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Las Vegas Office Investment Market Analysis: November 2025 Sales Review

1. Executive Summary

1.1 The Great Bifurcation: A Market Defined by Quality and Utility

As the Las Vegas commercial real estate market moves through the final quarter of 2025, specifically the transaction period covering September through November, it presents a narrative of extreme bifurcation. The market has effectively split into two distinct ecosystems that operate with independent pricing mechanics, buyer pools, and liquidity profiles. On one side exists the “trophy” and medical office sector, concentrated in the Southwest and West Henderson submarkets, where institutional capital and high-net-worth family offices are transacting at record pricing levels. On the other side lies the commoditized Class B and C office sector, particularly in the Central East and older Downtown corridors, where assets are trading near replacement cost or land value, driven by functional obsolescence and a shrinking tenant base for non-amenitized space.

Data from the last three months indicates a market stabilizing not through broad-based recovery, but through decisive segmentation. The sales volume for the period was buoyed significantly by institutional capital targeting specific, high-quality assets, while the transaction count was dominated by small-to-mid-sized owner-user acquisitions utilizing Small Business Administration (SBA) financing. This divergence creates parallel trendlines: a stagnant, price-sensitive market for aging product, and a robust, competitive environment for Class A and medical-grade facilities.

1.2 Key Performance Indicators (September – November 2025)

The transaction data analyzed for this report, sourced from confirmed sales comparables and brokerage filings, reveals the following critical trends:

  • Transaction Velocity: Deal flow remained steady, with November 2025 recording significant closings that pushed Q4 volumes toward healthy levels despite national headwinds. The market absorbed the impact of sustained interest rates, with buyers adjusting underwriting models to reflect a higher cost of capital.

  • Pricing Disparity: The spread between asset classes has widened to record levels. Prime Class A assets in the Southwest are trading near $480–$680 per square foot (PSF), exemplified by the sale of “The Narrative” and small-bay owner-user assets in Summerlin. Conversely, vintage Class C inventory in the Central East submarket is transacting as low as $100–$200 PSF, reflecting a distress discount.

  • Dominant Buyer Profiles: The market is currently defined by two primary buyer types: Strategic Owner-Users leveraging SBA financing to control occupancy costs, and Private Capital/Family Offices seeking yield in recession-resistant sectors like healthcare and experiential office environments.

  • Star Submarket: The Southwest Submarket (including the 215 Beltway corridor) remains the undisputed epicenter of activity, capturing the lion’s share of high-value transactions and maintaining the lowest vacancy rates among major submarkets.

1.3 Strategic Outlook Summary

Entering December 2025 and looking toward 2026, the Las Vegas office market is forecasted to continue this trajectory of specialization. The stabilization of interest rates has provided just enough certainty to unlock capital for owner-users. However, speculative investment in general office space remains muted. The “flight to quality” is no longer a buzzword but the fundamental underwriting criteria for every major deal closing in the valley. Investors are advised to focus heavily on the Southwest and West Henderson corridors, specifically targeting medical office buildings (MOB) and post-2015 construction Class A assets, which continue to demonstrate insulation from broader economic volatility.

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