Photo by Severine Wider
Entering 2026, the Jacksonville office market has begun to show clear signs of stabilization.
The Class A suburban market is benefiting from higher absorption and rising rental rates, while Downtown is positioned to lead the next phase of growth. A meaningful performance gap remains between the best and worst buildings, but highly amenitized assets — particularly in Brooklyn and the Sports and Entertainment District — are outperforming and garnering the highest rental rates in the city.
Jacksonville remains one of the most affordable major office markets in Florida, with rental rates well below Tampa and Orlando and far under the national average.
That pricing advantage matters, but what is more compelling is that performance is improving at the same time. Office rent growth rebounded to 1.9% annually by Q4 2025, outperforming the national average, with high-quality Class A assets accelerating even faster.
Every submarket is now experiencing positive rent growth, a strong indicator that Jacksonville is shifting from stabilization toward expansion heading into late 2026.
Downtown is benefiting from renewed confidence and long-term commitment.
More than $6 billion in transformative public and private investment is underway, including Riverfront Plaza, the Sports and Entertainment District, Pearl Square and the University of Florida’s new Jacksonville campus. Collectively, these projects are reshaping Jacksonville’s urban core into a more vibrant, connected mixed-use district.
From an investment standpoint, Jacksonville is increasingly being recognized as one of the strongest value-add markets in the Southeast. In 2025, office sales volume increased nearly 20% year over year, driven largely by value-add investors and owner-user buyers.
As equity and debt capital become more readily available for office properties, the market is positioned for steady growth over the next 12 to 24 months.
Looking ahead, 2026 will be defined by momentum. Capital is returning, financing conditions are improving and tenants are re-engaging after delaying major real estate decisions.
Nationally, the return-to-office trend continues to strengthen, reinforcing demand for high-quality workspace and pushing companies to prioritize locations that help attract and retain talent.
Jacksonville is emerging as one of the most compelling office value markets in the country at exactly the right point in the cycle and Downtown is poised for its next chapter.
Harden is CEO and and an owner of NAI Hallmark.
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Top commercial sales of 2025. List here
Top commercial sales of Q4 2025. List here