmly in place.   At the same time, regulatory scrutiny is increasing. Recent displacement events following mobile home park sales, such as those in Cary, North Carolina, have highlighted vulnerabilities within the land-lease model and accelerated policy attention. As lawmakers respond, owners should anticipate expanded tenant protections, right-of-first-refusal proposals, and renewed discussions around rent regulation.   In this environment, proactive operators will be better positioned than reactive ones. Transparent communication, measured rent growth, and sustained community investment are becoming differentiators as oversight intensifies.   From a transactional standpoint, conditions remain favorable for sellers, though the window may be narrowing. Institutional and private equity capital continues to support competitive pricing, with recent transactions indicating that well-marketed assets can achieve pricing 8%–15% above initial expectations. Improving financing conditions and expectations of future rate cuts are further expanding the buyer pool.   For many owners, current pricing presents an opportunity to evaluate an exit or pursue a 1031 exchange into more passive strategies. The question isn’t whether or not to sell; it’s whether assets are positioned to capture peak value.   Looking ahead, three forces are likely to shape the sector in 2026: ongoing institutional consolidation, rising infrastructure and capital expenditure requirements, and widening gaps between market rents and in-place rents at legacy-owned communities. How owners navigate these dynamics will define both risk and opportunity in the year ahead.

Image of Arthur Varela Author

Arthur Varela

Associate

Image of The Matthews™ Podcast — Jeff Enck Success Story

The Matthews™ Podcast — Jeff Enck

Jeff Enck on Southeast Shopping Center Trends In this episode of the Matthews™ Podcast, host Matthew Wallace continues the publication takeover series with Part 3 of the National Shopping Center Overview, breaking down the Southeast with Matthews™ Senior Vice President Jeff Enck.   With 25+ years of retail investment sales experience and hundreds of transactions closed across the Southeast, Enck shares why strip centers have moved from underrated to one of the most competitive retail investment categories in the country, and what that means for both private and institutional capital. The Role of Strip Centers as a Primary Asset Class Traditionally, retail real estate was often viewed through the lens of grocery-anchored or power cents. However, Enck notes that over the last decade, and specifically the last two to three years, unanchored strip centers have shifted their strategies to exit grocery-anchored and power centers in favor of strips. Industrial Adoption: Major groups, including the first publicly traded REIT solely focused on strip centers (Curbline), have shifted their strategies to exit grocery-anchored and power centers in favor of strips. The “Apartmentization” of Retail: Investors are increasingly treating strip centers like “retail multifamily”. Because the bays are typically uniform (1,500 to 2,500 square feet), owners expect regular tenant turnover as an opportunity to reset and increase rents. Operational Efficiency: Re-tenanting smaller bays is more capital-efficient than filling large big-box spaces, often requiring less tenant improvement (TI) allowance. Essential Service Retail (ESR) and the Amazon Impact The narrative of the “retail apocalypse” has shifted as investors recognize the durability of “essential service retail”. Recession and Internet Proofing: Success in the space is driven by tenants that cannot be easily replaced by e-commerce, such as urgent care, hair salons, dentists, and local restaurants. The Amazon Synergy: Ironically, the rise of Amazon has helped strip centeres by creating a need for shipping hubs. Many centers now feature UPS or Pack Mail stores to handle the heavy volume of consumer returns. The Human Factor: COVID-19 revealed that local “mom and pop” tenants are often more resilient than national credit tenants because their personal livelihoods are tied to the business, making them more willing to collaborate with landlords during crises. Investment Dynamics of the Southeast Enck highlights the Southeast as a particularly attractive region due to its fundamental economic drivers. Growth Drivers: Tax-friendly states, job importation, and low cost of living have led to a massive influx of population, which in turn fuels the need for retail support. Market Concentration: Major metros like Charlotte, Tampa, Atlanta, Orlando, and Nashville are all performing solidly. Yield Opportunities: While core markets see heavily compressed cap rates, investors are increasingly looking toward secondary markets like Savannah, Knoxville, and Greenville to find better yield The Future of the Asset Class Early Innings of Institutionalization: The strip center market remains highly fragmented. Enck estimates that only about 1.5% to 2% of the approximately 68,000 unanchored centers nationwide are currently institutionally owned. Rent Growth Strategy: The primary attraction for large groups is “mark to market” opportunities—buying seasoned properties (10–30 years old) and raising below-market rents. Supply Constraints: New construction of traditional strips is limited due to high construction costs. Most new development is focused on small 2–4 tenant out-parcels (e.g., Chipotle and Starbucks) where rents are already at their peak, limiting future growth potential. Key Takeaways for CRE Professionals Stick to a Specialization: Enck advises young brokers to choose a property type and geographic focus and stay with it, rather than jumping between asset classes based on what is currently popular. Understand Risk from the Buyer’s Perspective: Learning how buyers evaluate risk, a lesson Enck learned from early struggles with difficult listings, is essential for long-term success Value of Professional Representation: Because 80% of strip center owners only own one or two properties, there is a significant opportunity for brokers to provide professional guidance to private clients.  

Image of Tampa, FL Industrial Market Report Q4 2025 Success Story

Tampa, FL Industrial Market Report Q4 2025

Tampa’s industrial market continues to outperform many major U.S. metros, although momentum has cooled amid a prolonged development wave and slower leasing activity. Vacancy has climbed to roughly 7.3%, up about 130 basis points year-over-year and the highest level in a decade. Absorption has been uneven, with muted activity over the trailing year as tenants migrate out of older, pre-2015 buildings in a clear flight-to-quality trend. Although the market recorded 588,605 square feet of absorption in Q4 2025, fewer large leases and a sharp slowdown in build-to-suits have limited overall demand. Construction has cooled to 2.4 million square feet underway, and rent growth has moderated to 3.3% annually; yet, Tampa remains healthier than national averages. Key Findings Tampa’s industrial vacancy rate has climbed to 7.3%, a decade high, as new supply and tenant moveouts from older buildings outpace absorption. Developments cooled to 2.4 million square feet under construction, with build-to-suits now a small share of activity. Tampa recorded $1.1 billion in industrial sales volume over the past year, well above pre-2020 averages, supported by strong private buyer activity and consistent quarterly deal flow.   Tampa Industrial Supply & Demand Dynamics Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Demographics Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Unemployment Rate: 3.8% Current Population: 3,465,598 Households: 1,394,157 Median Household Income: $79,467   Tampa’s population has increased quickly throughout the past five years, making it the second-most populous metro in Florida. Retirees continue moving to the metro, with those over 65 taking over Tampa’s population growth. Industrial operators continue moving to Tampa because of its top-performing fundamentals. As such, City Furniture, Lowe’s, and Target have opened distribution centers greater than 1 million square feet, benefiting from the metro’s performance.   Top Tenant Leases Primo Brands Actron Engineering, Inc. Prime Furniture Chadwell Supply   Population, Labor Force, & Income Growth Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Industrial Construction Tampa’s industrial construction pipeline is normalizing as build-to-suit activity fades. Previously, build-to-suits accounted for more than half of total construction, but they now represent only a small share of the 2.4 million square feet underway. Over the past year, 2.9 million square feet delivered, highlighted by Target’s 1.4 million-square-foot facility in Pasco County and Coca-Cola’s 725,000-square-foot project in East Tampa. Target’s building remains vacant, underscoring leasing challenges for large assets. Roughly 1.2 million square feet under construction falls in the 100,000– to 200,000-square-foot range, with 90% available. Despite fewer groundbreakings, developers remain active as land scarcity pushes interest toward office-to-industrial redevelopment.   SF Construction Starts Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   SF Under Construction Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Industrial Sales Tampa’s industrial investment market has remained resilient, posting $1.1 billion in total sales volume over the past year, with 2025 marking the strongest year since 2022. Activity remains well above the $660 million annual average recorded from 2015 to 2019. After a slow start to 2025, several large transactions in the second half of the year lifted momentum, contributing to $391.7 million in Q4 2025. Private buyers led activity, accounting for roughly 50% of total volume, often acquiring assets from institutional owners. While institutional capital has been more selective, it continues to execute some of the market’s largest trades, supporting steady liquidity and long-term investor interest.   Tampa Industrial Sales Volume Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   By the Numbers Q4 2025 | Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Sales Volume: $392M Price Per SF: $156 Cap Rate: 7.4% Vacancy Rate: 7.3% Rent Growth: 3.4% Asking Rent Per SF: $12.82 SF Under Construction: 2.4M SF Delivered: 681K SF Absorbed: 589K  

Image of Tampa, FL Retail Market Report Q4 2025 Success Story

Tampa, FL Retail Market Report Q4 2025

Tampa’s retail market continues to demonstrate strong performance, supported by tight supply and sustained tenant demand. Retail availability has remained below 4% since 2022, with high-quality centers holding sub-3% availability, although the rate inched higher in 2025 as national bankruptcies and store closures returned space to the market. These vacancies have created opportunities for landlords to upgrade tenant rosters and reset rents, while allowing tenants faster entry into prime corridors.   The metro has led the nation in retail rent growth, with rents up 35% over five years to an average of $28.00 per square foot on a NNN lease. Fourth quarter absorption totaled 314,702 square feet, with vacancy at 3.4%. As Tampa records limited new construction, the metro is expected to remain supply-constrained and competitive.   Key Findings Retail fundamentals remain tight, with vacancy at 3.4% and availability below 4%. Limited new construction continues to constrain supply and support landlord leverage. Rent growth is among the strongest nationally as rents have increased 35% over the past five years, outpacing the U.S. average. The sector’s transactions totaled around $1.5 billion over the past year, driven largely by single-tenant net-lease deals.   Tampa Retail Supply & Demand Dynamics Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Demographics Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Unemployment Rate: 3.8% Current Population: 3,465,311 Households: 1,393,909 Median Household Income: $79,447   Tampa continues to post strong economic fundamentals, supported by sustained population growth, a diverse employment base, and steady commercial development. Now Florida’s second most populous metro, Tampa has added more than 270,000 people over the past five years, with Hillsborough and Pasco Counties leading recent gains despite slowing net migration since 2022. Tampa’s economy benefits from a broad mix of industries, including financial services, healthcare, education, logistics, and corporate services. Corporate leasing activity has moderated, yet high-profile commitments from firms like GEICO, JPMorgan Chase, Pfizer, and MUFG Bank underscore Tampa’s continued appeal as a business destination.   New Tenant Arrivals Belk Aldi Bravo Supermarkets Apollo Beach Gymnastics Academy   Population, Labor Force, & Income Growth Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Retail Construction Tampa construction has slowed markedly as rising development costs and lengthy entitlement and permitting timelines temper new projects. Over 600,000 square feet was under construction in Q4 2025, with build-to-suit properties comprising the majority of the pipeline and offering minimal speculative space. Standalone retail and shopping center developments remain rare, though select redevelopments are gaining traction. Large-scale opportunities, such as the Westshore Plaza site, and smaller projects, including Britton Plaza and Hyde Park Village, are expected to deliver revitalized retail as part of mixed-use concepts. Overall, speculative development is unlikely, and build-to-suits will continue to dominate Tampa retail construction.   SF Construction Starts Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   SF Under Construction Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Retail Sales Investment in Tampa remains robust, positioning the metro among Florida’s most active retail sales markets. Over the past year, transaction volume totaled approximately $1.5 billion, including $402 million in Q4 2025, with the majority of deals consisting of single-tenant, triple-net investments under $5 million. Larger transactions have accelerated, with 11 trades over $10 million year-to-date, compared to four during the same period last year. Notable deals include Brixmor’s $60.5 million acquisition of Britton Plaza and Automotive Properties REIT’s $13 million purchase of a Rivian facility. Strong population growth and durable retail fundamentals continue to drive broad investor demand across pricing tiers.     Tampa Retail Sales Volume Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   By the Numbers Q4 2025 | Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Sales Volume: $402M Price Per SF: $276 Cap Rate: 6.6% Vacancy Rate: 3.4% Rent Growth: 4.5% Asking Rent Per SF: $27.52 SF Under Construction: 629K SF Delivered: 284K SF Absorbed: 315K

Image of Daniel Gonzalez Author

Daniel Gonzalez

First Vice President & Associate Director

Image of Tampa’s Top-Performing Retail Sales Success Story

Tampa’s Top-Performing Retail Sales

Throughout 2025, Tampa’s retail sector was consistently sought after, due to the metro’s population growth and thriving fundamentals. The metro recorded $1 billion in annual sales volume by the end of Q3 2025, second only to Orlando in transactions.    Deals under $5 million remain the most common across Tampa. Over the 12-month period at the end of the third quarter, there were more than 575 deals in this range. However, deals greater than $10 million began to rise throughout 2025. The metro noted 11 trades with these larger deals, compared to four that traded in 2024.     Notable Deals The largest transaction in 2025 was the exchange of the Summerfield Crossing shopping center located in Riverview. Summerfield Crossing traded as part of a 163-portfolio in March, and sold for a total $29.2 million. The center boasts retailers like Publix, McDonald’s, and QSR tenants, and was 100% leased at the time of the deal. Additionally, the shopping center is working on a Phase Two for development, which will feature a 120,00-square-foot power center and ground lease opportunities.    Together with the trade of Summerfield Crossing, neighborhood and shopping centers remain the leaders of properties sold for more than $10 million. In Q4 2025, the largest deal occurred in Northwest Tampa for the exchange of Buccaneer Square, which boasts ALDI as its anchor. The neighborhood center sold for $12.71 million, or $122.06 per square foot. The property is made up of 104,130 square feet, and sold as part of a 1031 exchange.    So far in Q4 2025, smaller transactions under $5 million have been driven by auto tenants, QSRs and convenience store properties. However, the largest transaction within this range was for a Cracker Barrel in the Eastern Outlying submarket that sold for $3.3 million. The restaurant consists of 10,000 square feet, and boasts a triple-net lease.   Pricing Trends Sales costs have fluctuated across Tampa as the metro records steady and robust sales trends. For investors seeking properties over $10 million, cap rates have ranged around 6% to 7%. One example is the recent trade of Buccaneer Square, which noted a cap rate of 7%. With shopping centers recording the most trades greater than $10 million, these properties have also recorded a sale price per square foot around $120.    On the other hand, deals under $5 million have noted prices averaging over $200, but are dependent on the building’s age and tenant quality. For example, an Arby’s in the Mid-Pinellas submarket traded for $1.6 million in October, with a sale price per square foot of $795.51. The property was built in 1967, and totals 1,961 square feet.   Future Expectations Tampa’s retail sector is well-positioned for continued strength and is expected to remain a top investment market, fueled by steady, employment-driven population growth. Transaction volume is likely to remain robust, with a continuing trend toward larger, institutional deals for essential retail centers. Neighborhood and shopping centers, especially those anchored by grocery tenants like Publix and ALDI, are anticipated to command strong investor interest and maintain sale prices around the current $120 per square foot level.    Smaller transactions under $5 million will also persist, though their pricing will continue to be influenced by asset age and tenant quality. Overall, the market’s strong fundamentals and limited new supply relative to demand suggest a healthy outlook, with the primary drivers being the metro’s expanding consumer base and sustained leasing activity in essential retail categories.

Image of Daniel Gonzalez Author

Daniel Gonzalez

First Vice President & Associate Director

Image of Tampa, FL Industrial Market Report Q3 2025 Success Story

Tampa, FL Industrial Market Report Q3 2025

The Tampa metro has grown rapidly in recent years, aided by population growth and business expansion. Tampa is now the second-most populous metro in Florida with over 3.4 million residents. A diverse demographic mix is attracted to Tampa, from retirees to younger working-age residents, contributing to both consumer spending and labor force growth. Industrial development has surged as well, with major distributors like City Furniture, Lowe’s, and Target establishing million-square-foot facilities to serve the growing market.   Tampa Demographics Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Unemployment Rate: 3.8% Current Population: 3,462,221 Households: 1,391,721 Median Household Income: $79,101   Population, Labor, and Income Growth Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Key Findings While Tampa’s industrial vacancy rate reached a decade high of 7.2%, due to increased new deliveries, the metro continues to note strong rent growth activity. Industrial construction has slowed to 2.3 million square feet underway, with build-to-suit projects accounting for less than 500,000 square feet. Sales volume totaled $337 million in Q3 2025 as private buyers drove the majority of activity, including acquisitions like SB Services’ $94 million purchase of two Link Logistics industrial parks.   Market Performance Industrial activity across Tampa continues to demonstrate resilience, though recent trends mirror the national slowdown in absorption and leasing activity. The vacancy rate has climbed to 7.2%, marking a decade high as new supply continues to outpace demand. Negative absorption of roughly 259,812 square feet through Q3 2025 reflects limited large-scale move-ins and increased vacancies from older facilities.   While leasing for large distribution spaces has cooled compared to previous years, smaller users remain active, supporting moderate rent growth. Developers are slowing new construction in response to shifting conditions and limited land availability in core submarkets. Despite these headwinds, Tampa’s industrial sector remains one of the stronger performers nationally, maintaining above-average rent growth.   Tampa Industrial Supply & Demand Dynamics Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Construction New industrial construction is normalizing after years of elevated build-to-suit activity. Currently, only about 500,000 square feet of the 2.3 million square feet under construction are build-to-suits, compared to more than half in prior years. Roughly 3.5 million square feet were delivered over the past 12 months, including major projects for Target and Coca-Cola, though Target’s facility remains vacant. Vacancy challenges persist, particularly in East Side, Plant City, and Pasco County, where over 2.7 million square feet from recent completions are still available. Developers remain engaged, focusing on smaller speculative projects and seeking redevelopment sites as land scarcity limits new opportunities.   SF Construction Starts Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   SF Under Construction Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Sales Transactions across Tampa remain strong and consistent, with quarterly sales volume reaching $337 million in Q3 2025—the highest since late 2022. Year-to-date sales totaled $727 million, nearly matching last year’s pace and far exceeding pre-2020 averages. Private buyers have been the primary drivers of activity, accounting for 60% of total volume, including notable acquisitions such as SB Services’ $94 million purchase of two Link Logistics industrial parks. Institutional investors remain active through select large deals, like Transwestern’s $56.2 million purchase of Mango I-4 Logistics Center. Investor interest in IOS is growing, reflecting Tampa’s continued strength, solid rent growth, and enduring long-term fundamentals.   Sales Volume Source: CoStar Group, Inc.

Image of Tampa, FL Multifamily Market Report Q3 2025 Success Story

Tampa, FL Multifamily Market Report Q3 2025

Tampa’s multifamily market softened through Q3 2025 as elevated vacancy and moderating demand coincided with continued supply pressure. The vacancy rate rose to 10.3%, well above the national average, as absorption of about 6,300 units trailed the 8,350 deliveries added over the past year. The construction pipeline remains sizable at roughly 10,000 units, though new starts have slowed to a multi-year low, signaling an upcoming easing of supply. Rents declined 1.9% year-over-year to an average of $1,800 per month, pressured by competition in submarkets with heavy construction, including Pasco County, Southeast Tampa, and Downtown. Concessions have become widespread, particularly among new Class A projects working to achieve lease-up. Investment activity has normalized but remains measured, with private buyers leading most transactions. Suburban areas with lighter supply pipelines show comparatively firmer performance, while Downtown continues to face elevated vacancy and pricing pressure.   Overall, Tampa’s multifamily sector is adjusting to supply-driven softness, with moderating development and steady long-term demand supporting gradual stabilization.   Key Findings Vacancy remains high at 10.3% as new deliveries outpace demand, with Pasco, Southeast Tampa, and Downtown showing the most elevated rates. About 10,000 units are still under construction, but the pipeline is cooling as starts fall to a five-year low, signaling easing supply pressure ahead. Rents are down 1.9% year-over-year, and heavy construction clusters are offering aggressive concessions, often up to two months free, to compete for tenants.   Tampa Multifamily Supply & Demand Dynamics Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Demographics Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Unemployment Rate: 3.8% Current Population: 3,462,660 Households: 1,392,021 Median Household Income: $79,159   Tampa’s economy continues to expand, driven by strong population gains, a diverse employment base, and steady corporate interest. The region has surpassed 3.4 million residents, adding 270,000 people over the past five years, with Hillsborough and Pasco among Florida’s fastest-growing counties even as overall migration moderates from 2022 highs. Tampa remains a top-15 U.S. market for population growth, led by retirees and supported by rising working-age cohorts. Corporate activity has cooled but remains active, highlighted by GEICO’s 190,000-SF hub and major renewals from JP Morgan Chase, alongside continued investment from Pfizer and MUFG Bank. Industrial expansion is another key strength, with City Furniture, Lowe’s, and Target opening million-SF distribution centers. Education and healthcare anchor long-term stability through institutions like USF, BayCare, AdventHealth, and Tampa General Hospital. The Tampa region has grown to more than 3.4 million residents, adding 270,000 people in just five years, one of the fastest-growing populations in the state. Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Population, Labor Force, & Income Growth Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Multifamily Construction Tampa’s construction activity remained robust over the past year, with roughly 8,300 units delivered, one of the highest annual totals in the market’s recent cycle. While Pasco County and Southeast Tampa have emerged as the primary development hubs, accounting for about half of all new deliveries, Downtown Tampa also saw meaningful growth with more than 1,500 units added. The construction pipeline sits at roughly 10,000 units, with Pasco County, Southeast Tampa, and Downtown collectively making up more than 6,200 units underway. Despite this elevated activity, the pipeline has begun to thin, as construction starts have fallen sharply and are on pace for their lowest annual total in five years. Looking ahead, deliveries are expected to pull back meaningfully in 2026 and 2027, easing competitive pressures, stabilizing vacancies, and laying the groundwork for a healthier rent growth environment.   Units Construction Starts Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Units Under Construction Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Multifamily Sales Tampa remains Florida’s most active multifamily investment market, posting $1.9 billion in sales over the past year—roughly in line with pre-pandemic norms. Large trades above $100 million, once common during the 2021–2022 peak, have been limited to just five deals, contributing to softer overall volume as many sellers wait for fundamentals to improve. Competition from new supply has lengthened lease-up periods and increased concessions, creating underwriting challenges and reinforcing seller hesitation. Even so, pricing for 4- and 5-Star assets has stabilized between $240,000 and $250,000 per unit, as seen in Frontier Group’s acquisition of 1100 Apex at $243,500 per unit. Cap rates have also leveled, with well-located assets typically trading between 5% and 6%, exemplified by Amelia at Westshore’s recent sale at a 5.1% cap rate and plans for targeted value-add upgrades. Tampa Multifamily Sales Volume Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   By the Numbers Q3 2025 | Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Sales Volume: $372M Price Per Unit: $223K Cap Rate: 5.6% Vacancy Rate: 10.1% Rent Growth: – 0.1% Asking Rent Per Unit: $1.8K Under Construction: 10.9K units Delivered: 2.4K units Absorbed: 903 units

Image of Off-Price Stores Aid Retail’s Robust Performance Success Story

Off-Price Stores Aid Retail’s Robust Performance

While retail remains a standout performer across the country, the segment is navigating a restructuring period. The move is driven by the mass store closures of several brands, such as Bed Bath & Beyond, Party City, and JOANN.    The influx of closures, which left behind vacant spaces, served as a necessary market correction for retail. Many of the shuttered chains struggled with less foot traffic and the inability to keep up with larger tenants. The fallout of these stores allows remaining tenants to operate with a stronger foundation.    Retail has also maintained strong performance levels, together with a low national vacancy rate of 4.3%. This resilience is largely attributable to the rise of discount and value-focused retailers, which are actively strengthening the broader market structure.   Tampa Focus The influx of store closures across Tampa has allowed retailers to capitalize on an influx of availabilities. While the metro’s availability rate has hovered around 4% for the past three years, store closures have increased availability in 2025. Yet, the metro’s strong fundamentals continue to support asking rents, attracting discount retailers to Tampa.    Across the metro, Tampa noted asking rents rising by about 5% year-over-year to a market average of $27.26 per square foot. Discount retailers have increasingly moved to Tampa with these positive levels in place. The most recent movement for these tenants includes leases by HomeGoods and Nordstrom Rack in Q3 2025. As Tampa is forecast to record an annual rent growth rate of 3% to 4%, discount tenants will continue to be attracted to the metro.   Discount Tenant Growth The most direct contribution of discount retailers to the segment’s health is their role as economic stabilizers for the consumer. Against a backdrop of economic strain, characterized by elevated consumer debt, many Americans have increasingly sought after lower-priced goods. Discretionary spending has contracted, forcing a fundamental shift in consumer behavior toward value.    Tenants like Dollar General, T.J. Maxx, Burlington, and Walmart thrive in this environment because their business goals align with consumers’ behavior of seeking high quality at the lowest possible cost. They provide an essential service by allowing consumers to stretch their budgets, acting as a crucial safety net that sustains purchasing activity despite broader economic pressure.   By capitalizing on economic conditions, discount tenants channel consumer demand that has been pushed by high costs and debt. Their financial ability helps aid the market by replacing weaker tenants, leading to a structure that has less risk. The strong performance of discount chains is an essential factor that is steering the retail sector toward a balanced future. 

Image of Daniel Gonzalez Author

Daniel Gonzalez

First Vice President & Associate Director

Image of Tampa, FL Hospitality Market Report Q3 2025 Success Story

Tampa, FL Hospitality Market Report Q3 2025

Tampa’s hospitality market held steady through Q3, maintaining healthy fundamentals following a strong first half of the year. Occupancy averaged 57.6%, reflecting a seasonal dip, while ADR measured $140.77 and RevPAR reached $81.09, supported by steady leisure and group demand. Performance remained resilient as major conventions, sports tourism, and coastal leisure activity helped offset softer weekday business travel. Development momentum continued, with 1,216 rooms delivered and 867 under construction, underscoring investor confidence amid $97.7 million in quarterly hotel sales. Despite near-term moderation, Tampa Bay remains one of Florida’s most balanced hospitality markets, bolstered by its diverse demand base and upcoming tourism anchors including the Gasparilla Pirate Festival, NHL Stadium Series, and College Football Playoff National Championship.   Key Findings The Tampa Convention Center remains a key driver of group and sports tourism, helping push weekend occupancy above 80% and sustaining strong market performance through Q3. Clearwater posted the highest RevPAR at $155, driven by its strong concentration of luxury and upper-upscale hotels that continue to anchor regional performance. Transaction volume reached $97.7 million in Q3, roughly one-third of 2024’s full-year volume, signaling renewed investor confidence across Tampa Bay.   12-Month Tampa Occupancy, ADR, & RevPAR Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Demographics The Tampa metro continues to rank among Florida’s most dynamic hospitality and tourism markets, supported by its award-winning beaches, expanding convention presence, and vibrant sports and entertainment scene. Anchored by Tampa International Airport, one of the nation’s top-rated large airports, the region serves as a key gateway for both domestic and international travelers. Ongoing investments such as the $44.5 million Tampa Convention Center renovation, the Water Street Tampa waterfront redevelopment, and the planned Airside D terminal at TPA are poised to strengthen long-term hotel performance and reinforce Tampa Bay’s role as a premier destination for leisure, business, and group travel.   TIA Travel Accolades 2025 | Source: TIA Airport 1st in Airport Service Quality 9.3M Enplaned Passengers 26th Busiest Airport in the U.S. 3.37% Passenger Growth YOY Upcoming Tourism Anchors Busch Gardens NCAA Women’s Final Four NHL Stadium Series Gasparilla Pirate Festival   Population, Labor Force, & Income Growth Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Hospitality Construction Development activity across Tampa Bay remains healthy, with approximately 870 rooms under construction across eight projects and an additional 2,900 rooms in final planning. Developer confidence persists despite higher interest rates and construction costs, supported by the market’s strong leisure base and expanding convention and sports tourism.   Projects are concentrated in the Tampa CBD/Airport and Clearwater submarkets, driven by demand from corporate travelers, event traffic, and coastal leisure guests.   Notable developments include the 220-room Pendry Tampa, Drury Plaza Hotel Tampa Brandon, and the CW Resort & Marina in Clearwater, each reflecting continued investment in the luxury and upper-midscale segments.   Pipeline by Scale Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Rooms Delivered Source: CoStar Group, Inc.    Tampa Hospitality Sales Investment activity in Tampa Bay’s hospitality market strengthened through Q3 2025, signaling renewed investor confidence amid stabilizing capital markets. Sales volume reached $97.7 million across 25 transactions, averaging $250,758 per key with an average cap rate of 7.9%. Trading was led by regional owner-operators and private investors targeting value-add and select-service assets across Tampa East, St. Petersburg, and Clearwater. Notable transactions included the Hilton St. Petersburg Carillon Park and the Homewood Suites Tampa Brandon, reflecting continued demand for well-located, performance-stable hotels supported by strong tourism and event activity.   Tampa Sales Volume Source: CoStar Group, Inc.

Image of Tampa, FL Retail Market Report Q3 2025 Success Story

Tampa, FL Retail Market Report Q3 2025

Tampa’s economy is thriving, driven by strong population growth and business investment. Now the second most populous market in Florida, the region has over 3.4 million residents, with Hillsborough and Pasco counties adding the most in recent years. While migration has slowed since 2022, Tampa continues to outpace the national growth rate, fueled by retirees and working-age groups. Companies like Foot Locker, GEICO, and Pfizer have expanded operations, while large retailers have built major distribution centers to serve the growing population. Education and healthcare remain leading industries, anchored by the University of South Florida and major hospital systems, ensuring Tampa’s economy stays diverse and resilient.   Tampa Demographics Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Unemployment Rate: 3.7% Current Population: 3,466,857 Households: 1,413,156 Median Household Income: $76,828   Population, Labor, and Income Growth Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Key Findings The majority of transactions over the past year have been for single-tenant, NNN lease investments that traded for under $5 million. Tampa’s retail vacancy rate held steady at 3.4%, one of the lowest in the U.S., reflecting strong tenant demand and limited available space. The market recorded $332 million in sales volume during Q3 2025, with cap rates averaging 6.5%, signaling investor confidence and competitive demand.   Market Performance Tampa’s retail market remained one of the tightest in the nation throughout Q3 2025, with a vacancy rate of 3.4%, holding steady from the prior quarter and marking a modest improvement year-over-year. Net absorption registered 74,200 square feet, reflecting continued but moderating demand compared to earlier gains. Despite this, asking rents continued to rise, benefiting from limited available space, although quarterly growth decelerated slightly from Q2 2025.   On a year-over-year basis, rent growth remained solid, underscoring landlords’ pricing power in a supply-constrained environment. With 728,000 square feet under construction, new deliveries are limited relative to inventory, ensuring vacancy stability and sustaining upward rent pressure across Tampa’s retail market.   Tampa Retail Supply & Demand Dynamics Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Construction In Q3 2025, Tampa’s retail construction sector remained steady, with 728,000 square feet under construction across the market. During the quarter, developers added 82,700 square feet, signaling moderate but ongoing additions to the retail inventory. While new supply entered the market, overall activity was balanced, reflecting developers’ cautious but confident approach given Tampa’s strong fundamentals and low vacancy environment. The construction pipeline remains a key driver of growth, ensuring new retail options for tenants, while helping sustain competitiveness and future market resilience.   SF Construction Starts Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   SF Under Construction Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Sales Tampa’s retail investment market remained active in the third quarter, with sales volume reaching $332 million. Investor confidence held firm as the sector continued to attract capital, supported by strong underlying fundamentals and limited vacancy. Additionally, out-of-market private investors accounted for the majority of deals over the past 12 months. The average cap rate of 6.5% reflected stable pricing expectations, underscoring steady demand for retail assets even amid a competitive investment environment. As Tampa’s population continues to grow, the metro will remain a top market for retail sales.   Tampa Retail Sales Volume Source: CoStar Group, Inc.

Image of Daniel Gonzalez Author

Daniel Gonzalez

First Vice President & Associate Director

Image of No Anchor, No Problem: Unanchored Strip Center Report Success Story

No Anchor, No Problem: Unanchored Strip Center Report

Unanchored strip centers—those smaller, convenience-driven retail properties ranging from 10,000 to 50,000 square feet—are stealing the spotlight in 2025. They might not have a big-name grocery chain or anchor tenant, but they’re more than holding their own. With tight retail supply and resilient consumer spending, these centers are commanding high occupancy, steady rent growth, and increased investor interest. Once seen as a secondary retail type, their adaptability, neighborhood-focused tenant mix, and ability to handle turnover with ease have redefined them as dynamic, core retail assets. This report breaks down the numbers behind this transformation, analyzing performance from coast to coast.   Performance Overview Consumer Spending Fuels Growth   The overall outlook for retail in 2025 is positive, supported by resilient consumer spending, easing financial pressures, and productivity gains. With job growth and rising wages continuing to put money in shoppers’ pockets, consumer spending, the lifeblood of retail, is strong despite uncertainties in the market.   The Metrics: Occupancy and Rent Growth Proving that you don’t need a heavyweight tenant to be a heavyweight contender.   Retail space is hard to come by in 2025, with national vacancy at historically low levels, around 4% to 5%. Unanchored strip centers, while slightly trailing their grocery-anchored counterparts, average a 4.5% vacancy rate. Occupancy at unanchored strip centers is holding steady and likely contributing to the overall tightness in the market. Power centers see a vacancy rate of 4.3% and enclosed malls 8.7%.   Unanchored strip retail resilience stems from a few key strengths:   • Demand for high-quality retail space that far exceeds supply • Resilience of service-oriented and local businesses • Flexibility to accommodate a diverse tenant mix   In today’s constrained development environment, where limited new retail construction is coming online, existing unanchored strip centers are well-positioned to capture demand and maintain high occupancy.   These same fundamentals are fueling steady rent growth. The average asking rent for strip centers rose from $17.10 in Q1 2019, to $20.85 in Q2 2025, a clear signal of the value tenants place on visibility, convenience, and accessibility. With landlords in a strong position amid elevated occupancy and limited competition, unanchored centers are expected to meet or slightly exceed the projected 2% national retail rent growth rate for 2025.   Taking Center Stage Investment Momentum Builds   Investor interest in unanchored strip centers has reached new heights. At the heart of their appeal is the relatively low acquisition cost, steady cash flow, and flexibility to adapt leasing strategies to local demand. While private investors have long dominated this space, institutional capital is increasingly entering the fold. Large funds and institutions are drawn to the sector’s straightforward investment and potential for scale, particularly in today’s yield-constrained environment.   A growing focus on value-add opportunities is further fueling momentum, as investors seek to unlock upside through improved management, strategic leasing, and targeted renovations. Many of these assets, historically held by private owners, offer room to reposition rents, optimize tenant mixes, and enhance operational efficiency, better positioning them for revenue growth and broader investor appeal.   Data shows that cap rates for unanchored strip centers in Q2 2025 average:   • Class A: 6.9% • Class B: 7.2%   By contrast, grocery-anchored retail centers show slightly lower cap rates in Q2 2025:   • Class A: 6.1% • Class B: 5.4%   This shift is supported by cap rate trends that suggest healthy return expectations. As of H2 2025, cap rates for unanchored strip centers average 7.0%. These yields remain generally higher than those for grocery-anchored centers, which average 5.7%, reflecting both the slightly higher perceived risk and the value-add potential unanchored centers offer. Many investors are capitalizing on this spread by pursuing active management strategies to boost NOI through improved leasing and repositioning efforts. These assets are increasingly viewed as stable alternatives to other asset classes such as office and multifamily, where returns may be compressing in many markets.   However, the segment is not without nuance. Some unanchored centers, particularly those overlapping with categories like freestanding retail or housing vulnerable tenants such as pharmacies and discount retailers, may face short-term challenges. Closures and consolidation in these categories could temporarily raise vacancy rates, primarily in centers with concentrated exposure. Yet, landlords able to backfill with more resilient, service-oriented tenants often see limited disruption.   Retail’s Quiet Climbers Trends in the Unanchored Space   Resilience of Local Businesses   Small, entrepreneurial “mom-and-pop” tenants continue to be a stabilizing force in unanchored strip centers. Their strong personal investment, adaptability, and long-term commitment make them reliable and valuable tenants.   Rise of Experimental and Service-Oriented Retail   Fitness studios, salons, medical clinics, and diverse restaurants are increasingly occupying space, reflecting consumer demand for convenience and in-person services less vulnerable to e-commerce disruption.   Omnichannel Integration   Retailers are leveraging unanchored centers as key touchpoints for e-commerce fulfillment—facilitating in-store pickups, returns, and last-mile logistics. These centers help bridge online and physical retail in a consumer-centric way.   Regional Deep Dive: Standout Markets of Unanchored Strip Retail  West Rebounding with strong, urban core demand in H1 2025   • Los Angeles: $239M • San Diego: $235M • Seattle: $110M • Vegas: $100M   Southwest Stable growth with high pricing resilience in H1 2025   • Dallas: $324M • Houston: $175M • Phoenix: $120M • Denver: $113M   Midwest Stabilizing, but still in early recovery   • Chicago: $334M in 2024, $93M in H1 2025   Northeast Pricing in strength returns amid cautious optimism   • NYC: $336M in 2024, $70M in H1 2025 • Boston: $155M in 2024, $48M in H1 2025   Mid-Atlantic Reacceleration led by D.C. and institutional capital   • D.C.: $212M in 2024 (3x 2023), $100M in H1 2025   Southeast Consistently leads in volume and momentum throughout H1 2025   • Nashville: $111M • Lexington: $137M • Jacksonville: $113M • South Florida: $100M • Atlanta: $157M • Tampa $131M   Regional Deep Dive: Mid-Atlantic   The Mid-Atlantic unanchored strip center market entered a transitional phase in 2024, showing signs of recovery after a volatile few years. Total transaction volume reached $494 million for the year—a 6% increase over 2023—fueled by a dramatic 925% surge in portfolio sales, even as individual deal volume declined 11.5% year-overyear. Despite a soft pricing environment in late 2024, with the average price per square foot dropping to $139 and cap rates rising to 9%, the market gained traction heading into 2025. In the first half of 2025, volume reached $243 million and pricing rebounded sharply to $219 per square foot, indicating a flight to higher-quality assets.   According to Ed Laycox, EVP of Single & MultiTenant Retail at Matthews™, the Mid-Atlantic remains “a premier investment geography for any investor type,” owing largely to strong demographic trends. “The robust population growth in Virginia and the Carolinas has only fueled the investment appetite more,” he explains, noting that REITs, private equity firms, and family offices have all been especially active.   The D.C. Metro and Secondary Market Dynamics   In 2024, performance was led by the D.C. metro, which posted $211.8 million in volume–more than tripling its 2023 total and making it the clear focal point for regional investor interest. Laycox attributed the sharp pricing rebound in D.C. largely to replacement cost dynamics. “The cost to construct a new space for a tenant is very prohibitive in today’s market–the D.C. market in particular,” he says. “When you can buy a center 50-60% below replacement cost and still get a market cap rate, your future downside is limited.” This affordability relative to new construction is also helping drive retail vacancy rates in unanchored strip centers to all-time lows.   Richmond also emerged as a bright spot, matching its prior peak with $52 million in volume. Meanwhile, markets like Philadelphia and Baltimore saw pullbacks, and Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, and Norfolk remained relatively muted.   Small investors are moving to secondary markets of the Mid-Atlantic, chasing yield and lower price per square foot.   Early 2025 data shows the D.C. metro leading the region with over $100M in transactions year-to-date, while Philadelphia is growing with $65M already transacted in H1 2025, already above 2024 volume.   Shifting Capital Composition and Tenant Demand   The capital composition of the market also began to shift. Institutional investors, after net selling nearly $97 million in 2024, returned in force in early 2025 with $55.7 million in net acquisitions— signaling renewed confidence in Mid-Atlantic retail opportunities. REITs were also active buyers in 2024, posting their largest net inflow in over a decade at $65.2 million. However, they have yet to record any deal activity in early 2025, suggesting a strategic pause or wait-and-see approach. As Laycox puts it, “the REIT and institutional investors are focused on the growth markets as they view these areas as opportunities for rent growth.”    Laycox also notes a significant shift in tenant mix and demand patterns across the region. Big and medium-box spaces are increasingly being filled by experiential retailers and medical users such as “kids’ play concepts, bounce zones, urgent cares, and outpatient surgery centers.”   Asset Performance: Urban Infill, Suburban, and Value-Add   Urban infill and suburban strip centers are performing well across the region, buoyed by the replacement cost advantages and tenant demand trends Laycox highlights. However, he points out that value-add opportunities are rare.   Because retail vacancy is low just about everywhere in the Mid-Atlantic, finding a value-add investment is VERY difficult. The ones that are out there generally have some challenging issues or are priced too high—or both.   Altogether, these trends point to a market in the early stages of reacceleration, with institutional and private capital leading the way and investor sentiment steadily improving.   Regional Deep Dive: Midwest   The Midwest unanchored strip center market began showing signs of stabilization and recovery in the second half of 2024, following a two-year slump from the post-pandemic peak. After substantial yearover-year declines through 2023 and early 2024, quarterly sales volumes rebounded sharply–up 50.4% YOY in Q3 and 82.9% in Q4. The year ended with $986 million in total sales, primarily driven by individual asset trades, which comprised more than $950 million of the total. As of H1 2025, $517 million in deals have traded. According to Patrick Forkin, SVP at Matthews™, this surge is “a strong signal that buyer confidence is returning,” underscoring a shift in market sentiment.   While transaction activity is on the mend, the market remains well below its 2022 peak of $1.75 billion. Still, pricing trends are encouraging. The average price per square foot is $145 as of H1 2025, and Class A assets record $310/SF, reflecting a clear flight-to-quality. Cap rates rose to 8.2% in Q4 but decreased to 8% as of Q2 2025. Forkin explains that while these elevated cap rates “reflect continued risk pricing, they’re also driving interest from yield-focused private buyers who dominate the region.” He notes that bid-ask spreads are narrowing and that “high-quality deals are moving,” especially in core cities like Chicago, Milwaukee, Indianapolis, and St. Louis. While the cap rate spread between premium and value assets has widened, the volume and pricing data suggest growing buyer appetite, particularly for well-located or stabilized properties.   Supply Constraints and Owner Behavior   The region’s inventory remains tight, largely due to the ownership profile. “The majority of these properties are privately owned by long-term holders who aren’t under pressure to sell,” Forkin explains. “When sellers believe they’re in a strong pricing window, they’re realistic and ready to transact. Otherwise, they’re comfortable holding for longer.” This dynamic has kept competition strong for quality assets and limited the flow of new listings to the market.   Leasing Momentum Driven by Services and Restaurants   On the leasing front, service-oriented users have taken the lead. Forkin highlights tenants like medical, dental, urgent care, pet services, salons, and fitness centers as the primary drivers of demand. “These tenants are prioritizing visibility and accessibility over co-tenancy with a traditional anchor,” he notes. Additionally, restaurant demand has increased, with fast casual and local operators expanding in suburban locations offering patio space and drive-thru capabilities.   National credit tenants are still active, but the real change has been the rise of experiential and neighborhood-serving users over traditional soft goods.   Private Capital Leads, Institutions More Selective   ate investors have carried the momentum through the downturn and into the early stages of recovery, accounting for nearly 90% of volume in 2023 and 2024. Institutional and REIT buyers, while still present, have become more selective. “Capital hasn’t disappeared—it’s just more selective,” Forkin says, pointing to continued interest in large metros like Chicago and Minneapolis. He emphasizes that institutional capital is still drawn to the Midwest’s value proposition: “Cap rates here are often 100 to 150 basis points higher than in the Sunbelt or on the coasts.”   However, he also notes that many assets in the region are smaller and individually traded, which “doesn’t always match the acquisition strategies of larger institutional players.” Cross-border capital, once a small but steady contributor, has almost entirely exited the market since 2020. If private capital continuous to lead and macro conditions stabilize, the Midwest strip center market is well-positioned for a more sustained recovery in the second half of the year.   Suburban Strength and Urban Challenges   Suburban strip centers are currently outperforming. “Suburban centers with strong demographics and daily-needs tenants are leading in terms of performance and liquidity,” Forkin affirms. These assets typically offer features like ample parking, high visibility, and flexible layouts—ideal for today’s tenant base.   Urban infill assets, while still appealing for their long-term potential, face more immediate headwinds. Forkin cites reduced office occupancy, rising taxes, and population outflows in some cities as contributing factors to softened demand. “Several headwinds have impacted performance in recent years,” he notes, even as these assets maintain strategic value in dense, high-barrier markets.   Focus on Stabilized and Light Value-Add Plays   New construction remains limited, keeping investor focus on stabilized or lightly value-add assets. “Most investor activity is focused on centers where there’s upside through lease-up, renewal, or modest cosmetic improvements,” Forkin observes. The common thread? “The ability to support modern tenancy needs is key.”   Regional Deep Dive: Northeast   In 2024, the unanchored strip center market in the Northeast began a clean and measurable recovery after a turbulent 2023. Total transaction volume for the year reached $576.7 million, up 12.9% year-over-year, with a particularly strong Q4 showing $171.2 million, a 43.2% YOY increase.   This rebound was driven largely by individual property sales, which totaled $526 million for the year–up 15.5% YOYwhile portfolio activity remained limited, accounting for just $50.7 million. In 2025, pricing strength returned. approximately $206.3 million in deals traded in the first half. While the average price per square foot increased to $201 in Q2, up 4.5% YOY and 16.4% above year-ago levels.   Confidence among Northeast buyers remains strong despite modest growth, as investors pay premiums for high-quality, well-located centers. Joanna Manfro, Vice President at Matthews™ explains,   Confidence stems from the Northeast’s historical resilience in all economic climates, often acting as a ‘flight to safety’ during turbulent markets.   She notes that market downturns in the region tend to be less severe, often followed by quicker recoveries compared to trend-driven areas. This consistent historical performance continues to support buyer optimism, even amid broader economic uncertainty.   Strength in Leasing and Pricing   Following a strong finish in 2024, investor activity remained measured but focused in the first half of 2025. While overall transaction volume moderated, particularly in Q2, the market continued to reflect a selective but steady flow of capital targeting high-conviction opportunities. A total of 34 properties traded in H1 2025, with the majority occurring in Q1, underscoring a continued appetite for quality assets despite macro uncertainty. Cap rates held firm at 7.3%, unchanged from the prior year, suggesting sustained competition and disciplined pricing.   Leasing fundamentals across the Northeast continue to support firm pricing. “The Northeast’s high barriers to entry and consistent demand generally support higher PPSF,” Manfro notes.   She points out that while rent growth may be steady rather than rapid, the region’s lower risk profile and historical stability “justify the pricing for many investors,” helping to sustain elevated values.   Early 2025 Momentum and Buyer Trends   Looking into early 2025, momentum has continued, though at a more tempered pace. Investor appetite remains active, with private capital continuing to drive most activity. However, Manfro states that the buyer pool is broadening. “There’s increasing cross-regional interest, notably from California investors seeking stability amidst their market dynamics,” she says. “Some Southeast investors are also evaluating the Northeast for slightly better yields,” viewing the region as less competitive, but still fundamentally Sales Volume Source: RCA $1B strong, an alternative to their home markets. Institutional buyers also remain engaged, drawn by the Northeast’s long-term reputation for stability.   Market Hotspots and Evolving Demand   Certain submarkets within the Northeast are drawing heightened investor attention. “Suburban urban cores near major cities are attracting significant investor interest,” Manfro explains, highlighting areas such as Westchester, NY and Fairfield, CT, Northern New Jersey, NASA and Suffolk County, NY and Boston’s MetroWest region inside the 495 Corridor. These locations have “not only weathered the post-COVID landscape but have sustained growth and investor interest due to their appealing live-work-play lifestyle and accessibility to urban hubs.”   Necessity-based retail remains the cornerstone of demand across the region. Manfro emphasizes that essential services—food, health, and fitness— continue to underpin stable occupancy, but she also sees emerging shifts. “The resilience of these core sectors suggests continued strong occupancy alongside potential growth in experiential retail and services catering to evolving suburban lifestyles,” she notes, pointing to a gradual diversification in tenant mixes as suburban consumer preferences evolve.   Regional Deep Dive: Southeast   The Southeast unanchored strip center market surged in 2024, emerging as one of the most active regions nationwide. Total transaction volume reached $2.14 billion–a 33.2% year-over-year increase–driven by robust growth in both individual and portfolio-level trades. Pricing metrics also strengthened, with the average price per square foot climbing to $230 and cap rates compressing to 7.1%, reflecting strong demand for neighborhood retail across the Sunbelt.   That momentum has carried into 2025, with $1.5B closing as of Q2. Pricing rose further to $264 per square foot, though cap rates have ticked up to 7.3% amid recalibrated risk premiums and tighter financing conditions.   According to Jeff Enck, Senior Vice President at Matthews™, the sustained surge in activity is no surprise. “Historically, the Southeast has imported a lot of capital from the West Coast and Northeast due to higher yields,” Enck explains. “That gap is narrowing, but the Southeast remains relatively attractive in terms of cap rates and price per square foot. Migration to metros like Miami, Atlanta, and Charlotte continues to rise–driven by job growth, business-friendly policies, and no or low income taxes. These factors are translating into persistent demand for essential-service retail.”   Market Leaders and Regional Hotspots   Miami/South Florida led all Southeast metros in 2025 with $283 million in sales, followed by Atlanta at $160 million, underscoring investor confidence in major gateway markets.   Vacancy rates across the Southern U.S. remained exceptionally low, averaging under 4%, with standout markets like Nashville, Miami, and Raleigh/ Durham posting vacancies below 3%. The Carolinas, in particular, have emerged as a national hotspot for retail, supported by high occupancy (around 97%) and population growth across both urban and suburban corridors. Tourism-driven demand, especially in Florida’s coastal cities, further enhances the region’s appeal.   Nearly every major MSA in the Southeast is in high demand. We’re seeing the most heat in high-income suburbs and dense, urban infill locations–particularly South Florida. That’s where some speculative pricing has emerged, but it’s really limited to those rare, high-end corridors.   Shifting Capital Stack and Competitive Dynamics   Private investors remained the dominant force in 2025, accounting for 79.4% of acquisitions, but the tide is beginning to shift. Private investors have become net sellers, prompted by refinancing pressures, maturing debt, and capital market headwinds. REITs, by contrast, stepped in aggressively, acquiring $141 million in 2024 and $136 million in H1 2025. Their share of acquisitions now hovers near 20%, signaling a growing appetite for high-quality, yield-generating strip retail. Enck says,   There are still very few true institutions acquiring unanchored retail centers. Curbline is a rare exception–they’re replacing their entire portfolio of grocery and power centers with strip centers. Meanwhile, quasi-institutional groups and funds are focusing on well-located strips that trade below replacement cost and offer long-term upside. The challenge? There just aren’t enough quality properties to go around.   Buyer demand continues to outpace quality supply, particularly for centers offering stable tenancy, belowmarket rents, or redevelopment potential. Enck notes that while public and private interest is rising, buyers are struggling to compete–especially in a landscape where top-tier assets are increasingly scarce.   Interest Rate Pressure and Financing Trends   High interest rates have reshaped the market’s financing dynamics. “Treasury yields have remained fairly flat in recent quarters, with some short-term dips,” Enck observes. “Savvy buyers have been able to lock in opportunistic rates, but in general, we’re seeing fewer deals close unless the asset is high quality and offers long-term stability.”   Most financing is now coming from credit unions and life insurance companies. CMBS lending, once a staple of strip center financing, has all but dried up for these smaller assets. “Buyers are largely steering clear of short-term; high-leverage capital. Instead they’re targeting Class A or well-located Class B properties that pencil out under positive leverage. Class B and C assets are still trading, but only when they deliver yields above borrowing costs,” he adds.   Tenant Mix and Leasing Fundamentals   Tenant fundamentals remain strong in the Southeast, with unanchored strip centers attracting a growing mix of convenience, dining, and medical uses. “Coffee is still in growth mode,” Enck says, “Along with both franchise and local restaurants, urgent care clinics, dental offices, and veterinary users.”    This evolving tenant-mix has helped keep demand high for available space, driving steady rent growth and keeping vacancy tight. In many cases, these newer tenants are backfilling older vacancies and stabilizing income streams, particularly in fastgrowing suburban trade areas.   Outlook: Stability and Strategic Positioning   The Southeast remains one of the most liquid and competitive regions for unanchored strip center investment in mid-2025. Private capital continues to drive the market, but institutional and REIT activity is rising. The investor profile is shifting toward buyers with long-term hold horizon and value-add strategies centered around demographic tailwinds and essential-service tenancy.   “Southeast retail continues to offer compelling fundamentals,” Enck concludes. “You’ve got population growth, tax advantages, a strong tenant base, and pricing that still looks attractive relative to other regions. That’s a powerful combination–and one that keeps buyers coming back.”   Regional Deep Dive: Southwest   The Southwest unanchored strip center market demonstrated clear signs of stabilization in 2024 following the sharp downturn in 2023. Total transaction volume for the year reached $1.91 billion, up 12.9% year-over-year, driven by consistent individual property trades, which totaled nearly $1.77 billion.   While Q4 volume declined 19.2% yearover-year–likely due to macroeconomic caution or closing delays–the full-year uptick and a 286% year-over-year surge in portfolio sales pointed to a reemerging wave of institutional interest. Early 2025 activity confirms renewed momentum, with $1.1B in transaction volume and 142 properties closed or pending as of Q2 2025. According to Grayson Duyck, Vice President and Associate Director at Matthews™, 2025 has been off to a roaring start, “we’ve been the busiest we’ve ever been, in Dallas specifically.”   Pricing dynamics in 2025 are particularly strong. The average pricing rose 11.2% year-over-year to $214 per square foot. This pricing strength was accompanied by a 11.2% year-over-year increase in total square footage traded. Cap rates have decreased 20 basis points over the last year to 7%, reflecting broader repricing trends. Yet in 2025, cap rates dipped to 7% by Q2, indicating increased bidding activity for stabilized products.   Duyck noted that investor psychology has shifted compared to a year ago. “People have gotten to the point where they’ve accepted market conditions and want to get deals done,” he explains. “Last year, buyers and sellers were far apart. Now, expectations have met the market.”   Capital Flows and Investor Profiles   The composition of capital in the Southwest continues to evolve. Institutional investors returned in force in 2024 with $84.7 million in net acquisitions but have reversed course in early 2025, registering $95.3 million in net dispositions–likely signaling profit-taking amid shifting macro conditions. REITs remained more cautious, contributing modest net acquisitions of $29.4 million in 2024 and $19.7 million in net dispositions in 2025 as they selectively reposition their portfolios.   Private capital remains the most active and agile investor group, ending 2024 with a moderate $56.2 million in net outflows before returning to net buyer status in early the first half of 2025 at $110.2 million. Duyck says,   Private owners are more willing to play ball. They don’t need to hit exact return metrics like institutions do. They can move faster and make decisions quicker, which gives them an edge in competitive environments.   Tenant Trends and Leasing Fundamentals   Southwest tenant demand remains robust, specifically in major Texas metros. Dallas, in particular, is seeing outsized activity from food and service users. “Restaurants are the most active in the market right now–especially franchise concepts and freestanding quick-service formats like Cava,” Duyck notes. “We’re also seeing a lot of boutique f itness–class-based models like pilates, yoga, barre, are outperforming the big-box gyms.” Many of these tenants are adapting to high rents by shrinking their footprints. “To combat higher costs, tenants are taking less space. They’re still doing strong business, but they’re being smarter with layouts,” Duyck adds.   Strong regional brands continue to show a preference for well-located, unanchored centers–even over grocery-anchored formats in some cases. “These centers on busy streets are still pulling in great traffic,” he says. “Tenants are seeing the same performance they would in larger centers, without the institutional lease structure.”    Drive-thru configurations also remain in high demand, although Duyck sees caution on the horizon. “Drive-thru space is red-hot,” he says. “But long-term, we’re going to see questions emerge around whether tenants can generate enough volume to justify the rent. It’ll be interesting to see how it plays out.”   Construction, Constraints, and Regional Growth   Despite strong leasing, development activity remains restrained. “Construction costs are still high, and vacancy rates are extremely low, especially in Dallas, where retail vacancy is under 4%,” Duyck explains. “Because there isn’t much new construction, rents have gone up. It’s getting very competitive.” This imbalance between supply and demand is driving renewed suburban expansion. “Collin County, Frisco, Prosper, Forney–those northern suburbs are booming,” Duyck says. “High-net-worth families are moving out of the city. Places like Kaufman County and Walsh Ranch–these thousand-acre master-planned communities–are drawing big interest.” Kaufman County has been recognized as the fastest-growing county in Texas and one of the fastest-growing counties in the nation.   Austin also remains a bright spot for growth, thanks to its booming tech sector and rapid population gains. Along with Phoenix and DFW, Austin continues to be a top market for tenant absorption and new development, particularly for flexible, service-oriented retail formats that cater to growing suburban populations.   Sales Strategy and Market Caution   While pricing remains strong, Duyck advises that buyers need to approach new construction deals with caution. “Some of these centers have inflated NOI because of generous tenant improvement packages. The rents being paid now aren’t always replaceable,” he notes. “Exchange buyers, in particular, don’t always account for that. If you’re buying a deal, make sure the rent is sustainable in the long run.”   Outlook: Normalization and Competitive Position   The Southwest market appears poised for steady growth in 2025. Institutional participation may remain selective, but private capital is showing clear signs of renewed conviction. With pricing stabilizing and buyer expectations realigning, deal velocity is expected to improve–especially for well-located, Class A assets.   “There’s so much growth and population expansion across the region,” Duyck concludes. “Investors have adjusted to the new normal, and we’re finally seeing that translate into real transaction volume. Everyone’s back at the table.”   Regional Deep Dive: West    The year 2025 is proving to be a pivotal recovery year for the Western U.S. unanchored strip center market. Total quarterly transaction volume reached $588M in Q1 2025 and $363M in Q2 2025, together the first half of the year represents close to a 40% year-over-year increase.   Pricing trends further underscore renewed confidence: the average price per square foot reached $301, while cap rates compressed to 6%, marking a significant shift from the wider spreads seen in 2023. These metrics suggest growing competition for limited quality assets and optimism around income durability and long-term upside.   According to Conrad Sarreal, First Vice President and Director at Matthews™, several structural and economic tailwinds are fueling the region’s momentum.   West coast multi-tenant retail continues to experience aggressive bidding and cap rate compression–often 50-100 basis points tighter than similar assets elsewhere. California metros benefit from a deep pool of both private and institutional capital, particularly high-net-worth individuals and family offices. In cities like Los Angeles and San Francisco, cap rates can dip as low as 4.5% to 5.5% for prime locations.   Metro Performance and Investor Focus   Performance across key Western metros reinforces this recovery narrative. Los Angeles led the region with $625 million in 2024 transaction volume and posted a strong $249 million start in the first half of 2025, highlighting its central role as a gateway for both domestic and international capital. San Diego, Las Vegas, and Seattle also posted year-over-year gains in 2024 and 2025, underscoring investor interest in metros with strong demographic and economic fundamentals.   Urban core strip centers in these cities continue to attract significant capital thanks to tight vacancy (96%+), rising rents, and an evolving tenant mix that reflects modern consumer preferences. “These centers are poised in dense, high-traffic areas near affluent neighborhoods and transit hubs,” Sarreal says. “West Coast multi-tenant centers increasingly feature experiential tenants–boutique fitness, craft breweries, and specialty services–now making up 1530% of new leases in 2025, especially in places like Los Angeles and Seattle.”   Meanwhile, performance in San Francisco and Sacramento remained relatively muted. San Francisco has seen transaction volume fall sharply from its 2022 peak, with just $46 million recorded year-to-date, as investors remain wary of broader economic headwinds and a sluggish return-to-office trend.   Urban Core Resilience and Market Fundamentals   The structural strength of urban strip centers continues to set the western region apart. Development in dense urban cores remains constrained by sky-high costs and regulatory complexity. In cities like Los Angeles and San Francisco, urban retail development can cost $450$650 per square foot, while California’s CEQA regulations further slow the pipeline. As a result, new supply remained limited in 2024, adding just 0.2%0.5% of inventory in primary markets–boosting pricing power and tightening already low vacancies.   “Despite population shifts, West Coast metros still benefit from high-income consumers and strong retail demand,” Sarreal notes. “With average occupancy rates between 95%-96%, tenant stability and consumer spending reinforce premium pricing.” He points to the concentration of wealth in cities such as San Francisco ($160,000 median household income), San Jose ($150,000), and Seattle ($120,000) as key drivers of tenant performance and rent growth.   Capital Composition, Institutions Return, REITs Retreat   Institutional investors have reemerged as key buyers, accounting for 11.9% of acquisitions in 2025 after remaining largely on the sidelines in 2023. This renewed activity signals rising confidence in the sector’s income durability and long-term upside.   REITs, by contrast, have become net sellers, representing over 20% of dispositions so far this year. Private investors still dominate overall, but the buyer mix is shifting. “Secondary markets like Sacramento and Fresno are seeing growing interest from family offices and 1031 buyers,” notes Sarreal. “These investors are pursuing value-add players like lease-up or repositioning and are drawn by higher yields and lower pricing relative to urban cores.”    Secondary and Tertiary Market Divergence   While primary urban markets continue to anchor investment volume and pricing stability, secondary and tertiary markets are carving out their own roles.   Sales Volume Source: RCA $4B Secondary markets such as Sacramento, Tacoma, and Fresno are gaining momentum with 10-12% investment growth, fueled by private capital and affordability-driven migration. Tertiary markets, including Bakersfield and Spokane, showed 7-8% growth, attracting smaller private investors willing to accept higher yield and risk exposure.   Cap rate spreads illustrate the divergence: primary markets trade in the 4%-5% range, while secondary markets offer yields of 5.5%-6.5%, and tertiary markets reach 6.5%-8%.   Outlook: A Repricing Moment with Strategic Opportunity   Urban cores remain the benchmark for stability and institutional capital, while smart money increasingly targets secondary markets offering favorable yield spreads relative to borrowing costs. Tertiary markets remain opportunistic, but speculative bets.   “Urban hubs provide long-term stability, but the real growth story may be in the secondary markets,” Sarreal concluded. “They balance risk and reward more effectively and offer a yield premium that looks increasingly attractive given where debt costs are.”   As pricing stabilizes and buyer composition diversified, Western unanchored strip centers are once again positioned as a competitive asset class–both for core investors and value-driven players seeking durable income in a constrained supply environment.  

Image of Tampa, FL Office Market Report Q2 2025 Success Story

Tampa, FL Office Market Report Q2 2025

In Q2 2025, Tampa’s office market reflected a balance of strong tenant activity and cautious investment trends. The quarter recorded 1.4 million SF of leasing, though new deliveries of 486,000 SF kept the vacancy rate at 9.9%. Rents continued to climb, with the average asking rate reaching $31.08/SF, up 4.6% year-over-year, driven by demand in prime submarkets. On the investment side, sales totaled $234.6 million, with pricing averaging $186/SF and cap rates at 7.4%, signaling selective but steady buyer interest. With only 277,000 SF under construction, new supply remains limited, helping support stable fundamentals moving forward.   Highlights Solid Leasing Momentum: Roughly 1.4M SF of office space was leased during Q2, pushing f irst-half leasing activity to 3.7M SF, about 20% above the 2015–2019 average. Large-scale commitments, including Fisher Investments (320K SF) and GEICO (190K SF), helped absorb long-standing vacancies. Rents Rising Despite Vacancy Pressure: Average asking rents climbed to $31.08/SF, reflecting 4.6% YOY growth. Demand is strongest in Westshore and Downtown trophy assets, where top-tier rents exceed $48–$65/SF, though overall market vacancy stands at 9.9%. Muted Investment but Stable Pricing: Office investment totaled $234.6M in sales volume for the quarter, with an average sales price of $186/SF and a 7.4% cap rate.   Market Demographics Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Unemployment Rate: 3.7% Current Population: 3,464,907 Households: 1,412,262 Median Household Income: $76,789   Tampa Office Rents Tampa’s office market saw average asking rents rise to $31.08/SF, up 4.6% year-over-year, with a clear divide between top-tier and suburban markets. Westshore and Downtown led the region at roughly $37/SF, while trophy assets pushed rates above $48/SF and Midtown East reached $65/SF. Suburban submarkets largely remained under $30/SF, where long-standing vacancies pressured landlords to be more flexible. Limited concessions in prime areas and varying tenant improvement allowances highlight strong demand for premium space, though weaker suburban assets are likely to keep broader rent growth in check.   Market Asking Rent Per SF Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Office Vacancy Momentum in Tampa’s office market carried into Q2 2025, with tenant demand holding strong even after a record-setting start to the year. The quarter saw 1.4 million SF leased, bringing year-to-date activity to 3.7 million SF—roughly 20% above pre-pandemic norms. Landmark deals from Fisher Investments and GEICO helped absorb long-vacant space and underscored confidence in the market. Still, the vacancy rate held at 9.9%, as new deliveries and persistent softness in older product offset the strength of Class A assets.   Vacancy Rate Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Tampa Office Construction Construction remained limited in Q2 2025, with only 277,000 SF underway, largely dependent on preleasing. Deliveries totaled 486,000 SF, led by the completion of Midtown East, Tampa’s first new office tower since 2021, where tenants like TECO and Booz Allen Hamilton have already committed at rates up to $65/SF. Projects such as Gas Worx in Ybor City and the planned Halcyon tower in Downtown St. Petersburg highlight that future office supply will be selective and tied to mixed-use developments. With the vacancy rate at 9.9% and 1.4M SF leased in the quarter, limited construction should help sustain market balance.   SF Under Construction Source: CoStar Group, Inc.    Tampa Office Sales In Q2 2025, Tampa’s office sales activity totaled $234.6 million, with an average price of $186/SF and a 7.4% cap rate, keeping volumes well below pre-pandemic levels. Over the past year, sales reached $831 million, far short of the 2015–2019 average of $1.2 billion. Notable transactions included BayCare Health Systems’ $145 million purchase of three Tampa Bay Park buildings, accounting for more than half of Q1 volume. This signaled the influence of healthcare users. Industrial developers are also reshaping the market, with Clarion Partners and Creation Equities acquiring a Westshore site for $30 million and East Group buying a 66-acre campus for $32 million to redevelop into a 550,000-SF industrial park. With traditional office demand muted, investment is increasingly driven by users and developers repositioning assets.   Sales Volume & Market Sale Price Per Unit Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   By the Numbers Source: CoStar Group, Inc. Sales Volume: $234.6M Cap Rate: 7.4% Price Per SF: $186 Vacancy Rate: 9.9% Rent Growth (YOY): 4.6% Asking Rent Per SF: $31.08 SF Under Construction: 277K SF Delivered: 486K SF Leased: 1.4M

Image of Josh Beniek Author

Josh Beniek

Associate

Image of Top National Hospitality Markets Success Story

Top National Hospitality Markets

The Southeast’s Shining Hospitality Activity Events and new deliveries make the Southeast a standout region nationally. In just the first quarter, the Southeast added over 6,000 rooms, a large jump compared to the 3,600 rooms that opened in Q1 2024. Of these new additions, more than half opened in Florida, with around a quarter opening in Georgia. Combined, both states are looking forward to hosting a variety of events.   Florida Boasts Full Event Slate Although Florida led the region in new deliveries for the first quarter, it recorded a decline in sales. Associate Vice President Mabelle Perez stated transactions in Florida have fluctuated for the past few years. “Sales activity went parabolic in Florida from 2021 through 2023,” Perez stated. “In 2024, concerns around interest rates, insurance, and the presidential election all created a perfect storm to decrease sales activity coming into Q1 2025.”   The state recorded a total $9.7 billion in transactions for the first quarter, led by the Full Service segment, but this volume is still a decrease from the $13.5 billion achieved in Q1 2024. Despite this slowdown, Florida added 3,226 rooms that opened in the first quarter of this year. About two-thirds of the new additions are in the Full Service segment, with two 750-room hotels delivering in Orlando.   Florida’s Hotspots As the state adjusts to the deliveries, it is also preparing for new events that will drive room bookings. One of the most notable events on the way is the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which will feature Miami as a host city next year. The events will begin in June and July, but Miami officials are already preparing for visitations. The city is expected to see hundreds of thousands of visitors arrive for the events, and is forecast to have a total $1.3 billion economic impact on Miami-Dade County.   Hard Rock Stadium will welcome visitors, and nearby areas like Wynwood, Downtown, and Miami Beach will also become hotspots. Spillover benefits are also expected to aid Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach, thanks to the Brightline high-speed rail system. With service connecting to these metros, as well as Orlando, hoteliers can capitalize on increased visitations for the World Cup.   Other metros across the state are recording increased activity, according to Perez. “Places like Tampa, Sarasota, and Fort Myers are heating up,” Perez said. “People are drawn to better cap rates, infrastructure growth, and population migration in these areas.”   Tampa, specifically, is notable for its job growth, cruise traffic, and airport expansion, which are all enticing factors for investors.   “Florida as a whole will remain a top target,” Perez emphasized. “We’ve got population growth, no state income tax, and a tourism economy that keeps evolving. I don’t see that slowing down anytime soon.”   Demand Gains in the Southeast Similar to Florida, Georgia also noted ongoing hotel construction in the first quarter with the addition of 1,463 rooms. Atlanta consistently benefits from an influx of travelers, due to the presence of Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. In 2024, the airport served 58.8 million passengers, which is a 10% increase over the previous year. Corporate travelers greatly contribute to the airport’s activity, with corporate demand rising in the second half of 2024.   Atlanta is also set to host World Cup events next year with eight matches, as well as one semifinal. The matches are expected to total an economic impact of $1 billion, and the metro estimates more than 300,000 visitors arriving for the tournament. There is a $120 million initiative in the works to prepare the city for its guests, and hoteliers are already preparing to accommodate the visitor influx.   The Carolinas Charlotte North and South Carolina are noting increased visitations, due to their strength as popular destinations for both corporate and leisure travel. In Charlotte, the metro’s prominence as a financial center allowed for an increase in group travel, with group business accounting for about a quarter of its performance in 2024. This comes as the metro hosted about 45 events at the Charlotte Convention Center. Now, Charlotte is expected to note RevPAR growth of more than 5% for the rest of 2025.   Charlotte’s construction pipeline will continue increasing to meet demand, according to Associate Lane McCool. “Though particularly for business and convention-related travel, Charlotte is seeing steady demand growth,” McCool said. As more visitors arrive in the metro, there are about 1,800 rooms underway, and more than 3,600 rooms are planned with openings in 2026 and after.   McCool added that Raleigh-Durham is another key metro that benefits from constant business travel. “Raleigh-Durham stands out due to its thriving technology, life sciences, and academic sectors,” McCool stated. “With proximity to major universities and 29 hotels planned or under construction in Wake County, this indicates strong developer confidence in long-term demand.”   The Research Triangle in the metro is a prominent area to watch, due to its economic strength and business travel. Its successful performance led Raleigh-Durham to record an occupancy rate of 66.9% at the end of Q1 2025.   Charleston While Charlotte and Raleigh-Durham are frequently visited as corporate travel destinations, Charleston is a standout market for leisure travel. The metro is home to several historical sites, and is also appealing for its beaches and golf courses. Despite its enticing location and variety of leisure opportunities, Charleston has a high barrier to entry, due to limited developable land and zoning regulations.   This difficulty led to only 72 rooms opening in 2024, but now there are more than 3,000 rooms in the planning phase, with the upscale segment accounting for 56% of the inventory. Vice President Mitchell Glasson stated that strategic timing is key when it comes to Charleston’s construction pipeline.   “Investors should focus on upscale and upper midscale properties, which maintain strong occupancy at 72% and offer stable returns,” Glasson emphasized.   One new development that leisure travelers can look forward to is The Cooper, which will open on the eastern side of Charleston in June 2025. The upper upscale hotel consists of 209 rooms, five dining locations, a meeting center, a rooftop pool, and more. The Cooper will deliver in the Charleston/West Ashley submarket, which Glasson noted as a high-performing area in the metro. “Despite flat RevPAR growth in 2024 at $120.27, Charleston/West Ashley’s dominance with a $183.52 RevPAR highlights its premium positioning,” Glasson said.   California Begins Hospitality Recovery Across the state, California recorded struggles in visitations since COVID-19. The Bay Area was one of the hardest-hit markets, noting decreases in international and domestic travelers. This slowdown is one factor that led to one of the metro’s most difficult periods in transaction volume, according to Associate Ryan Sanchez. “In the two years leading up to 2025, we saw a significant downturn in overall transaction volume, with 2024 being the fourth-lowest year in the last 15 years,” Sanchez said.   Now, the Bay Area is forecast to slowly start noting a recuperation in its hospitality sector as higher-end hotels are outperforming lower-tier hotels. “Room rate increases for non-luxury hotels are lagging behind inflation, compressing profit margins as operational costs continue to climb,” Sanchez stated.   “In essence, luxury hotels are regaining the ability to command higher prices, whereas budget hotels struggle to achieve meaningful rate increases in real terms,” Sanchez explained.   Several events are on the way in the Bay Area, which will increase both international and domestic visitations. Expectations for convention room night bookings are forecast to be greater than 600,000 this year, which will be approximately 40% above 2024 levels. San Francisco will continue to see an uptick in visits moving forward as it is hosting the 2026 Super Bowl and is a host city for the World Cup.   Midwest Demand Shifts New opportunities in the technology industry increased performance in Midwest markets. Specifically, Columbus is gaining attention for its Intel semiconductor investment, according to Associate Luke Whittaker. “The market is evolving into a tech-centric, innovation-driven place, which is creating a ripple effect on corporate travel and extended-stay demand,” Whittaker stated. Across the region, Whittaker noted that Indianapolis is benefiting from its strong calendar of conventions and sports tourism, while suburban areas in Chicago are seeing renewed interest because of industrial growth and regional business travel.   As the Midwest records an uptick in visitors, it is also noting a change in activity within its hospitality segments. Visitors are now most attracted to select-service and extended-stay hotels, which led to these sectors outperforming in the Midwest.   “These properties tend to be more cost-efficient to operate and cater to a mix of transient, corporate, and long-term guests—especially construction crews, healthcare travelers, and government-related stays,” Whittaker said.   The increase in demand for these hotels will also benefit smaller Midwest cities. “Affordability, infrastructure investment, and population shifts to lower-cost regions will continue to attract both institutional and private capital,” Whittaker stated. These trends are expected to stay moving forward, which will aid the entire region.   National Trends and Forward Expectations Extended-stay hotels are not only recording increased demand in the Midwest, but also across the country.   “Extended-stay is leading the pack in terms of developer and investor demand,” Perez expressed. “They’re operationally efficient, have stable occupancy, and appeal to workforce and long-term guests.”   Due to their popularity, the extended-stay sector recorded stable performance in the first quarter of 2025. Occupancy averaged 70% in this timeframe, with March noting the greatest occupancy rate at 75%. New rooms in this segment are also expected to rise, with 42,000 rooms under construction expected for delivery this year and in 2026.   Other trends that will benefit the hospitality sector include the addition of technology efficiency in business models. “Automation is picking up with mobile check-in, AI-enhanced operations, and leaner teams,” Perez stated. “Cap rates will stay tight in core markets, but value-add and conversion opportunities will offer great upside in less saturated areas.” New activity also includes how rising insurance premiums are pushing buyers to look at newer builds or inland assets that are better prepared for storms. “Buyers are asking deeper questions about flood zones, roofs, and insurance, which will matter more in underwriting,” Perez said. Overall, these new changes in the hospitality industry will set the stage for top performance in the years to come.

Image of Mitchell Glasson Author

Mitchell Glasson

First Vice President

Image of The Bellwether State Florida’s CMBS Hotel Defaults as a National Indicator Success Story

The Bellwether State Florida’s CMBS Hotel Defaults as a National Indicator

The Bellwether State Florida’s CMBS Hotel Defaults as a National Indicator The U.S. hotel market faces worsening financial strain from commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) loans, a trend acutely felt across the Southeast. By mid-2025, 86 hotels in the region had entered special servicing due to financial trouble, with Florida accounting for the lion’s share, cementing its role as ground zero in the nation’s hospitality debt crisis.   More than $6.2 billion in hotel CMBS loans are maturing this year, and the pressure is mounting, nearly 80% of 2025’s conduit hotel loan maturities are showing signs of stress, with only 21% considered both current and clean, according to Hotel Investment Today.   Amid this storm of expiring loans and rising operational costs, owners are forced back to the drawing board, seeking viable solutions under tighter financial conditions. Investors are proceeding with caution, wary of hidden risks. In tandem, lenders brace for a wave of refinancing challenges, loan workouts, and defaults in what’s shaping up to be one of the most turbulent years for hospitality financing in recent memory.   From Rebound to Reckoning After years of subdued activity, the CMBS market staged a dramatic comeback in 2023, surpassing $20 billion in issuance, nearly double the combined total of the previous two years. The post-COVID economic rebound created optimism around hotel performance, driving borrowers toward CMBS for its relatively lower rates and greater leverage in an otherwise high-interest environment. This appeal enabled the issuance of many loans from 2020 to 2022.   However, that optimism is now colliding with a much harsher reality. A large volume of these loans is maturing between 2024 and 2025, coinciding with the post-pandemic hotel recovery’s plateau and a significant tightening of market conditions. Interest rates have soared, refinancing is far more expensive, and net operating income (NOI) remains soft, weighed down by elevated operating costs and a plateau in both leisure and business travel demand. With margins tightening across the broader economy, hotels are increasingly struggling to meet stricter lending criteria, including higher debt service coverage ratios (DSCRs) and required debt yields.   Indeed, the payoff rate for hotel CMBS loans was 79.7 percent in Q4 2024, down from 84 percent in Q3, indicating a rising share of borrowers are unable to refinance or pay off maturing debt, according to Morningstar DBRS. This trend is pushing many into distress just as their loans come due, leading to a wave of maturity defaults.   Quantifying Southeast Hotel Distress The Southeast is teetering on a tightrope, with Florida leading the region in CMBS hotel distress. It far surpasses Georgia’s 22, with 42 hotels now in special servicing, compared to 16 in North Carolina and 6 in South Carolina.   But the pressure goes beyond geography. The real burden lies within the midscale and upscale hotel segments, which represent over 75% of distressed properties. These hotels are particularly vulnerable, caught between rising operating costs driven by inflation and price-sensitive travelers cutting back on discretionary spending. At the metro level, Atlanta leads the Sunbelt with 18 hotels in special servicing, followed by Orlando and Raleigh with 9 each, highlighting how uneven demand recovery and oversupply in key markets are deepening the distress.   Across the sector, CMBS lodging special servicing rates jumped 126 basis points to over 10% in April 2025, the highest level in three years, surpassing all other property types, according to SouthTrepp’s April and May 2025 reports. Notably, new transfers to special servicing nearly tripled month-over-month in April, marking this period as a critical low point for the nation’s hospitality credit market.   Florida: Unpacking Ground Zero Historically, Florida has borne a long-standing concentration of hospitality debt exposure, as Trepp Data from 2020 shows that the state held over 10 percent of the nation’s total hotel CMBS loan balance, with 476 hotel loans on the national watchlist at that time. Now, that exposure is resurfacing. Florida not only leads in current hotel distress, but also in future risk. With 93 hotels on the watchlist, there’s apparent potential for future defaults, as the watchlist serves as a critical early warning, flagging properties with elevated maturity risk, underwhelming performance, or insurance complications, regardless of on-time payments.   Key Markets A major tourism hub, Orlando is a primary contributor to Florida’s distress, where nine hotels have entered special servicing. Although the city saw occupancy rebound to nearly 77 percent in early 2025, it is contending with an overbuilt supply pipeline, which continues to disrupt demand dynamics and compress profit margins across the market.   Orlando, reliant on leisure travel and conventions, has struggled to regain pre-pandemic momentum, leaving it vulnerable to cyclical swings. Layered with operational challenges, the metro faces deeper financial fragility, ranking sixth in WalletHub’s 2025 financial distress index among U.S. sunbelt cities. The city also has the highest share of residents with distressed accounts, reflecting broader consumer strain. Though the ranking measures consumer health, not hotels, the effects often trickle down, reducing discretionary travel and straining mid-tier performance.   Miami and Tampa, two of Florida’s tourism-driven coastal hubs, are increasingly vulnerable, Miami in particular, despite resilient occupancy rates of about 83 and 80 percent at the beginning of the year. While these leisure-focused Southeast metros continue to attract international demand and investor interest, demand and occupancy are reverting to pre-COVID norms following several years of post-pandemic surges. The boom is cooling, occupancy is softening, and room rates are leveling off.   WalletHub ranked Miami ninth and Tampa eighth, signaling widespread economic pressures that could ripple through the hospitality sector. This deceleration exposes markets to slower revenue growth and tighter lending standards, especially for asset managers and owners who underwrote their assets at peak performance, assuming those elevated conditions would last indefinitely.   RevPar Trends and Growth Access Florida’s Key Markets Between early 2020 to mid-2025, 12-month RevPar steadily recovered across Miami, Tampa, and Orlando. Year-over-year percent change sharply peaked in early 2022 before stabilizing across all three market sectors.   Flag Exposure Consequently, a weighted portion of the sunshine state’s distressed assets is linked to specific brand portfolios. And the aftershocks of the low-rate era are now coming to a head. According to S&P Global Rating, over 25 percent of the state’s distressed hotels link back to a single La Quinta portfolio. As part of the LAQ 2022-LAQ Mortgage Trust collateralized by a $1.04 billion floating-rate loan tied to 109 La Quinta hotels and one Baymont. The loan, originated in 2022, officially matured in March 2024, with options for three one-year extensions. Florida became a key pressure point, with 23 properties in-state making up 16.2% of the portfolio’s loan balance. In 2025, CoStar confirmed that the loan had been downgraded.   That exposure runs deeper than one loan. This portfolio is the product of years of layered financing and the cracks formed long before the debt faced a reckoning. It began with a $1.5 billion acquisition by CorePoint Lodging in 2021, which owned a significant portion of the La Quinta portfolio. While ownership changed hands, day-to-day operations remained tied to Wyndham Hotels & Resorts, which had acquired the La Quinta brand and management platform back in 2018. That deal was partially financed by a $1.6 billion term loan due in 2025, compounding exposure as refinancing pressures intensify. Florida’s La Quinta defaults aren’t an outlier, they’re a preview of how thinly stretched brand-heavy portfolios are reacting under rate pressure.   But La Quinta isn’t alone.   Fellow major mid-tier play, Courtyard by Marriott, is fighting its own battle. Fourteen properties from a 2021 CMBS portfolio are now in distress, with foreclosure or liquidation on the table. The properties trace back to Ashford Hospitality Trust’s 2018 CMBS deal, AHT 2018-KEYS, which officially defaulted in mid-2023 after being transferred to special servicing that spring. A partial refinance in early 2025 salvaged part of the portfolio, but the remaining 14 hotels, totaling 2,384 rooms, remain exposed. Ashford pointed to rising capital costs, sluggish local recoveries, and ballooning operating expenses as the drivers behind the fallout.   The Drivers of Hotel Distress Maturing debt isn’t the sole culprit behind the intensifying instability of the CMBS hotel market. It’s the result of squeezed margins, lackadaisical demand, and unfortunate timing that’s now undermining even stable properties. The broader tone of the market is frugal as households tighten budgets and prioritize essential spending. One pressure feeds into the next, triggering a slow-moving domino effect that’s rippling across the sector.   As savings erode, so does discretionary travel. According to the Q2 2025 Travel Service Pulse Report, hotel occupancy plateaued for six consecutive months leading into quarter two of 2025, particularly in the economy and mid-tier segments, where rate sensitivity is highest. Corporate and group travel, once a reliable offset, hasn’t fully rebounded. Spending figures appear to recover, but actual room-night volume is still lagging. Travel patterns have shifted, and for hotels that once depended on a steady stream of weekday business travel, this mismatch is quietly eating away at performance.   Even prime assets are reaping marginal compressions. Inflation-driven increases in labor, insurance, and maintenance costs are compressing margins across the board. Meanwhile, brand-mandated renovations are becoming prohibitively expensive. Owners are struggling to meet their own standards, let alone those required by lenders.   Refinancing, too, is increasingly elusive. Interest rates remain elevated, and lenders are demanding stronger cash flows, higher DSCRs, and lower leverage. In markets like Florida, once a magnet for investment, owners now find themselves boxed in, unable to refinance, sell, or operate with meaningful profitability.   Stakeholder Imperatives The unfolding debt crisis in Florida’s CMBS hospitality sector carries significant, differentiated implications for various market participants:   Owners and Operators There’s immediate pressure to pursue proactive loan workouts and optimize operational efficiencies. Owners must also reposition brands or inject capital to strengthen performance and avoid default.   Investors Due diligence is paramount. Underwriting must rigorously reflect evolving market fundamentals, particularly rising capital expenditure obligations and the potential for extended volatility.   Lenders and Servicers Servicers must prepare for heightened special servicing, complex restructurings, and potential liquidations continuing through 2025 and beyond. Such preparation is essential to minimize financial losses and protect stability in the hospitality loan market.   Florida’s Bellwether Role Florida is no longer a debt hot spot. The Sunshine State is a real-time stress test for national CMBS hotel recovery. It offers vital lessons on adaptive strategies to manage the current debt cycle’s decline.   Synthesizing the Signals Florida’s outsized exposure is more than a regional concern, it’s a barometer of systemic stress across the U.S. hospitality landscape. Distress is concentrated in mid-tier brands and oversupplied markets, underscoring the fragmented, uneven nature of hospitality’s post-pandemic recovery.   The following 12 to 18 months will test the industry’s adaptability. The peninsula’s position as a high exposure market makes it a national case study. How stakeholders respond, through workouts, restructurings, and capital strategies, will help shape the industry’s broader playbook for navigating distress. Florida’s unfolding crisis may provide the clearest preview of how hospitality real estate endures the next credit cycle.

Image of David Loving Author

David Loving

Associate Market Leader

Image of Your 2025 National Self-Storage Update Success Story

Your 2025 National Self-Storage Update

H1 2025 National Self-Storage Report The U.S. self-storage sector in mid-2025 finds itself in a tentative but notable transition. After two years of rate compression, demand volatility, and aggressive discounting, the market is beginning to stabilize, with some regional markets outperforming expectations. Despite macroeconomic headwinds, including high interest rates and suppressed housing turnover, street rates are flattening, development pipelines are easing, and occupancy is hovering above pre-pandemic levels.   Key Themes National advertised rents are flat year-over-year but showing positive sequential growth. Midwest markets, particularly Chicago and Minneapolis, are outperforming. Lease-up supply is cooling nationally, but oversupplied Sunbelt metros still face pressure. Boat & RV storage is showing signs of a mild rebound with rent growth and a slowdown in new deliveries. Investment volume has slowed, particularly for portfolio sales, but individual asset sales remain active.   Rent and Occupancy Trends According to Yardi Matrix and RentCafe, the national average street rate for self-storage reached $16.90/SF in June 2025 (a 0.1% decrease YOY, but a 0.7% increase month-over-month, indicating a shift toward stabilization.   Climate-Controlled (CC) Units: +0.4 YOY Non-Climate-Controlled (NCC) Units: -0.4% YOY REIT Rents: +1.3% YOY in June (up 0.7% from May)   Occupancy is down slightly from pandemic highs but remains stable. Delinquency concerns are rising, particularly in more price-sensitive markets.   Market Performance Chicago (+2.9% YOY) and Minneapolis (+1.3% YOY) continue to outperform, benefiting from limited new supply and steady housing market support. Minneapolis saw its trailing three-year lease-up supply drop from 20.3% (2022) to just 4.1% in June 2025.   Weak Spots: Charlotte, Denver, and Tampa Face Pressure   Charlotte: Rates down -1.4% YOY amid heavy new supply (15.3% Inventory added over 3 years) Denver: Despite lower new supply, demand has waned due to housing affordability issues. Tampa: Monthly rent dropped -0.3% in June, short-term demand from prior hurricane activity is fading.   Top 10 Markets by MOM Rent Growth | June 2025 Source: Yardi Matrix, data as of July 8, 2025   Consumer Behavior & Operational Strategy From Storable’s 2025 Industry Pulse Report:   “Storage Near Me” hits 5-Year Low Occupancy is soft, but above pre-2020 levels Delinquencies are rising Rates down from pandemic highs ($120 vs $80)   Construction & Development Outlook Nationwide, 53.4 million NRSF of storage space is under construction, 2.7% of existing stock, a decline from previous months. However, the development focus is returning to the Sunbelt, with 17 of the top 30 metros above the national average.   Notable Activity: San Antonio: +0.8% MOM increase in construction Las Vegas: Highest share under construction at 6.6% (down from 7.2% due to completions). Frisco, TX & Fayetteville, NC: Overbuilding has led to steep rent declines (-17.4% YOY in Fayetteville)   Top 10 Markets Under Construction Supply by Percent of Existing Inventory Source: Yardi Matrix, Data as of July 8, 2025   Sales Volume & Investment Market Per CoStar and RCA, the self-storage investment market has cooled in 2025 amid economic uncertainty and persistently high interest rates. In Q2 2025, the sector recorded $751.8 million in sales volume across 400 transactions, down from $1.27 billion in Q1 and marking the lowest quarterly total in over a year. The average cap rate increased to 7.4%, while the average price per square foot fell to $109.31, reflecting investor caution and softening fundamentals.   Q2 2025 By the Numbers: Sales Volume: $751.8M Average Cap Rate: 7.4% Price Per SF: $109.31   Boat & RV Storage Despite falling from 2021’s boom, the RV and boat storage sector is stabilizing in 2025. As of Q2, the market continues to rebalance, with rent recovery outpacing that of traditional self-storage particularly in Western and Midwestern markets. Notably, pricing has rebounded after a 024 correction, with 2025 sales averaging $505,000 per acre, up from $308,000 last year, signaling renewed investor interest in select high-performing locations. However, transaction volume remains subdued, and overbuilt suburban nodes, especially in Texas and Florida, continue to weigh on long-term rate performance.   Rent Growth: +1.1% YOY in March, led by small-unit types (10X20 to 10X30: +1.3%. Chicago: Top-performing market with +4.2% YOY parking rent growth. Construction Activity: 58 projects under construction, down 64 in late 2024. Trailing 36-Month Supply: Declined to 15.8% in March, easing competitive pressures.   Boat & RV Storage | National Average Annualized Street Rates (Per SF for Main Unit Types) Source: Yardi Matrix, Data as of April 10, 2025

Image of Q225 | Retail Market Report | Tampa, FL Success Story

Q225 | Retail Market Report | Tampa, FL

Q2 2025 Tampa Retail Market Report Tampa Market Highlights Residents can look forward to new additions by TJX Brands, Ross, and Burlington as these discount retailers look to expand in Tampa. The metro’s population has grown by 280,000 residents over the past five years, drawn to the metro by a variety of employment opportunities. Britton Plaza is currently being revitalized to enhance customers’ experiences to boost visits. By the Numbers SF Under Construction: 667K SF Absorbed: -237K Vacancy Rate: 3.4% Asking Rent Growth: 5.4% Average Price per SF: $270 Sales Volume: $334M | Q2 2025 | Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Rents Tampa is among the top retail markets across the U.S. for five-year rent growth. Rents grew by 35% over the past five years, and recorded an asking rent of $26.93 per square foot during Q2 2025. Westshore and South Tampa note some of the highest rents in the metro, specifically along Kennedy Boulevard, where rents range from $40 per square foot or greater. Investors can find lower rents for anchor tenants greater than 10,000 square feet, with pricing around $13 to $15 per square foot. Looking ahead, Tampa is likely to see rent growth of 3% to 4% in the upcoming quarters.   Market Asking Rent per SF Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Vacancy Tampa recorded 3.2 million square feet absorbed over the past four quarters. However, leasing noted a downturn in the first half of 2025, which can be attributed to an increase in availability from store closures. This includes closures from tenants like Big Lots, Party City, and Walgreens. One of the tenants leading the way for leasing this year is EoS Fitness. So far, it signed four leases that totaled 150,000 square feet. It also plans on backfilling vacant spaces left over by JOANN’s, Earth Fare Supermarket, Walmart Neighborhood Market, and Badcock Furniture.   Vacancy Rate Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Construction Increased construction pricing has led to decreased developments across the metro, with 667,000 square feet on the way as of Q2 2025. Build-to-suit properties make up the majority of new additions in Tampa, as well as several redevelopments on the way. New redevelopments consist of mixed-use properties with a retail component. Moving forward, the largest developments on the way include a new Walmart and a Sprouts Farmers Market. The stores will be delivered in the Southeast Hillsborough and South Pinellas submarkets, respectively.   SF Under Construction Source: CoStar Group, Inc.   Sales Investors have increased their investments across Tampa, due to ongoing population growth and stable fundamentals. So far this year, Tampa recorded the majority of its transactions for properties $10 million or above. The largest deal in the second quarter was for Port Richey Honda, located in the Pasco County submarket. The dealership sold for $15.5 million, or $322.92 per square foot.   Top Florida Metro for Transactions: $1.3B in 12-Month Sales Volume Q225 Total Transaction Volume: $334M   Sales Volume & Market Sale Price per SF Source: CoStar Group, Inc.

Image of Q225 Florida Drugstore Tenant Report Success Story

Q225 Florida Drugstore Tenant Report

Q225 Florida Drugstore Tenant Report Florida’s drugstore retail market has undergone noteworthy changes within the past year. These developments underscore the influence of high-profile transactions, framed with an overarching resonance of broader national trends. Asset allocation strategy is moving beyond brand-driven comfort to a more nuanced emphasis on regional demographics and property-level performance. Fluctuating cap rates, elevated vacancies, and deliberate major operator repositioning characterize the ongoing dynamics within the drugstore sector.   Cap Rate Dynamics Over the past year, cap rates for pharmaceutical retailers in The Sunshine State have fluctuated within a narrow one percent range, ranging from 6.5% to 7.5%.   Walgreens cap rates have consistently traded on the lower end compared to the rest of the country due to varying factors, including location, performance, and lease duration. CVS assets follow suit, generally impacted by short lease terms at the time of sale. A distinct bifurcation is emerging across the Floridian sector.   Coastal metros experience higher valuations and sustained investor demand, while tertiary markets like Ocala and Lakeland offer higher yields.   Walgreens: Sales and Market Implications The national drugstore operator has made major strides in 2025, most notably its $10 billion sale to Sycamore Partners. Announced in March 2025, the acquisition is set to close in the second half of the year at a steep discount. The deal values Walgreens at 90% less than its peak market value a decade ago.   In late 2024, Walgreens announced plans to close 1,200 stores over three years as part of a broader restructuring plan. The closures began in 2025 with 500 locations scheduled to shutter in the first fiscal year. Currently, over 400 of those locations are listed, with 40 of them in Florida.   CVS Strategy and Store Format Innovation The pharmaceutical giant is nearing the end of its three-year plan to close 900 underperforming stores nationwide, announcing plans to shed at least another 270 stores in 2025. Not to be mistaken as signals of distress, this consolidation strategy is part of a deliberate shift toward a leaner, restructured growth model.   CVS is piloting “pharmacy-only” locations to reduce store footprints from 12-15K SF to under 5K to meet consumer and efficiency demands. The company plans to open 200 locations in 2025, including 30 in Florida.   Investment Trends Investor behavior throughout Florida’s drugstore segment is redefining itself. Buyers and sellers alike are responding to changing risk profiles, becoming more meticulous in their tenant strategies, taking local demographics, market fundamentals, and property-level attributes into consideration.   Areas experiencing record-high populations and employment growth are attracting capital and outperforming statewide averages. Specifically, in the Tampa Bay area, Orlando’s urban and suburban cores, as well as Miami’s suburbs, are standout investment zones. Secondary cities attract value-seeking buyers drawn by high return potentials.   Key Takeaways Florida’s pharmaceutical sector is entering a period of recalibration with large-scale Walgreens closures, tactical CVS repositionings, and rising vacancy trends. Top-performing core markets and key coastal regions across the state are maintaining resilient cap rates.   The retail segment remains fiercely competitive heading into Q3. Falling back on core CRE fundamentals is increasingly important, with regional demographics serving as a guide through a murky landscape marked by pricing gaps and cautious capital.

Image of Princeton Douglass Author

Princeton Douglass

Associate