Much of that is driven by big tech firms, which occupied huge campuses before the pandemic, later putting space back on the market as employees opted to work from home. In terms of the percentage of overall office inventory available for sublease, San Francisco has the highest of any metro area.
“San Francisco really became a tech market, so we had an overreliance on the one industry most readily adaptable and embracing of remote work,” said Mark Geisreiter, an executive managing director at commercial real estate company Newmark. “Last year the top 10 sublessors were all big tech companies.”
Subleases, in particular, often offer rent discounts, more flexible lease terms and lower costs to get the office ready for occupancy. But that doesn’t mean sublease offers are flying off the shelves.
Derek Daniels, research director at Colliers real estate company, said that sublease space would typically be on the market for five to six months before being snapped up or pulled off. But throughout the pandemic, that time has dragged out to around 14 months today.