Minneapolis Class A office asking rent in Q1 2026 is $28.80/SF/yr, with vacancy at 24.6% per Cushman & Wakefield Minneapolis Q1 2026. Free rent on a 60-month Class A deal is running 5 to 8 months; TI allowance $45 to $65/SF; blended NNN/CAM $10 to $13/SF.
TL;DR
North Loop’s brick-and-timber warehouse conversions popular with creative agencies and tech firms. Smaller floorplates and architectural character pull a 10 to 20% premium over generic downtown Class A. Skyway-connected buildings command winter-season premium.
Minneapolis Class A office market data (Q1 2026)
| Metric | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Class A asking rent | $28.80/SF/yr | Cushman & Wakefield Minneapolis Q1 2026 |
| Vacancy | 24.6% | Cushman & Wakefield Minneapolis Q1 2026 |
| Free rent (60-month deal) | 5 to 8 months | Cushman & Wakefield Minneapolis Q1 2026 |
| TI allowance (Class A, 5-year) | $45 to $65/SF | Cushman & Wakefield Minneapolis Q1 2026 |
| NNN/CAM blended | $10 to $13/SF | Cushman & Wakefield Minneapolis Q1 2026 |
Minneapolis submarkets
Top submarkets and pricing:
- Submarkets: Downtown, North Loop, Bloomington
- Submarket pricing: North Loop $32-$38, Downtown $26-$32, Bloomington $22-$28
- Tightness leader: Downtown typically commands the highest rent and lowest vacancy in Minneapolis
Submarket-specific pricing per Cushman & Wakefield Minneapolis Q1 2026 and per-submarket field reports.
How to use this data
For your specific deal:
- Use our pillar TCO calculator with
metro:minneapolisand your specific RSF, term, and property type. - Compare your proposed deal to the asking rent above; the asking-vs-effective spread in soft markets can be 15 to 25%.
- Benchmark concessions: free rent and TI in the table above are market medians. Your deal should be within range.
- Push on negotiation levers via our AI Negotiation Coach.
Property type rent ratios (vs Class A office, applies to Minneapolis)
- Office Class B: ~78% of Class A
- Retail storefront: ~115% (premium for traffic-driven submarkets)
- Restaurant/QSR: ~132% (grease/hood/gas premium)
- Industrial / warehouse: ~42%
Apply ratios to the Class A asking rent above for rough property-type estimates. For precise property-type rent, see Commercial lease cost per square foot metro index.
Minneapolis submarket pricing detail (Q1 2026)
| Submarket | Class A asking $/SF | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| North Loop | $32 to $38 | Brick-and-timber creative |
| Downtown | $26 to $32 | Class A office |
| Bloomington | $22 to $28 | Suburban |
Source: Cushman & Wakefield Minneapolis Q1 2026 with submarket-level estimates.
What to negotiate in Minneapolis in 2026
Five lever priorities for Minneapolis tenants:
- Free rent: target 5 to 8 months on a 60-month Class A deal based on Cushman & Wakefield Minneapolis Q1 2026 concession data.
- TI allowance: target $45 to $65/SF for Class A 5-year deals.
- Annual escalation cap: 3% fixed is the market default per CBRE Q1 2026 Lease Tracker. CPI-tied requires both 5% cap and 2% floor.
- Operating expense audit rights: 60 to 90 day window. NNN/CAM in Minneapolis runs $10 to $13/SF blended; protect against escalation surprise.
- Personal guaranty downgrade to good-guy clause: founders should always negotiate this regardless of metro.
Minneapolis-specific tenant considerations
North Loop’s brick-and-timber warehouse conversions popular with creative agencies and tech firms. Smaller floorplates and architectural character pull a 10 to 20% premium over generic downtown Class A. Skyway-connected buildings command winter-season premium. Minnesota state income tax is high (top rate 9.85%); affects senior hiring economics.
Who should lease in Minneapolis in 2026
For deal-specific analysis: use our pillar TCO calculator with metro:minneapolis and your specific RSF, term, and property type. The calculator handles all 13 inputs including per-metro NNN/CAM and submarket-specific TI defaults.
For Minneapolis tenants signing first commercial leases or considering 5+ year terms, engage a tenant rep broker (free to tenant; paid by landlord). For deals over 5,000 SF, the broker typically pays for themselves through better deal economics, especially in this market.
Cross-asset rent benchmarks for Minneapolis
Property type rent ratios applied to Minneapolis Class A asking rent of $28.8/SF:
- Office Class B: ~78% = $22.46/SF
- Retail storefront: ~115% = $33.12/SF
- Restaurant/QSR: ~132% = $38.02/SF
- Industrial / warehouse: ~42% = $12.10/SF
Property-type ratios per Cushman & Wakefield US cross-asset Marketbeat 2026. For metro-level industrial benchmarks, see Prologis Industrial Index Q1 2026.
How Minneapolis compares to peer metros
When evaluating Minneapolis against peer metros for a 5-year Class A office lease, three comparisons matter:
- Effective rent vs asking: in Minneapolis Q1 2026, the asking-vs-effective spread depends on submarket vacancy. Tighter submarkets (under 18% vacancy) hold value; softer submarkets (above 22% vacancy) deliver materially better effective rent.
- Total cost of occupancy: load NNN/CAM, escalations, and broker commission into the all-in number. Minneapolis’s blended TCO loading factor is in the 28 to 35% range typical of major US metros per the CBRE Total Cost of Occupancy framework.
- Workforce concentration: pull BLS Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages data for your specific industry’s employment in the Minneapolis MSA. Cheap rent in a market without your sector’s talent pool is a hiring trap.
For metro-by-metro comparison: Commercial lease cost per square foot metro index.
When to engage a tenant rep broker for a Minneapolis deal
For Minneapolis deals over 1,000 SF, engage a tenant rep broker. The broker is paid by the landlord (4 to 6% of gross rent over the term per CCIM fee guide), making representation effectively free to the tenant. Self-rep tenants don’t capture the saved commission; landlords or listing brokers retain it as margin.
For Minneapolis specifically, prioritize brokers with submarket experience in your specific area of the metro. Generalist city-wide brokers can miss submarket-specific dynamics that drive deal economics.
For broker selection: Top commercial tenant rep brokers 2026.
Frequently asked questions
Why is the North Loop priced at a premium?
Brick-and-timber warehouse conversions popular with creative agencies and tech firms. Smaller floorplates and architectural character pull a 10 to 20% premium over generic downtown Class A.
Is parking commonly bundled in Minneapolis leases?
Often yes for downtown, typically 1 space per 2,000 SF rentable included. Skyway-connected buildings command a 5 to 10% rent premium during winter months.
What’s the standard tenant-rep broker commission in Minneapolis?
4 to 6% of gross rent over the lease term, paid by the landlord (not the tenant). Tenant-side representation in Minneapolis is essentially free to the tenant in standard markets, always engage one for any deal over 1,000 SF.
Related guides
- Pillar: all-in commercial lease cost calculator
- Commercial lease cost per square foot metro index
- Commercial lease negotiation tips and AI coach
- NNN lease calculator
Sources
- Cushman & Wakefield Minneapolis Q1 2026 accessed 2026-05-02
- CommercialEdge Q1 2026 Office Report accessed 2026-05-02
- BLS Local Area Unemployment Statistics accessed 2026-05-02
Not financial or legal advice. Estimates based on publicly available market data and broker reports. Commercial real-estate is highly local and deal-specific. Consult a licensed commercial real-estate broker and a real-estate attorney before signing any lease.