Market data: Q1 2026 · Source: Cushman & Wakefield, Colliers · Last reviewed June 2026
$56.67/SF Downtown overall avg. asking rent
$61.77/SF Downtown Class A avg.
$77.55/SF Manhattan avg. (context)
16.8% Downtown availability
49 Active listings
Cushman & Wakefield, Manhattan Office MarketBeat Q1 2026 (April 2026) · Colliers, Q1 2026 Downtown Office Market Report (April 8, 2026)

The Financial District is the oldest office market in New York and known as the home to Wall Street, the New York Stock Exchange, and the Federal Reserve. It holds roughly 40 million SF of office space, about half of all of Downtown Manhattan.

What sets it apart right now, though, is that its weakest towers are being converted to apartments by the thousand. That pulls obsolete space off the market and tightens what remains, and it is steadily changing FiDi’s reputation as the place you go only for cheap space.

In Q1 2026, Downtown posted 2.9 million SF of leasing, its second-highest quarterly total on record (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). Availability slipped to 16.8% with positive net absorption of 660,000 SF (Colliers, Q1 2026). Overall asking rent rose for the sixth straight quarter to $56.67/SF, and Class A reached $61.77/SF (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026), the widest gap between the two classes in two years.

This also means that where you land in FiDi matters more than it once did.

Financial District Office Market Overview

FiDi has long been seen as the place where you trade prestige for a lower rent. But while that was a fair description five years ago, it becomes less true with each quarter, as the cheapest and weakest office stock gets pulled out of the market for residential conversion and the remaining supply tightens.

The numbers bear this out.

  • Downtown leasing reached 2.9 million SF in Q1 2026, its second-highest quarterly total on record (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026), with availability down to 16.8% and positive absorption (Colliers, Q1 2026).
  • Asking rents have risen for six straight quarters, the longest run since 2017 (Colliers, Q1 2026).
  • Manhattan as a whole leased 11.78 million SF, its strongest first quarter since 2014, with the average asking rent up 2% to $77.55/SF (Colliers, Q1 2026).
  • Downtown is riding that recovery from a lower base, with one feature no other submarket shares: a shrinking supply.

Four Forces to Monitor

  • The conversion boom is shrinking the office market. 25 Water Street, rebranded SoMA, became the largest office-to-residential conversion in U.S. history with 1,320 apartments when it began leasing in late 2025 (6sqft, January 2025). It was also the first project to use New York’s 467-m tax incentive. Behind it come 55 Broad Street (571 units, Silverstein Properties and Metro Loft), 1 Wall Street (566 units, complete), 80 Pine Street (713 units underway), 160 Water Street (588 units), plus 77 Water and 111 Wall, together expected to add roughly 5,000 homes.
  • Class A is pulling away from Class B. Since 2020, about 73% of all Downtown leasing has gone to Class A buildings (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). The Class A premium over Class B reached 25.5% in Q1 2026, up from roughly 14% in mid-2024, the widest gap in two years (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). The flight to quality is pronounced here. If your team needs a modern Class A address for clients or recruiting, that premium is the cost of it. If you can work in a well-run Class B building, the same gap is your leverage. Our explainer on what makes a building Class A, B, or C adds context.
  • Large anchor tenants are lifting the bottom of the market. American Express committed to nearly 2 million SF at 2 World Trade Center in February 2026. Moody’s took close to half a million SF at Brookfield Place in 2025, and Cleary Gottlieb signed 475,000 SF at Brookfield’s One Liberty Plaza in spring 2026 (Commercial Observer, May 2026). Commitments of that size give landlords room to hold firmer on quality space and trim the heaviest concessions.
  • Tenants priced out of Midtown are looking south. Companies that cannot justify Midtown trophy rents keep coming Downtown for comparable quality at a lower number, and the deals follow whenever the space and the price line up. Midsize requirements are driving it, with 10,000 to 50,000 SF deals taking the largest share of Manhattan leasing in Q1 2026 (Avison Young, Q1 2026). If the alternative is paying up in Midtown South, FiDi is worth comparing.

How Much Does Financial District Office Space Cost?

It depends on the building, the class, and the block, so a single “FiDi rent” tells you very little.

Start with the Downtown benchmarks. The overall asking rent was $56.67/SF in Q1 2026, and Class A averaged $61.77/SF (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). CBRE put the Lower Manhattan monthly average in the high $50s through the spring (CBRE, March and April 2026). The Financial District holds the older, more Class B-heavy half of Downtown’s inventory, so FiDi space generally prices at or below that average, while a handful of repositioned and trophy-adjacent buildings run higher (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026).

The first question to settle is whether you actually need a Class A address. Client-facing finance, fintech, and law usually do. Most other tenants do not. The Class A premium over Class B is 25.5% (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026), which puts Class B asking rents in the high $40s/SF (derived from the published premium; Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026), for the same neighborhood and the same trains.

Before touring, run your headcount through our Office Space Calculator so you are shopping for the right size.

FiDi area Class A profile Class B / C coverage Availability Typical square footage for new leases Tier
Wall Street core (Broad / Wall / Pine / William) Repositioned Class A Deep Class B; some Class C ~15 to 18% 2,500 to 40,000 SF Mixed
Broadway corridor (Trinity to Liberty) Prewar Class A Strong Class B inventory ~14 to 17% 2,000 to 30,000 SF Mixed
Water Street / Seaport edge Limited Class A Class B and C dominate, converting ~17 to 21% 2,000 to 50,000+ SF Value
Battery / Bowling Green Class A with harbor views Class B available ~14 to 17% 3,000 to 50,000 SF Mixed
Maiden Lane / insurance edge Limited Class A Class B and C dominate ~16 to 19% 1,500 to 15,000 SF Value
Downtown average (context) $61.77 Class A $56.67 overall district average 16.8% Varies Mixed

Downtown Class A average of $61.77/SF and Downtown overall average of $56.67/SF from Cushman & Wakefield, Manhattan Office MarketBeat Q1 2026 (April 2026). Downtown availability of 16.8% from Colliers, Q1 2026 Downtown Office Market Report (April 8, 2026). FiDi area-level Class A profiles, Class B and C coverage descriptors, and availability ranges are Metro Manhattan internal research (May 2026); approved firms publish the Downtown district average but do not publish per-area FiDi breakouts in the named Q1 2026 reports.

Class A and Repositioned Space

Most of FiDi’s Class A inventory is being renovated rather than newly built. The clearest example is 60 Wall Street, the 1.6 million SF tower Deutsche Bank vacated in 2021, now in a full repositioning by Paramount Group and GIC with a KPF redesign of the lobby, atrium, and base. It’s a LEED Gold building being rebuilt to draw media, tech, creative, law, and finance tenants.

Nearby, 28 Liberty Street (the Gordon Bunshaft and SOM landmark formerly known as One Chase Manhattan Plaza, owned by Fosun) anchors the William Street side with its Noguchi sunken garden. One Liberty Plaza (Brookfield) recently landed Cleary Gottlieb’s 475,000 SF. 120 Broadway, the landmarked Equitable Building owned by Silverstein Properties, and 195 Broadway, L&L Holding’s former AT&T headquarters, round out the prewar Class A core.

True trophy product sits just west, at Brookfield Place and the World Trade Center towers in the WTC / World Financial Center submarket, which is the top of the Downtown market.

For more on what separates genuine trophy buildings from standard Class A, see our piece on how trophy buildings set themselves apart in NYC.

Class B Space

Class B is the heart of FiDi and where most of its leases get signed. It’s a deep pool of prewar towers, many of them genuinely good after a decade of lobby and elevator upgrades.

The cluster runs along Broadway and the Wall Street side streets:

  • 80 Broad Street
  • 50 Broad Street
  • 111 Broadway (the Trinity Building)
  • 115 Broadway
  • 44 Wall Street
  • 100 Wall
  • 110 William
  • 80 Maiden Lane

Many of these landlords have built prebuilt spec suites in the 2,000 to 6,000 SF range, so a small or midsize tenant can sign and move in quickly. Some of these floors feel like loft space once you are inside, with big windows and high ceilings, which is why FiDi draws some of the same tenants who shop the loft markets in SoHo and Chelsea over in Midtown South, at lower rents.

One thing to expect in this tier: two Class B buildings a couple blocks apart can quote very different numbers, depending on each landlord’s vacancy and how they read your credit. This is where touring beats relying on averages, and where negotiation pays off.

Class C and Value Space

The deepest discounts in FiDi sit in the oldest prewar elevator buildings, mostly along Water Street, the Seaport edge, and the insurance side streets near Maiden Lane and John Street. These work for small businesses, early-stage startups, back-office operations, medical and dental practices, and nonprofits.

One caveat, though, makes FiDi unusual: this is the same stock being pulled into residential conversion, so the cheapest office space in the neighborhood is steadily disappearing, and the value window is closing faster here than elsewhere Downtown.

Brokerages also rarely publish a Class C average for the area, so treat any single Class C figure with caution.  

Lease Concessions and Effective Rent

Concessions are where many tenants under-negotiate. They push on the face rent, win a few dollars, and sign, without pressing on free rent or the tenant improvement allowance, which is where much of the value sits in Downtown deals. FiDi concessions are among the most tenant-favorable in Manhattan right now, with real availability still on the market and landlords competing for credit tenants.

The ranges below are typical-market figures from recent deals (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026), assuming a 5 or 10-year term. Shorter terms get smaller packages, and 12 to 15-year deals can pull richer ones.

If weighing term length, our breakdown of 3-year, 5-year, or 10-year lease terms covers the trade-offs.

Building class Free rent (typical) TI allowance (typical) Notes
Trophy and repositioned Class A 10 to 14 months free $90 to $140/SF The tightest concessions in FiDi, though still generous by Midtown standards.
Standard Class A 12 to 16 months free $70 to $110/SF A strong balance of a Wall Street address and meaningful concessions.
Class B 14 to 20 months free $50 to $85/SF Prebuilt suites are widely available, and a 10-year term here gives you substantial negotiating room.
Class C 12 to 18 months free $35 to $65/SF Often turnkey suites you can sign and occupy in 30 days.

Source: Metro Manhattan internal research (May 2026), based on recent Financial District and Downtown Manhattan lease transactions. Ranges assume a 5- or 10-year term; shorter terms get smaller packages and 12 to 15-year deals can pull richer ones. Deal-specific concessions vary materially by landlord, tenant credit, lease term, and building.

Two things are worth understanding before you sign.

Second, a TI allowance is only as useful as the build-out it funds, so it helps to know who pays for an office build-out before you negotiate.

First, the net effective rent on a Class B FiDi deal usually lands well below the face rent quoted; our concessions explainer walks through the math.

Which Businesses Lease in the Financial District?

Industries cluster here for the usual reasons: clients, talent, and peers are already nearby. Finance and law have anchored FiDi for more than a century, with fintech, insurance, government, and a growing set of value-seeking tech and creative tenants filling in around them. Matching your industry, headcount, and budget to the right part of the district saves weeks of touring the wrong buildings. The table below maps it out.

Industry Best-fit FiDi locations Class fit Example buildings
Banks / Financial Services Wall Street core, Broadway corridor, WTC edge Class A / Trophy 28 Liberty, 60 Wall (repositioning), 200 West (Goldman, western edge), Brookfield Place
Hedge Funds / PE / Asset Management WTC / Brookfield Place, Wall Street core Trophy / Class A Brookfield Place towers, 28 Liberty, One Liberty Plaza
Fintech / Crypto / Trading Wall Street core, Broadway corridor Class A / Class B 30 Wall, 44 Wall, 80 Broad, 111 Broadway
Law Firms (large and boutique) One Liberty Plaza, Wall Street core, Broadway Class A / Class B One Liberty Plaza (Cleary Gottlieb), 120 Broadway, 44 Wall, 110 William
Insurance Maiden Lane / John Street, William Street Class B / Class C 110 William, 80 Maiden Lane, 100 William
FX / Global Trade Advisory Wall Street core Class B 30 Wall (Emerging Markets), 44 Wall, 17 Battery
Government / Public Sector / Nonprofits City Hall edge, Broadway corridor Class A / Class B 44 Wall (Cities for Financial Empowerment Fund), 195 Broadway, 17 State
Technology / SaaS Broadway corridor, repositioned Class A Class A / Class B 195 Broadway, 60 Wall (repositioning), 199 Water
Coworking / Flex Battery / Bowling Green, Wall Street core Class A / Class B One Battery Park Plaza (Industrious), 85 Broad
Startups / Small Business (under 20 people) Broad Street, Water Street, Seaport edge Class B / Class C 80 Broad, 50 Broad, 115 Broadway, 55 Broadway
Healthcare / Medical Broadway corridor, Maiden Lane Class B / Class C 111 John, 80 Maiden Lane, 65 Broadway
Retail / Showroom Broadway, Stone Street, Fulton corridor Ground-floor Stone Street historic district, Fulton retail, Broadway ground floor

Source: Metro Manhattan internal research (May 2026).

Top Office Buildings and Amenities in the Financial District

FiDi is no longer the after-hours ghost town it once was. The conversions reshaped the neighborhood: thousands of new apartments brought restaurants, gyms, grocery stores, and nightlife, and the office buildings answered by upgrading lobbies, adding tenant amenity floors, and modernizing systems. It is a live-work neighborhood now, and the amenity gap with Midtown has narrowed considerably.

Three tiers to expect:

Trophy tier (Brookfield Place and the WTC towers, just west in the WTC submarket): Tenant-only amenity floors, conferencing, lounges, fitness, waterfront dining and retail, LEED certification, smart-building infrastructure, and direct PATH and subway access.

Repositioned and modern Class A (60 Wall reborn, 28 Liberty, One Liberty Plaza, 120 Broadway, 195 Broadway): Renovated lobbies and atriums, on-site fitness and conferencing, modernized mechanicals, ground-floor retail and dining, and walking-distance transit. Several added or upgraded amenity floors in the recent capital cycle.

Prewar Class B value (80 Broad, 50 Broad, 111 Broadway, 44 Wall, 17 Battery, 110 William): Prewar character, big windows, high ceilings, attended lobbies, and a growing supply of fully built-out spec suites with furniture and IT so smaller tenants can move in fast.

  • 28 Liberty Street: Fosun’s 60-story Bunshaft and SOM landmark on the William Street side, with the Noguchi sunken garden plaza. A FiDi icon and a deep Class A address.
  • 60 Wall Street: Paramount Group and GIC’s 1.6 million SF tower, vacated by Deutsche Bank in 2021 and now in a full KPF-led repositioning of its lobby, atrium, and base. LEED Gold, column-free floors, panoramic harbor views, targeting a new mix of finance, law, tech, media, and creative tenants.
  • One Liberty Plaza: Brookfield Properties’ Wall Street-core tower, anchored by Cleary Gottlieb’s 475,000 SF commitment in 2026.
  • 120 Broadway (Equitable Building): Silverstein Properties’ landmarked prewar tower, one of the defining buildings of the Broadway corridor.
  • 140 Broadway (Marine Midland Building): the sleek black International Style tower fronted by Isamu Noguchi’s red cube sculpture, a Broadway corridor landmark.
  • 195 Broadway: L&L Holding’s former AT&T headquarters, a colonnaded landmark now leased to media, tech, and professional-services tenants.
  • One Battery Park Plaza: Rudin’s harbor-front tower at the southern tip, where Industrious added flex space in 2026.
  • 80 Broad Street and 50 Broad Street: prewar Class B value buildings with strong 2,000 to 6,000 SF prebuilt inventory for small and midsize tenants.

See all Downtown buildings or filter active listings by size and price.

Major Office Landlords in the Financial District

Who owns your building matters as much as which building you choose, because every major Downtown landlord negotiates differently. For instance, Brookfield holds the institutional Class A inventory at One Liberty Plaza and Brookfield Place. Silverstein owns the World Trade Center towers and the Equitable Building. Paramount and GIC are funding the large-scale repositioning of 60 Wall. Fosun owns 28 Liberty. A set of conversion specialists, among them GFP Real Estate, Metro Loft, and Silverstein, are driving the neighborhood’s residential projects.

A good broker knows which owners fund build-outs and which ones hold out on terms, so for background, see our overview of the biggest commercial real estate landlords in NYC.

Landlord Notable FiDi / Downtown properties Approx. Downtown portfolio Typical lease profile
Brookfield Properties One Liberty Plaza, Brookfield Place (200, 225, 250, 300 Vesey), 199 Water ~12M SF 15,000+ SF, 10+ year
Silverstein Properties 120 Broadway (Equitable), World Trade Center towers (3, 4, 7 WTC), 2 WTC (developing) ~10M SF 10,000+ SF
Paramount Group (with GIC) 60 Wall Street (repositioning) ~1.6M SF (single asset) 10,000+ SF
Fosun International 28 Liberty Street ~2.2M SF (single asset) 10,000+ SF
L&L Holding 195 Broadway ~1M SF 5,000+ SF
RXR 32 Old Slip (One Financial Square), 61 Broadway ~3M SF 10,000+ SF
Rudin Management One Battery Park Plaza, 110 Wall area holdings ~2M SF 5,000+ SF
GFP Real Estate (with Metro Loft) 25 Water (SoMA conversion), select FiDi office holdings Mixed office and conversion 2,500+ SF
Gaedeke Group 44 Wall Street ~350K SF (single asset) 2,500+ SF

Portfolio figures are approximate and limited to Downtown holdings. Several landlords listed (Brookfield, Silverstein, RXR) also operate significant inventory in Midtown and Midtown South. Metro Manhattan internal research (May 2026).

Transportation and Commuting to Financial District

Transit access is one of FiDi’s strongest selling points. The district sits at the convergence of more than a dozen subway lines, several commuter and intercity options through nearby hubs, PATH service to New Jersey, and ferries on both rivers. For much of the metro area it is a one-seat ride, and from Brooklyn, Staten Island, and Jersey City it is genuinely quick.

Use our Commute Calculator to check specific addresses.

Fulton Center
The district's main hub, serving the 2, 3, 4, 5, A, C, J, and Z lines, with the underground Dey Street passage connecting to the R and W and to the WTC Transportation Hub.
WTC Transportation Hub (Oculus)
PATH service to Hoboken, Jersey City, and Newark, plus the E train terminal, just west of FiDi.
Wall Street stations
The 2 and 3 at Wall and William, and the 4 and 5 at Wall and Broadway, put trains in the middle of the financial core.
Bowling Green and Rector Street
The 4 and 5 at Bowling Green, the 1 at Rector, and the R and W along Trinity Place serve the southern and western edges.
Whitehall / South Ferry
The 1, R, and W, plus the Staten Island Ferry terminal for free service to St. George.
Ferries
NYC Ferry and the East River Ferry serve Pier 11/Wall Street, with additional service from Whitehall and the Battery to Brooklyn, Queens, and Governors Island.
From To the Financial District Mode
Jersey City (Exchange Place) 5 to 10 min PATH to WTC
Hoboken, NJ 20 to 25 min PATH to WTC
Newark, NJ 25 to 35 min NJ Transit / PATH
Staten Island (St. George) 25 to 30 min Staten Island Ferry to Whitehall
Downtown Brooklyn 10 to 15 min 2, 3 or 4, 5
Park Slope, Brooklyn 20 to 25 min R or 2, 3
Williamsburg, Brooklyn 20 to 30 min L plus transfer, or ferry to Pier 11
Long Island City, Queens 25 to 35 min E or 7 plus transfer
Midtown / Grand Central 15 to 20 min 4, 5
Hicksville, NY (Long Island) 50 to 60 min LIRR to Grand Central Madison plus 4, 5
Stamford, CT 60 to 70 min Metro-North to Grand Central plus 4, 5

Frequently Asked Questions About Financial District Office Space

  • How much does it cost to rent office space in the Financial District?

    Downtown Manhattan’s overall asking rent averaged $56.67/SF in Q1 2026, with Class A at $61.77/SF (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). The Financial District holds the older, more Class B-heavy half of Downtown’s inventory, so FiDi space generally prices at or below that overall average, while a handful of repositioned and trophy-adjacent buildings reach higher (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026). For context, the Manhattan-wide average was $77.55/SF in the same quarter (Colliers, Q1 2026).

  • What is the asking rent for Class A office space in Downtown Manhattan?

    Class A asking rents Downtown averaged $61.77/SF in Q1 2026, up $0.54 from Q4 2025 (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). The Class A premium over Class B reached 25.5%, the widest gap in two years, as tenants concentrated demand in top-tier buildings (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). Since 2020, roughly 73% of all Downtown leasing has gone to Class A space.

  • Why is the Financial District the center of New York City’s office-to-residential conversion boom?

    FiDi has the largest concentration of older, underused office towers in Manhattan, which makes them prime candidates for conversion under New York’s 467-m tax incentive. 25 Water Street, rebranded SoMA, became the largest office-to-residential conversion in U.S. history with 1,320 apartments when it began leasing in late 2025 (6sqft, January 2025). Additional conversions at 55 Broad Street, 1 Wall Street, 80 Pine Street, 160 Water Street, and others are expected to add roughly 5,000 homes to the neighborhood, pulling weaker office stock off the market and tightening what remains.

  • Is the Financial District cheaper than Midtown?

    Generally yes. Downtown’s overall asking rent of $56.67/SF in Q1 2026 sits well below the Manhattan-wide average of $77.55/SF and far below Midtown trophy pricing (Cushman & Wakefield and Colliers, Q1 2026). Tenants priced out of Midtown increasingly look south for comparable space at lower rents, which is one reason Downtown posted its second-highest quarterly leasing total on record in Q1 2026 (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026).

  • What is the current office availability rate in the Financial District?

    Downtown Manhattan’s availability rate was 16.8% in Q1 2026, down 0.3 percentage points from the prior quarter, with positive net absorption of 660,000 SF (Colliers, Q1 2026 Downtown Office Market Report). Availability has been trending down as leasing strengthens and conversions remove inventory. The Financial District’s older Class B and C stock typically carries higher availability than Downtown’s modern Class A buildings (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026).

  • What are the best Financial District buildings for small businesses and startups?

    Small businesses and startups under 5,000 SF tend to find the best Financial District value in prewar Class B towers with prebuilt suites, including 80 Broad Street, 50 Broad Street, 111 Broadway, 115 Broadway, and 44 Wall Street (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026). Many of these landlords offer move-in-ready suites with flexible terms. Coworking and flex options are also expanding, with Industrious adding space at One Battery Park Plaza in 2026.

  • What lease concessions are available in the Financial District right now?

    Concession packages are among the most tenant-favorable in Manhattan. Standard Class A leases typically include 12 to 16 months of free rent and $70 to $110/SF in tenant improvement allowances, while Class B leases often reach 14 to 20 months free and $50 to $85/SF TI (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026). Final terms depend on tenant credit, lease length, and building.

  • Who are the largest office landlords in the Financial District?

    Major Downtown owners include Brookfield Properties (One Liberty Plaza, Brookfield Place), Silverstein Properties (120 Broadway, the World Trade Center towers), Paramount Group with GIC (60 Wall Street), Fosun International (28 Liberty), and L&L Holding (195 Broadway), among others (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026). GFP Real Estate, Metro Loft, and Silverstein are also leading the area’s residential conversions.

  • How do I get to the Financial District by public transportation?

    The Financial District is one of the most transit-connected places in the country. The Fulton Center hub alone serves the 2, 3, 4, 5, A, C, J, and Z lines and connects via the Dey Street passage to the R, W, and the WTC Transportation Hub, where PATH trains run to New Jersey and the E train terminates. Wall Street, Bowling Green, Rector Street, and Whitehall / South Ferry stations add coverage, and NYC Ferry, the Staten Island Ferry, and the East River Ferry serve Pier 11/Wall Street and Whitehall.

  • Is the Financial District still a good location for finance and fintech firms?

    Yes. The district remains home to the New York Stock Exchange, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and a deep cluster of banks, law firms, insurers, and fintech companies, with Goldman Sachs headquartered at 200 West Street on its western edge. A Wall Street address still carries weight for client-facing finance and fintech firms, and FiDi offers it at a fraction of Midtown trophy pricing (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026).