Home Industries Real Estate Metro Milwaukee office real estate vacancy continues to rise

Metro Milwaukee office real estate vacancy continues to rise

A vacant floor of the R1VER office building in the Harbor District.

The metro Milwaukee area’s office real estate vacancy rate continued to rise through the end of 2024, reaching a new high of 19.8%, according to the latest quarterly report from the Commercial Association of Realtors Wisconsin (CARW). The rate was up from 18.6% in the third quarter and up from 17.7% in the same time

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Hunter covers commercial and residential real estate for BizTimes. He previously wrote for the Waukesha Freeman and Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. A graduate of UW-Milwaukee, with a degree in journalism and urban studies, he was news editor of the UWM Post. He has received awards from the Milwaukee Press Club and Wisconsin Newspaper Association. Hunter likes cooking, gardening and 2000s girly pop.
The metro Milwaukee area's office real estate vacancy rate continued to rise through the end of 2024, reaching a new high of 19.8%, according to the latest quarterly report from the Commercial Association of Realtors Wisconsin (CARW). The rate was up from 18.6% in the third quarter and up from 17.7% in the same time in 2023. In a sign of further softening, the market had negative absorption of more than 311,000 square feet of office space in the fourth quarter, bringing negative absorption in 2024 to more than 944,000 square feet. This comes after the market rebounded slightly in the third quarter, posting about 30,000 square feet of positive absorption. As the office market adjusts to users' post-pandemic preferences, office space brokers report a continued "flight to quality" trend of users opting for higher quality — albeit smaller — office spaces. This was reflected in fourth-quarter data with Milwaukee's central business district reporting positive absorption of about 14,000 square feet of class A office space and negative absorption of about 250,000 square feet of class B office space, which was mostly a result of Johnson Controls officially vacating its downtown Milwaukee office. In the suburbs, which posted a four quarter office space vacancy rate of 20.6%, class A, B and C properties all saw negative absorption of a combined 73,000 square feet, the report shows.

Fourth quarter office market data by submarket (vacancy/absorption):

Downtown Milwaukee East: 18% / -234,752 sf Downtown Milwaukee West: 19.2% / -15,743 sf Third Ward-Walker's Point: 20.3% / +12,615 sf --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Brookfield: 22.6% / +34,542 sf Mayfair-Wauwatosa: 28.1% / -74,718 sf Mequon-Theinsville: 16.8% / +3,523 sf Milwaukee Central: 1.2% / 0 sf Milwaukee North Shore: 14% / +2,130 sf Milwaukee Northwest: 25.7% / -83,638 sf Milwaukee South: 7.7% / -10,598 sf Milwaukee-West Allis: 29.7% / -27,823 sf Pewaukee: 22.4% / -305 sf Waukesha Northwest-Lake Country: 5.5% / +16,235 sf Waukesha Southeast-New Berlin: 30% / +38,469  sf Waukesha Southwest: 6.1% / +33,183 sf

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