Explore Atlanta’s Industrial, Office and Medical Office market reports along with Savannah’s Industrial market report.
Industrial Availability Metrics | October 2025
Sublease availability dipped for the first time in six months, falling slightly to 14.5 million SF in September. While still elevated, this marks a potential inflection point after a prolonged upward trend. 11 new projects broke ground in Q3 2025, adding fresh supply to the development pipeline. Despite the influx of 2 MSF of new speculative construction, overall availability rose only modestly to 104.9 million SF, suggesting that leasing momentum is starting to counterbalance…
September 2025 | Market Brief
Atlanta’s industrial market has seen extraordinary rent growth over the last decade, and recent data from Lee & Associates Atlanta Research provides critical context for today’s environment of rising vacancy. Across every building size category, cumulative rent growth over the last five years exceeds 70%. This pace of rent escalation is historic. For landlords, it has delivered record-setting lease rates, but for occupiers it has pushed rents far above historical norms. As highlighted in our…
Industrial Availability Metrics | September 2025
Sublease availability continued its upward climb to 14.7 million SF in August, setting a new cycle high. Total availability increased to 104.1 million SF, though the pace of increase has slowed from earlier this year. Large block availability (>250,000 SF) recorded a month-over-month decrease, a positive sign that some of the larger blocks of vacant space are getting absorbed even as overall availability continues to edge upward. Leasing momentum is showing signs of life,…
August 2025 | Market Brief
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY At the start of 2025, Lee & Associates made several key predictions about the Atlanta industrial market. With mid-year behind us, we are checking in—benchmarking where predictions prevailed, where the market surprised us, and what’s shaping the outlook for the remainder of the year. Despite headwinds, leasing has remained resilient, supply growth has eased, and tenants are staying put. However, vacancy is gradually rising as tenants adapt to a new market cycle. YEAR-END…