Market data: Q1 2026 · Source: Cushman & Wakefield, Colliers · Last reviewed May 2026
$78.23/SF Overall avg. asking rent/SF
$85.28/SF Class A avg.
$77.55/SF Manhattan avg. (context)
13.7% Manhattan availability
253 Active listings
Cushman & Wakefield Q1 2026 New York City MarketBeat · Colliers Q1 2026 Manhattan Office Market Report

Midtown is the biggest office market on the continent. 242 million SF. 13 submarkets. Hudson Yards to the UN, Columbus Circle down to Penn Station. And inside that one giant market, a Park Avenue trophy floor and a Murray Hill loft can sit on the same subway line at totally different prices. So when somebody tells you “Midtown is expensive,” they’re being lazy. Midtown is whatever you make it. Where you land matters way more than whether you land here.

Quick read on Q1 2026: it was the strongest first quarter Manhattan has had since 2014. Tenants signed 11.78 million SF. Availability dropped to 13.7%, the eighth straight quarter of tightening (Colliers, Q1 2026). Midtown asking rents held flat at $78.23/SF (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). The takeaway is simple: if you’ve been waiting for landlords to get desperate, that’s not happening. They’re not even nervous anymore.

Midtown Manhattan Office Market Overview

Here’s what most tenants get wrong about Midtown: they shop it like one market. It isn’t. It’s thirteen markets stacked on top of each other, and the deal on Park Avenue has nothing to do with the deal in Murray Hill. Get the submarket right and the rest of the search gets easy. Get it wrong and you’ll spend three months touring buildings that were never going to work.

So what’s actually happening right now? Manhattan leasing hit 11.78 million SF in Q1 2026. Strongest Q1 since 2014. Availability fell to 13.7%, the eighth straight quarter of holding flat or tightening. Asking rents up 2% to $77.55/SF (Colliers, Q1 2026). This isn’t one good quarter. It’s a two-year trend that just keeps showing up in the data.

Midtown specifically: $78.23/SF overall, $85.28/SF Class A (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). Class A actually slipped sixteen cents, which sounds bad until you realize it was all sublet space hitting two buildings, 1775 and 1675 Broadway. Two buildings. The rest of the district is rock steady.

Want the real proof? Look at who’s signing. Deloitte took 807,000 SF at 70 Hudson Yards, the priciest lease in NYC since the pandemic at over $2.6 billion across nearly 22 years (CoStar Group via CompStak, January 2026). Citadel at 660 Fifth. Bloomberg renewed at 120 Park. Millennium expanded at 399 Park (CoStar Group, January 2026). When the smartest, most over-resourced tenants in the world are signing 20-year leases at the top of the market, you don’t argue with the chart.

Four Forces to Monitor

  • Trophy is running out. Trophy availability fell 22% year-over-year to 16.9 million SF, down from 21.2 million a year ago (Avison Young, Q1 2026 New York Office Market Report). The next batch of trophy doesn’t deliver until 2028. So if you need a trophy address, you have two choices: move now, or wait two years and hope the supply situation looks better. Spoiler: it won’t.
  • Class A sublets are drying up. Class A availability down 18% year-over-year to 25.2 million SF. Only 4.1 million SF of Class A sublet left, down 13% in one quarter (Avison Young, Q1 2026). For two years, the smartest move in Midtown was grabbing a high-end sublet at half off from a tech company that overhired. That trade is done. If that was your plan, you need a new one.
  • AI tenants just reset the top of the market. AI firms leased 415,000 SF in Manhattan in Q1 2026, half the full 2025 total in a single quarter (JLL, Q1 2026 Manhattan Office Leasing Research, March 2026). Average AI deal jumped to 34,500 SF, more than double the 16,600 SF average from 2025. Then Nscale signed at $320/SF at One Vanderbilt, an all-time NYC record. Every trophy landlord in Midtown now points at that number when they sit down to negotiate. That’s how comps work, and that’s why your trophy quote keeps creeping up.
  • Tenants are growing, not just renewing. Two years ago, half of all Manhattan leasing was companies renewing in place. Today it’s 20%. The other 80% is new leases and expansions (Avison Young, Q1 2026). Translation: companies aren’t hunkered down anymore. They’re committing to space and committing to more of it. If your mental model of this market is still 2023, it’s wrong.

How Much Does Midtown Manhattan Office Space Cost?

Honest answer: it depends on where in Midtown and what class of building. Anyone giving you a single number for “Midtown rent” doesn’t know what they’re talking about. The range is huge. Class C in Murray Hill at the bottom. Nscale at $320/SF at One Vanderbilt at the top, the highest office rent NYC has ever recorded (JLL, Q1 2026 Manhattan Office Leasing Research, March 2026). The Class A average is $85.28/SF (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026), but that average is hiding more than it’s showing.

Start with this question, because it changes everything: do you actually need a trophy address? Hedge funds, Big Law, anyone whose clients walk through your lobby every week, yes. Most other tenants, no. Most of Midtown’s leasable inventory is Class B, sitting in Grand Central, Times Square / West Side, Penn Station / Garment District, and Murray Hill. Overall Midtown rent is $78.23/SF (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). Class B prices below that. Same neighborhood. Same subway. Much better deal. Skipping trophy is the move most savvy tenants make, and most of them don’t regret it. Not sure how much space you actually need? Run your headcount through our Office Space Calculator before you tour anything.

Submarket Class A profile Class B / C coverage Availability Typical size Tier
Hudson Yards Premium / Trophy Limited Class B; no Class C ~10–13% 20,000–100,000+ SF Trophy
Plaza District Premium / Trophy Limited Class B; minimal Class C ~10–11% 10,000–50,000+ SF Trophy
Park Avenue Premium / Trophy Some Class B; minimal Class C ~10–13% 10,000–50,000+ SF Trophy
5th Ave / Madison Ave Premium / Trophy Class B inventory available ~12–14% 5,000–30,000 SF Trophy
6th Ave / Rockefeller Class A core Class B inventory available ~12–14% 5,000–40,000 SF Class A
Bryant Park Class A core Class B inventory available ~12–14% 5,000–30,000 SF Class A
Grand Central Class A core Class B and Class C available ~13–14% 2,500–40,000 SF Class A
Times Square / West Side Class A core Class B and Class C available ~13–15% 5,000–50,000 SF Class A
Midtown East Class A core Class B and Class C available ~15–17% 2,000–15,000 SF Class A
Columbus Circle Class A core Class B and Class C available ~13–15% 5,000–25,000 SF Class A
Penn Station / Garment Class A available Class B and Class C dominate ~9–11% 2,500–25,000 SF Mixed
Murray Hill Limited Class A Class B and Class C dominate ~22–25% 1,500–10,000 SF Value
United Nations Limited Class A Class B and Class C dominate ~20–22% 2,000–15,000 SF Value
Midtown Average $85.28 Class A $78.23 overall district average ~12–14% Varies Mixed

Midtown Class A average asking rent of $85.28/SF and Midtown overall asking rent of $78.23/SF from Cushman & Wakefield, Q1 2026 Manhattan Office Leasing Statistics (April 2026). Submarket-level Class A profiles, Class B and C coverage descriptors, and availability ranges are Metro Manhattan internal research (May 2026).

Class A and Trophy Space

Class A averaged $85.28/SF in Q1 2026 (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). Practically flat from Q4 2025, off by sixteen cents only because of sublet space at 1775 and 1675 Broadway. Walk into a Class A tour right now expecting one thing: landlords who know exactly what their buildings are worth. They’re not in a hurry. Lead with your credit, your term, and a clean ask. Show up like it’s 2023 and you’ll get a 2023 reception, which is to say not a warm one.

Trophy is its own animal. Trophy availability is down 22% year-over-year (Avison Young, Q1 2026 New York Office Market Report). Supply going down, prices going up. If you genuinely need a trophy address, this is a timing problem, not a budget problem. You either move now or you wait until 2028 and pray. For a deeper look at what actually separates trophy buildings from regular Class A, see our piece on how trophy buildings set themselves apart in NYC.

Where trophy actually lives: Hudson Yards (10, 30, 50, 55, 70 Hudson Yards), Park Avenue (One Vanderbilt, 425 Park, 280 Park, 200 Park, 399 Park), 5th and Madison (550 Madison, 425 Madison), the Plaza District (9 West 57th, the GM Building), and 6th Avenue / Rockefeller Center (1271 Sixth Avenue (Time-Life Building), 1221 Sixth Avenue, 30 Rockefeller Plaza). The icons: the Empire State Building and the Chrysler Building. For a deeper rundown, see our list of the top 10 Class A office buildings in Midtown.

Class B Space

Midsize firm? Growing but not crazy yet? Don’t need to impress a hedge fund every Tuesday? This is your tier, and honestly, it’s where most Midtown leases get signed. Class B holds most of Midtown’s leasable space. The good ones cluster in Grand Central, Midtown East, Columbus Circle, Bryant Park, and parts of Times Square / West Side. Names you’d recognize: One Grand Central Place, The Chanin Building, 30 Rockefeller Plaza, 1290 Avenue of the Americas. A lot of these landlords have spent real money on renovations and prebuilt spec suites in the last five years. Walk into a 2026 Class B building and it often looks like a 2018 Class A. Big difference for your team. Small difference for your bill. Not bad. (Quick refresher on the class system here.)

On pricing, Midtown overall is $78.23/SF in Q1 2026 (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). Class B typically prices below that, and how far below depends entirely on the submarket and the building (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026). Here’s the part nobody tells you: two Class B buildings two blocks apart can quote you wildly different numbers on the same Tuesday afternoon, depending on the landlord’s mood, their current vacancy, and whether they like you. This is the tier where touring beats averages. This is also the tier where negotiation actually pays.

Class C and Value Space

If your priority is keeping costs down and you don’t need a fancy lobby to land your next client, Class C is where you’ll find the deals. Most of it sits in Murray Hill, the UN submarket, parts of Midtown East, and the Penn Station / Garment District. Mostly pre-war elevator buildings that haven’t been renovated in a while. Honest character, no pretense.

Class C works for small businesses, early-stage startups, medical and dental practices, nonprofits, back-office operations, and diplomatic missions. Here’s the truth nobody else will tell you: the approved brokerages don’t publish a Class C average for Midtown. So if anyone hands you a single “Class C rent” number, they’re guessing or selling you something. The tier description here is Metro Manhattan internal research (May 2026), based on the deals we actually work on.

Lease Concessions and Effective Rent

Here’s where most tenants give away the most money: they negotiate the asking rent, they get a small win, they sign. They never push hard on free rent or TI allowance, which is where the real value lives in non-trophy Class A and Class B Midtown deals. The ranges below are typical-market figures from our recent deals (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026), assuming a 5 or 10-year term. Shorter terms get proportionally smaller packages. 12 to 15-year terms can pull significantly richer ones. If you’re not sure which term length actually fits your business, our breakdown of 3-year, 5-year, or 10-year lease terms walks through the trade-offs. Your actual numbers come down to credit, term, building, and how hard you push.

Building class Free rent (typical) TI allowance (typical) Notes
Trophy / premium Class A 8–12 months $100–$160/SF Tightest concessions in Midtown; tenant lined up behind you
Standard Class A 12–17 months $80–$120/SF Best balance of real Midtown address and real concessions
Class B 14–18 months $60–$90/SF Spec suites widely available; 10-year terms offer strongest negotiating room
Class C 12–18 months $40–$70/SF Often built-out turnkey suites; move-in within 30 days

Source: Metro Manhattan broker data, based on recent Midtown Manhattan lease transactions, Q1 2026. Figures are typical ranges for 5- or 10-year direct leases; shorter terms get proportionally smaller packages. 12–15-year terms can pull significantly richer concessions. Deal-specific terms vary by landlord, tenant credit, lease term, and building.

One more thing on Class B: net effective rent typically lands well below the face rent your broker first quotes you. The math takes ten minutes to learn and it’s the difference between a fine deal and a great one. Our concessions explainer walks through it.

Which Midtown Submarket Is Right for Your Business?

Industries cluster in Midtown for a reason. Investors find each other on Park Avenue. AI companies pile into Hudson Yards. Fashion sticks to the Garment District. There’s actually a logic to it, and matching your industry, your headcount, and your budget to the right submarket can save you weeks of touring the wrong buildings. The table is the cheat sheet.

Industry Best-fit submarkets Class fit Example buildings
Hedge Funds / Private Equity / Asset Management Plaza District, Park Avenue, 5th / Madison Trophy 9 West 57th, 425 Park (One Vanderbilt), 280 Park, 590 Madison, 510 Madison
Large Banks / Financial Services Park Avenue, Hudson Yards, Plaza District Trophy 270 Park, 399 Park, 70 Hudson Yards, 660 Fifth Avenue, 200 Park
Big Law / International Law Firms Park Avenue, 6th Ave / Rockefeller, Bryant Park Trophy / Class A 1211 Sixth Avenue, 1221 Sixth Avenue, 425 Park, 1271 Sixth Avenue, 45 Rockefeller Plaza
Mid-Market Law / Boutique Firms Grand Central, Bryant Park, Midtown East Class A / Class B One Grand Central Place, 230 Park (Helmsley), 122 East 42nd (Chanin), 350 Fifth Avenue
Consulting / Big 4 Accounting Hudson Yards, 6th Ave / Rockefeller, Bryant Park Trophy / Class A 70 Hudson Yards (Deloitte), 30 Rockefeller Plaza, 1271 Sixth Avenue, 1166 Sixth Avenue
Technology / SaaS / AI Hudson Yards, Times Square / West Side, Penn Station Class A / Trophy 55 Hudson Yards, 11 Times Square, 5 Manhattan West, 30 Hudson Yards
Media / Entertainment / PR Times Square, 6th Ave / Rockefeller, Columbus Circle Class A 1271 Sixth Avenue, 1675 Broadway, 1700 Broadway, 11 Times Square, Hearst Tower
Advertising / Marketing / Creative Bryant Park, 6th Ave / Rockefeller, Penn Station Class A / Class B 1040 Sixth Avenue, 1185 Sixth Avenue, 1411 Broadway, 1411 Sixth Avenue
Fashion / Apparel / Wholesale Penn Station / Garment District Class B 1411 Broadway, 1412 Broadway, 530 Seventh Avenue, 1407 Broadway
Healthcare / Medical Offices Murray Hill, Midtown East, Columbus Circle Class B / Class C 57 West 57th, 133 East 58th, 200 Central Park South, 120 East 56th
Nonprofits / Diplomatic / NGOs United Nations, Murray Hill, Midtown East Class B / Class C 866 UN Plaza, 405 Lexington (Chrysler), 2 UN Plaza, 800 Second Avenue
Startups / Small Business (<20 ppl) Murray Hill, Penn Station, Garment District Class B / Class C 3 Park Avenue, 171 Madison, 286 Madison, 370 Lexington Avenue, 202 West 40th

Source: Metro Manhattan broker data, Q1 2026.

Top Office Buildings and Amenities in Midtown Manhattan

If you toured Midtown five years ago, the picture in your head is out of date. The amenity game has been transformed. One Vanderbilt opened. Hudson Yards filled in. Manhattan West came online. Older Class A buildings around Grand Central started writing big checks because their neighbors did. Amenities aren’t a perk anymore, they’re a recruiting tool. If you want your team in the office three days a week, the building has to give them a reason to want to be there. Three tiers:

Trophy tier (Hudson Yards, One Vanderbilt, 425 Park, 9 West 57th, 550 Madison): Tenant-only amenity floors, conferencing, lounges, fitness, dining. Private clubs and observation decks (The Summit, Edge). LEED Platinum. Smart-building infrastructure. Direct or near-direct access to Grand Central, Penn Station, or the 7 train.

Class A core (Empire State, Chrysler, One Grand Central Place, 1271 Sixth, 30 Rock): Renovated lobbies, on-site fitness, real conferencing, modernized mechanicals, ground-floor retail and dining, walking-distance transit. Many added tenant-only amenity floors during the 2018 to 2024 capex cycle.

Class B and value tier (3 Park Avenue, 286 Madison, 171 Madison, Garment District lofts): Pre-war character, big windows, customizable build-outs, modest shared amenities. Many landlords now offer fully built-out spec suites with furniture, IT, and turnkey move-in.

  • One Vanderbilt (425 Park Avenue): SL Green’s 1.7M SF supertall directly atop Grand Central. Tenants include TD Securities, Carlyle Group, McDermott Will & Emery. Home to The Summit observation deck.
  • Hudson Yards (10, 30, 50, 55, 70 HY): Related Companies and Oxford Properties’ 18 million SF mixed-use complex. Anchor tenants include BlackRock, KKR, Meta, Wells Fargo, Tapestry, Warner Bros. Discovery, L’Oréal, and Point72. Deloitte committed to 807,000 SF at 70 Hudson Yards in 2025, the most expensive office lease signed in NYC since the pandemic at over $2.6 billion (CoStar Group analysis via CompStak, January 2026). Building completion targeted for late 2028.
  • Empire State Building (350 Fifth Avenue): Empire State Realty Trust’s 2.7M SF tower. Tenant-only basketball court, fitness center, and the renovated 102nd-floor observatory. LEED Gold certified.
  • Chrysler Building (405 Lexington Avenue): Iconic art-deco landmark. The Chrysler Club tenant amenity floor (27th floor) includes yoga, meditation, conferencing, and a library.
  • 1271 Sixth Avenue (Time-Life Building): Rockefeller Group’s Class A trophy with full-floor build-outs, on-site dining, fitness, and conferencing.
  • Rockefeller Center (30 Rock and surrounding): Tishman Speyer’s 17-building complex. Tenants include NBCUniversal, Lazard, Christie’s, and BakerHostetler.
  • 590 Madison Avenue (IBM Building): Class A Plaza District trophy with renovated public atrium and full amenity package.
  • 3 Park Avenue, 286 Madison, 171 Madison: Class B value buildings near Grand Central and Murray Hill with strong 2,000 to 6,000 SF inventory for small-business tenants.

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

Major Office Landlords in Midtown Manhattan

Here’s something most tenants underestimate completely: who owns your building matters as much as which building you pick. Every major Midtown landlord has a personality, and that personality shows up at the negotiation table. SL Green moves fast and pushes hard. Vornado holds firm and waits you out. Related plays the long game on Hudson Yards. Empire State Realty Trust will take smaller tenants seriously where some of the bigger names won’t even take the meeting. A good broker knows what you’re walking into. Background reading: biggest commercial real estate landlords in NYC.

Landlord Notable Midtown properties Approx. Midtown portfolio Typical lease profile
SL Green Realty One Vanderbilt (425 Park), 919 Third Avenue, 280 Park (partial), 100 Park Avenue, 1185 Sixth Avenue ~25M SF (NYC's largest office landlord) 10,000+ SF, 10+ year
Vornado Realty Trust 1 Penn, 2 Penn, Penn 11, 280 Park (partial), 330 Madison ~20M SF 15,000+ SF
The Related Companies Hudson Yards complex (10, 30, 35, 50, 55, 70 HY), Manhattan West (partial) ~18M SF (Hudson Yards / MW) 20,000+ SF
Tishman Speyer Rockefeller Center (incl. 30 Rock), 1166 Sixth Avenue, 520 Madison, The Spiral (66 Hudson Blvd) ~15M SF 10,000+ SF
Brookfield Properties Manhattan West (1, 2, 5 MW), 660 Fifth Avenue, 660 Madison ~10M SF 15,000+ SF
Boston Properties (BXP) 399 Park Avenue, 601 Lexington (Citigroup Center), General Motors Building (767 Fifth) ~10M SF 10,000+ SF
Rudin Management 345 Park Avenue, 3 Times Square, 32 Sixth Avenue, 560 Lexington, 415 Madison ~10M SF 5,000+ SF
RXR Realty 1285 Sixth Avenue, 75 Rockefeller, 230 Park Avenue (Helmsley) ~7M SF 5,000+ SF
The Durst Organization One Bryant Park (BoA Tower), 4 Times Square, 1133 Sixth Avenue, 1155 Sixth Avenue ~10M SF 10,000+ SF
Empire State Realty Trust Empire State Building, 1400 Broadway, 1350 Broadway, 250 West 57th, 501 Seventh ~8M SF 2,000+ SF
Fisher Brothers Park Avenue Plaza (399 Park), 605 Third Avenue, 1345 Sixth Avenue, 299 Park Avenue ~6M SF 10,000+ SF
Silverstein Properties 1177 Sixth Avenue, 530 Fifth Avenue, 120 Broadway (also Downtown) ~4M SF Midtown 10,000+ SF

Portfolio figures are approximate and limited to Midtown holdings. Most of these landlords also operate significant inventory in Midtown South, Downtown, and outside Manhattan. Updated Q1 2026.

Transportation and Commuting to Midtown Manhattan

If your team is still pushing back on the office, this might be your strongest counter-argument. Midtown is the most transit-connected office submarket on the planet. Three major hubs (Grand Central, Penn Station, Port Authority Bus Terminal) anchor 14 subway lines, three commuter railroads, PATH to New Jersey, and intercity bus and rail. Most of your team can probably get here without a transfer. That’s a real talking point when you’re trying to win the return-to-office conversation. Use our Commute Calculator to check specific addresses.

Grand Central Terminal
Metro-North (Hudson, Harlem, New Haven lines), LIRR via Grand Central Madison (opened January 2023), and 4, 5, 6, 7, S subway lines
Penn Station
Amtrak, NJ Transit, LIRR (continuing service in addition to Grand Central Madison), and 1, 2, 3, A, C, E subway lines
Port Authority Bus Terminal
Commuter and intercity bus service from New Jersey, Connecticut, and beyond · 7, A, C, E, N, Q, R, W, S subway access at 42nd Street
PATH to New Jersey
Direct service to Hoboken, Jersey City, and Newark from 33rd Street Station · Hoboken 10–15 min, Jersey City 12–18 min, Newark 20–25 min
NYC Ferry
Midtown West / 39th Street and Midtown East / 34th Street terminals provide service to Brooklyn, Queens, and the Rockaways
Subway — 14 lines
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, A, C, E, N, Q, R, W, plus the S shuttle · Three major hubs anchor most routes: Grand Central, Penn Station, and Port Authority
From To Midtown (Grand Central or Penn) Mode
Stamford, CT 45–55 min Metro-North
White Plains, NY 35–45 min Metro-North
Hicksville, NY (Long Island) 30–40 min LIRR to Grand Central Madison
Newark, NJ 20–25 min NJ Transit to Penn Station
Hoboken, NJ 10–15 min PATH to 33rd St
Jersey City (Exchange Place) 12–18 min PATH to 33rd St
Downtown Brooklyn 20–28 min 2, 3 or 4, 5 to Grand Central
Park Slope, Brooklyn 25–35 min R or 2, 3 to Times Square or Grand Central
Williamsburg, Brooklyn 20–28 min L to Union Square + 4, 5, 6
Long Island City, Queens 8–15 min 7 to Grand Central or Times Square
Downtown Manhattan (Fulton) 12–18 min 4, 5, 6

Frequently Asked Questions About Midtown Manhattan Office Space

  • How much does it cost to rent office space in Midtown Manhattan?

    Midtown’s overall asking rent average was $78.23/SF in Q1 2026, with Class A averaging $85.28/SF (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). Manhattan-wide, the average asking rent was $77.55/SF in the same period (Colliers, Q1 2026 Manhattan Office Market Report). Trophy floors at the top of the market run substantially higher.

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

    Class A asking rents in Midtown averaged $85.28/SF in Q1 2026, down $0.16 from Q4 2025 (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). The slight decline was driven by sublease additions at 1775 Broadway and 1675 Broadway (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). Trophy floors in Hudson Yards, on Park Avenue, and along 5th and Madison Avenue typically run well above the Class A district average (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026).

  • What is the asking rent for Class B and Class C office space in Midtown?

    Cushman & Wakefield reports Midtown overall asking rents at $78.23/SF in Q1 2026 (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026). The firm does not publish standalone Class B or Class C averages for Midtown in this report. Class B and Class C inventory typically prices below the district average, with the specific delta varying by submarket and building condition (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026).

  • Which Midtown submarket is the most affordable?

    Murray Hill and the United Nations submarket carry the highest availability in Midtown and the largest pools of Class B and Class C inventory (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026). Both offer strong transit access and a meaningful inventory of 1,500 to 10,000 SF spaces suited to small businesses, startups, medical practices, and nonprofits. Penn Station / Garment District also offers value-tier inventory.

  • Which Midtown submarket is the most expensive?

    Hudson Yards, Park Avenue, the Plaza District, and 5th / Madison Avenue command the highest Midtown rents (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026). Trophy floors in these submarkets regularly transact well above the Midtown Class A district average of $85.28/SF (Cushman & Wakefield, April 2026).

  • What is the current office availability rate in Midtown?

    Manhattan-wide availability fell to 13.7% in Q1 2026, the eighth straight tightening or stable quarter (Colliers, Q1 2026 Manhattan Office Market Report). Trophy availability fell 22% year-over-year to 16.9 million SF (Avison Young, Q1 2026 New York Office Market Report). Class A availability fell 18% year-over-year (Avison Young, Q1 2026).

  • What were the largest Midtown office leases of 2025?

    Deloitte committed to 807,000 SF at 70 Hudson Yards, the most expensive office lease signed in NYC since the pandemic at over $2.6 billion across nearly 22 years (CoStar Group analysis via CompStak, January 2026). Other major 2025 Midtown commitments included Citadel at 660 Fifth Avenue, Bloomberg’s renewal at 120 Park Avenue, and Millennium Management’s expansion at 399 Park Avenue (CoStar Group, January 2026).

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

    Small businesses (under 5,000 SF) typically find the best Midtown value in Class B and Class C buildings in Murray Hill, Penn Station / Garment District, and on side streets near Grand Central. Buildings include 3 Park Avenue, 171 Madison, 286 Madison, 70 West 36th, 202 West 40th, and 248 West 35th (Metro Manhattan internal research, May 2026). Many landlords offer fully built-out spec suites with flexible 3 to 5 year terms.

  • How do I get to Midtown Manhattan by public transportation?

    Midtown is served by 14 subway lines (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, A, C, E, N, Q, R, W, plus the S shuttle), Metro-North, the Long Island Rail Road (at both Penn Station and Grand Central Madison, opened January 2023), NJ Transit, Amtrak, PATH, NYC Ferry, and the Port Authority Bus Terminal. Grand Central, Penn Station, and Port Authority each anchor multi-line subway hubs.

  • What is happening with AI tenant demand in Midtown?

    AI firms signed leases for 415,000 SF in Manhattan in Q1 2026, equivalent to half of the full 2025 total in a single quarter (JLL, Q1 2026 Manhattan Office Leasing Research, March 2026). The average AI deal size in Q1 was 34,500 SF, more than double the 16,600 SF average in 2025 (JLL, Q1 2026). Nscale Global Holdings signed at $320/SF at One Vanderbilt, the highest office rent ever recorded in New York City (JLL, Q1 2026).