Free NewsletterPro Login

Office-to-Apartment Conversions Hit 90,300 Units - Up 28% in One Year

Published Apr 19, 2026
Share:
Summary:
  • Office-to-apartment conversions hit 90,300 units, a 28% jump year-over-year.
  • Developers are targeting obsolete B- and C-class office towers in dense downtown cores.
  • Conversions are easing housing supply in cities facing both office glut and a rent crunch.

Empty office towers are not becoming rubble. They are becoming bedrooms.

The office-to-apartment conversion pipeline just hit 90,300 units nationwide. Up 28% in one year. Nearly four times what it was in 2022. This is what happens when Kastle's office occupancy barometer is still stuck around 56% and $930 billion in commercial real estate loans come due the same year.

From White-Collar Floors To White-Walled Studios

Nearly half of all planned building conversions in the country - 47% - now come from offices getting stripped and turned into apartments.

The industry calls this "adaptive reuse." In plain English, it means taking an existing building, keeping the bones, and swapping the guts. A conference room becomes a kitchen. A corner office becomes a primary bedroom.

Two things are driving the wave. Loans are coming due, so owners have to do something other than wait. And local governments are sweetening the math with tax breaks and zoning changes to bring empty downtowns back to life.

Where The Work Is Happening

New York tops the list with 16,358 units in conversion. Washington DC comes in second at 8,479. Chicago is third at 4,360.

Denver and Philadelphia both more than doubled their pipelines in a single year. Both cities happen to have older, narrower office buildings - the kind that convert most easily.

Not every office can make the jump. Whether a building can be converted comes down to a few boring but key details. How deep the floors go. Where the windows sit. Whether the structural layout can handle the plumbing and wiring that apartments need. Big, boxy trophy towers often fail the test.

What It Means For Investors

This matters in two directions.

Office landlords with the right kind of building now have an exit that did not exist five years ago. Office landlords with the wrong kind of building have fewer options than ever.

On the apartment side, 90,300 new units is real new supply hitting markets that were already building fast. For investors in REITs - real estate investment trusts, companies that own apartment buildings and pay out rental income - that means rent growth in the top conversion cities may face more competition than the headline numbers suggest.

What To Watch

If the pipeline keeps growing at 28% a year, office-to-apartment stops being a niche play. It starts being a category. Local incentives, construction costs, and loan terms will decide whether it keeps scaling.

The empty tower era is ending. The converted tower era is just getting started.

Disclosure

Get Market Briefs delivered to your inbox every morning for free!

No fluff. No noise. No politics. Just finance news you can read in 5 minutes.

Blogs

June 15, 2026
Top Covered Call ETFs: How to Compare Them
  • Top covered call ETFs are income funds that own stocks and sell call options against them to generate steady cash.
  • The best one for you is the fund whose income, holdings, and fees fit your goals, not simply the one with the flashiest yield.
  • They all share one trade-off: more income today, less upside in a big rally.
Read More
June 15, 2026
What Are Stock Options? A Plain-English Guide
  • Stock options are contracts that give you the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell a stock at a set price by a set date.
  • There are two kinds: calls (the right to buy) and puts (the right to sell).
  • Options can multiply gains or wipe out your money fast, so they suit investors who already know the basics.
Read More
June 15, 2026
EBITDA Margin: What It Is and How to Calculate It
  • EBITDA margin measures how much core profit a company keeps from each dollar of sales, before interest, taxes, and accounting deductions.
  • The formula is EBITDA divided by revenue, shown as a percent.
  • A higher, steadier EBITDA margin usually signals a more efficient, more durable business.
Read More
June 15, 2026
What Is Taxable Income? A Simple Guide for Investors
  • Taxable income is the portion of your money the government can tax after deductions are applied.
  • Not all income is taxed the same: job income, investment income, and passive income face different rates.
  • Investors and business owners get more tools to legally lower their taxable income, which is a big edge over time.
Read More
June 15, 2026
What Is a Covered Call? How the Strategy Works
  • A covered call is an options strategy where you own a stock and sell someone the right to buy it from you at a higher price.
  • You collect cash, called the premium, up front, and keep it no matter what happens.
  • The trade-off: if the stock soars, your shares get sold at the set price and you miss the extra upside.
Read More
June 15, 2026
What Is Gross Margin? A Simple Guide for Investors
  • Gross margin is the share of each sales dollar a company keeps after paying the direct cost of whatever it sold.
  • The formula is simple: revenue minus cost of goods sold, divided by revenue, shown as a percent.
  • A steady or rising gross margin points to pricing power, and it is one of the first things smart investors check.
Read More
June 15, 2026
What Is a Dividend? A Plain-English Guide for Investors
  • A dividend is a cash payment a company sends you just for owning its stock, usually every three months.
  • Dividends are one of two ways stocks pay you, the other being the share price going up.
  • Dividends are never guaranteed, so the strength of the business behind the payment matters more than the size of the payment.
Read More
May 30, 2026
Financial Literacy Books That Actually Build Wealth
  • The best financial literacy books don't just teach budgeting, they shift how you think about money.
  • Two classics stand out: The Intelligent Investor for valuing investments, and Rich Dad Poor Dad for the owner's mindset.
  • Reading is only step one. The real wealth comes from acting on what you learn.
Read More
May 30, 2026
What Is a Roth Conversion? A Simple Guide
  • A Roth conversion moves money from a traditional retirement account into a Roth account.
  • You pay taxes on the money now, in exchange for tax-free growth and withdrawals later.
  • It can pay off if you expect higher taxes or more income in the future, but the timing and tax hit matter a lot.
Read More
May 30, 2026
Trailing Stop Loss: How to Protect Your Gains
  • A trailing stop loss is an order that automatically sells a stock if it falls a set percentage from its recent high.
  • As the stock rises, the sell point rises with it, locking in gains while capping losses.
  • It's most useful for active strategies like momentum investing, not for long-term buy-and-hold.
Read More
1 2 3 22
Share via
Copy link