The Quarterly / Q1 2026

Q1 2026 Market Report

The Bid Holds.

Manhattan posts its strongest Q1 office leasing since 2014.
Multifamily reverses the post-election slump. The Fed pauses. Q1
confirms the recovery is no fluke.

Published April 2026

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Manhattan's Recovery Solidifies: Record Office Leasing and Multifamily Surge Highlight a Resilient Q1 2026

A Structural Shift for NYC Property

New York City’s commercial real estate market entered 2026 with an emphatic declaration that its recovery is structural rather than a temporary post-election bounce. Total transaction volume in Manhattan reached $3.7 billion, marking a 5-year first-quarter high and a 33% increase quarter-over-quarter. This surge occurred despite the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) pausing the benchmark interest rate at 3.50%–3.75% during its January and March meetings, alongside a 10-year Treasury note drifting higher toward 4.30%.

Underneath the macroeconomic indicators, the sectoral data reveals massive momentum in office leasing, which achieved 11.78 million square feet—the strongest first quarter since 2014 and within 1% of the record-shattering Q4 2025 performance. Concurrently, availability compressed for the eighth consecutive quarter to 13.7%, while average asking rents climbed 4% year-over-year to $77.55 per square foot ($84.74 for Class A spaces).

Multifamily Reverses the Slump While Retail and Hospitality Tighten

The most dramatic narrative of the quarter was the swift reversal in the multifamily sector. Following a sharp 57% decline in Q4 sales volume triggered by political anxieties surrounding the Mamdani administration’s election, Manhattan multifamily volume rebounded by 246% quarter-over-quarter to $1.07 billion across 44 deals. Free-market assets completely dominated the ecosystem, commanding 84% of the dollar volume. Meanwhile, the development sector achieved a 12-year high in monthly filings for March 2026, driven by the realization of 467-m, 485-x, and City of Yes incentives.

In the retail sector, prime corridor availability held tight at its historic low of 13.7%. Core corridors like Upper Madison ($982/SF) and SoHo Broadway ($355/SF) continue to operate in a premium state, while secondary corridors work to recalibrate. Simultaneously, NYC hospitality sustained its position as the nation’s premier market with a 2025 baseline occupancy of 84.1% and an Average Daily Rate (ADR) of $333.71, paving the way for substantial growth ahead of the upcoming FIFA World Cup matches.

Institutional Capital and AI Demand Re-Engage

The return of deep institutional and private capital defined Q1. AI-related firms transformed from a speculative demand source into an active market anchor, signing 415,000 square feet of leases in Q1 alone. Averaging 34,500 square feet per transaction, AI firms secured half of their entire full-year 2025 leasing volume in just three months, heavily concentrating their footprints within Midtown South.

Concurrently, corporate institutional capital continued to favor flagship real estate ownership over traditional leasing. Tier-one luxury brands have consistently reshored capital into permanent assets, exemplified by iconic late-2025 acquisitions like Kering’s $963 million purchase of 717 Fifth Avenue and Prada’s $835 million acquisition of 720/724 Fifth Avenue. This corporate buy-and-hold thesis indicates that current valuations represent a long-term entry window rather than a cyclical peak.

— Key takeaways
  1. Manhattan transaction volume reached a 5-year Q1 high of $3.7 billion, showing that capital is deploying aggressively despite a temporary pause in the Federal Reserve’s rate-cutting cycle.
  2. Office leasing achieved its strongest Q1 since 2014 at 11.78M SF, propelled by AI companies locking down 415K SF—matching half of their entire 2025 volume in one quarter.
  3. Multifamily assets staged a massive 246% quarter-over-quarter recovery to $1.07 billion, completely reversing the post-election panic through free-market asset demand.
  4. The retail availability rate plateaued at an all-time record low of 13.7%, with luxury flagship brands shifting heavily toward direct property acquisition.
  5. Development activity tapped a 12-year high in March filings, as office-to-residential conversions hit 2.5 million square feet actively underway.
— Sources
  • Ariel Property Advisors (2026). NYC All-Asset Investment Sales Report Q1 2026.

  • Ariel Property Advisors (2026). Multifamily Quarter in Review Q1 2026.

  • Avison Young (2026). New York City Office Market Report Q1 2026.

  • Avison Young (2026). Manhattan Capital Markets Q1 2026.

  • Colliers (2026). Manhattan Office Market Report Q1 2026.

  • CoStar/STR (2026). U.S. Hotel Forecast Assumptions February 2026.

  • JLL (2026). Manhattan Retail Q1 2026.

  • PwC (2025). Manhattan Lodging Index First Half 2025.

Get in touch

Get the full Q1 2026 Report

Download the PDF version with charts, comp tables, and source data.

Get in touch

Get the full Q1 2026 Report

Download the PDF version with charts, comp tables, and source data.