The headlines say there is no crisis. The data underneath says keep looking.
That is the paradox in commercial real estate - or CRE, the offices, apartments, and warehouses that landlords borrow against - right now. No single crash day. No big-bank-collapse moment to point to. That is exactly what is making this cycle hard to read.
Three Pressures, One Pot
Three forces are squeezing CRE at the same time.
Inflation keeps operating costs - insurance, labor, property taxes - stubbornly high. Loans taken out in the 4% rate era have to roll over into a 6% rate world. And the buildings themselves are in flux. Offices sit half empty. Apartments and warehouses face their own pricing resets.
Any one of these would strain the market. All three together explain why distress is piling up quietly instead of cracking open all at once.
What The Numbers Show
CMBS distress - late payments on commercial mortgage-backed securities, the loans that fund commercial buildings - hit a record 12.07% in March, according to CRED iQ. The same tracker says the rate could approach 13% by mid-2026.
That is happening while banks quietly extend loans instead of writing them down as losses. It is like turning down the volume on a fire alarm. The alarm is still ringing.
The $930 billion of CRE debt coming due in 2026 - more than triple last year's second-half total - is where the volume comes back up. Borrowers who cannot refinance have to sell, hand back the keys, or get creative.
Where The Creative Exits Show Up
Conversions are one creative exit. The office-to-apartment pipeline has grown to 90,300 units nationwide. Up 28% in a single year. Owners who cannot lease their towers are turning them into apartments.
That is not a victory. That is a workaround.
For investors, the lesson is clear. CRE distress in 2026 does not look like a tsunami. It looks like a tide coming in - slower, quieter, but rearranging the coastline just the same.
What Investors Should Actually Watch
Three things to keep an eye on: CMBS late-payment rates, the share of 2021-2022 loans being extended instead of refinanced, and office conversion pipelines in the top five cities.
Those tell you whether the water is still rising.
No headline is going to announce the bottom.
