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Commercial Lease Cost in Portland, OR (2026 Market Data)

Commercial lease cost Portland (OR) 2026: Class A $31.40/SF, vacancy 27.8%, free rent 9mo. Q1 broker data.

Commercial Lease Cost

All-in TCO: base rent + NNN + CAM + escalations + free rent + TI + broker

Portland OR Class A office asking rent in Q1 2026 is $31.40/SF/yr, with vacancy at 27.8% per JLL Portland Q1 2026. Free rent on a 60-month Class A deal is running 9 to 14 months downtown; TI allowance $60 to $80/SF; blended NNN/CAM $8 to $11/SF.

TL;DR

Portland downtown is the softest major West Coast secondary market, vacancy 27.8%. Concession packages are real but landlord financial health needs verification before signing long-term in older Class B/C buildings.

Portland OR Class A office market data (Q1 2026)

MetricValueSource
Class A asking rent$31.40/SF/yrJLL Portland Q1 2026
Vacancy27.8%JLL Portland Q1 2026
Free rent (60-month deal)9 to 14 months downtownJLL Portland Q1 2026
TI allowance (Class A, 5-year)$60 to $80/SFJLL Portland Q1 2026
NNN/CAM blended$8 to $11/SFJLL Portland Q1 2026

Portland OR submarkets

Top submarkets and pricing:

Submarket-specific pricing per JLL Portland Q1 2026 and per-submarket field reports.

How to use this data

For your specific deal:

  1. Use our pillar TCO calculator with metro:portland and your specific RSF, term, and property type.
  2. Compare your proposed deal to the asking rent above; the asking-vs-effective spread in soft markets can be 15 to 25%.
  3. Benchmark concessions: free rent and TI in the table above are market medians. Your deal should be within range.
  4. Push on negotiation levers via our AI Negotiation Coach.

Property type rent ratios (vs Class A office, applies to Portland OR)

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.

Portland OR submarket pricing detail (Q1 2026)

SubmarketClass A asking $/SFNotes
Pearl District$34 to $40Creative office
Downtown$28 to $34Soft 28% vacancy
Lloyd District$26 to $30Older Class B
Suburban$24 to $28Beaverton/Lake Oswego

Source: JLL Portland Q1 2026 with submarket-level estimates.

What to negotiate in Portland OR in 2026

Five lever priorities for Portland OR tenants:

  1. Free rent: target 9 to 14 months downtown on a 60-month Class A deal based on JLL Portland Q1 2026 concession data.
  2. TI allowance: target $60 to $80/SF for Class A 5-year deals.
  3. Annual escalation cap: 3% fixed is the market default per CBRE Q1 2026 Lease Tracker. CPI-tied requires both 5% cap and 2% floor.
  4. Operating expense audit rights: 60 to 90 day window. NNN/CAM in Portland OR runs $8 to $11/SF blended; protect against escalation surprise.
  5. Personal guaranty downgrade to good-guy clause: founders should always negotiate this regardless of metro.

Portland OR-specific tenant considerations

Portland downtown is the softest major West Coast secondary market at 27.8% vacancy. Concession packages are real but landlord financial health needs verification before signing long-term in older Class B/C buildings. Suburban Portland (Beaverton, Lake Oswego) is healthier at ~18% vacancy. Oregon’s 9.9% top state income tax is high; factor into senior hiring math.

Who should lease in Portland OR in 2026

For deal-specific analysis: use our pillar TCO calculator with metro:portland 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 Portland OR 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 Portland OR

Property type rent ratios applied to Portland OR Class A asking rent of $31.4/SF:

Property-type ratios per Cushman & Wakefield US cross-asset Marketbeat 2026. For metro-level industrial benchmarks, see Prologis Industrial Index Q1 2026.

How Portland OR compares to peer metros

When evaluating Portland OR against peer metros for a 5-year Class A office lease, three comparisons matter:

  1. Effective rent vs asking: in Portland OR 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.
  2. Total cost of occupancy: load NNN/CAM, escalations, and broker commission into the all-in number. Portland OR’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.
  3. Workforce concentration: pull BLS Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages data for your specific industry’s employment in the Portland OR 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 Portland OR deal

For Portland OR 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 Portland OR 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

Is downtown Portland recovering?

Slowly. Combination of remote-work shift, central-city safety perception, and corporate retraction kept Class A vacancy near 28%. Suburban Portland (Beaverton, Lake Oswego) is healthier at ~18% vacancy.

Are Portland concessions actually deliverable?

Yes, landlords are paying out 9 to 14 months free + $60 to $80 PSF TI on 5-year deals downtown. The risk is post-lease execution: confirm landlord financial health before signing a long-term lease, especially in older Class B buildings.

What’s the standard tenant-rep broker commission in Portland OR?

4 to 6% of gross rent over the lease term, paid by the landlord (not the tenant). Tenant-side representation in Portland OR is essentially free to the tenant in standard markets, always engage one for any deal over 1,000 SF.

Sources

  1. JLL Portland Q1 2026 accessed 2026-05-02
  2. CommercialEdge Q1 2026 Office Report accessed 2026-05-02
  3. 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.

How Portland (OR) compares

Class A asking rent, Q1 2026 ($/SF/yr)

  • Detroit $24.80
  • Orlando $28.60
  • Minneapolis $28.80
  • Las Vegas $31.20
  • Portland (OR) $31.40
  • Raleigh-Durham $31.80
  • Phoenix $32.40
  • Philadelphia $33.20
  • Houston $33.40
  • Charlotte $33.60
  • Tampa $34.10
  • Denver $36.20
  • Atlanta $36.40
  • Dallas $36.80
  • Nashville $36.80
  • Chicago $39.20
  • Washington DC $42.80
  • Austin $44.10
  • San Diego $48.60
  • Los Angeles $48.90
  • Seattle $49.60
  • Boston $61.40
  • Miami $63.80
  • New York City $72.10
  • San Francisco $78.40

Portland (OR) insights

  • Market trend

    Concession depth is real. Push for free rent + TI rather than asking-rent reductions.

  • Vacancy

    Q1 2026 vacancy is 27.8%. Above 22% generally signals tenant-favorable leverage.

  • Top submarkets

    Downtown, Pearl District, Lloyd

  • Typical concessions

    9 months free + $55/SF TI on Class A 5-year deals.

Source: us.jll.com · last verified 2026-05-02.