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Thursday, Nov 14, 2024

Tenants Feel Offices are Vital Despite Remote Work Trend

The Building Owners and Managers Association (BOMA) International, Yardi and Brightline Strategies last summer announced the release of findings from the second in a series of nationwide commercial real estate COVID-19 impact studies. Capturing U.S. tenant sentiments as COVID-19 cases began to decline and vaccinations accelerated, the study revealed that optimism around the return to the office has been growing, mediated by tenants’ increasing clarity around the “new normal” of office and remote work practices.

More than 3,000 commercial office space decision-makers were surveyed. While a large majority of tenant decision-makers still see office space as being vital to their business operations, tenants recognize a shift in pre-pandemic practices. Participants projected, on average, that fewer than half of their employees will work full-time in the office over the next 12-18 months.

“COVID-19 has created an inflection point across the commercial real estate landscape, and these study findings show the road ahead is going to pose different challenges and opportunities,” said Henry H. Chamberlain, APR, FASAE, CAE, president and COO of BOMA International. “The value and vitality of offices remain strong, and there is also tremendous opportunity for owners and operators to work collaboratively with their tenants on investments in building infrastructure, amenities, space designs and other features to create healthy, safe and productive workplaces.”

Among the study’s key findings are:
• 65% of respondents feel the United States is heading in the right direction on COVID-19 management (up 28% from the prior study in Q4 2020).

• 78% of respondents affirm their in-person office is vital to operating their business but indicate that the future use of their space will change.

• Tenants anticipate a clear shift toward hybrid work options, as respondents reported the average amount of people working in the office full time would decrease from 70% prior to the pandemic to 43% over the next 12-18 months. Notably, they predict only about a quarter of the workforce (26%) will telework full-time/most of the time.

• The number of respondents across tenant sizes reporting they will reassess space needs (56%) has decreased 5 points since the prior study, while those responding unsure has climbed to 37%, up from the 19%. Among those respondents reassessing space, 48% would reduce their square footage, amounting to 37% of all office tenants surveyed (down from 43% in Q4 2020).

• Nearly 2/3 of tenants (64%) believe owners and operators should make additional space investments in either health and safety infrastructure and technology to potentially mitigate future health emergencies or wellness amenities, programming and platforms that support tenants’ efforts to increase organizational culture, connectivity, productivity and well-being.

• 86% approve of their property management company’s response to COVID-19 so far (vs. 77% in Q4 2020), demonstrating that commercial property owners and operators are delivering strong value to tenants in actively responding to the pandemic.

Additional findings explore the implications of COVID-19 and increased vaccination rates on economic/business impacts, space utilization, the likelihood of lease renewals and relocations, confidence in the safety of office spaces and office return plans.

The executive summary of this nationwide study can be found at boma.org/covidimpact.

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