Office space is currently the most in-demand commercial property asset in England.

BPS London analysed investor demand across the commercial property market, assessing the proportion of available opportunities within each asset class that have already attracted investor interest.

Office space most in-demand commercial investment

At a national level, office space currently commands the highest level of investor demand with 30.5% of office opportunities across England already sold subject to contract or under offer. 

Retail follows closely behind at 30.2%, while industrial and warehouse opportunities account for 27.5%. 

Leisure and hospitality assets continue to attract lower levels of interest, with 16.1% of opportunities having found an investor.

Investor appetite for office space is particularly strong across several regions. 

The West Midlands tops the table, with 39.0% of office opportunities already attracting investor interest, followed by the South East at 36.6% and the East of England at 33.1%. 

These figures underline the extent to which the return to a physical workplace is feeding through into renewed confidence in office-led investment across much of the country.

London office demand lagging behind rest of the nation

In London, however, investor appetite for office space currently trails other commercial asset classes. 

The analysis shows that 21.6% of available office opportunities in the capital have attracted investor interest, with industrial, leisure, and retail all seeing higher demand.

According to BPS London, this divergence is more reflective of oversupply than any continued decline in the office sector itself.

London seeing oversupply of office space

Further analysis of current commercial rental opportunities across the capital shows that offices account for 71.0% of all available commercial rental stock, compared to just 15.3% for industrial and warehouse space – the second highest, highlighting the volume of office providers currently competing for occupier demand despite a strong return to the physical workplace.

54% of London office workers returning full-time

In fact, a survey of London office workers found that 54% are now expected to attend the office full-time, while a further 36% are predominantly office-based with some degree of remote working retained. 

Just 7% operate an evenly split hybrid arrangement, while only 3% work mostly remotely with occasional office attendance.

The research also highlights a clear shift in expectations around office quality. 

When asked which aspects of office space they now value more than before the pandemic, better technology and meeting facilities ranked highest, followed by improved communal and breakout areas and better air quality and ventilation. 

On-site amenities, increased space and lower desk density, and improved design and aesthetics also featured prominently.

BPS London believes that while demand is returning, the current oversupply in office rental stock highlights that London’s commercial office market is still recalibrating following the pandemic. 

After a prolonged period during which remote working became widespread and large volumes of office space were either underutilised or converted to alternative uses,  the capital is now contending with a surplus of space that has not yet been upgraded to meet modern occupier expectations.

Please visit:

Our Sponsor

By admin