Las Vegas Office Investment Market Analysis: September 2025 Sales Review
Las Vegas Office Market: Q3 2025 Sales Analysis & Strategic Outlook
Executive Summary: Las Vegas Office Market at a Glance – Q3 2025
The Las Vegas office sales market demonstrated a surge in activity in the third quarter of 2025, registering $134.7 million in total transaction volume across 44 closed sales.1 Market momentum accelerated significantly in the final month of the quarter, largely driven by a substantial portfolio acquisition by a government entity. The market-wide weighted average price per square foot (PSF) for the quarter settled at
$299.85/SF, a figure that belies considerable variation across the region’s diverse submarkets and asset classes.1
This quarter was defined by a distinct bifurcation in market activity. On one hand, leasing trends continue to reflect a “flight to quality,” with corporate tenants prioritizing well-located, highly-amenitized suburban assets.2 On the other hand, the sales landscape was overwhelmingly dominated by private capital and owner-users acquiring smaller, often older, Class B and C properties. This dynamic reveals two parallel markets operating simultaneously: one driven by tenants competing for premium space to attract and retain talent, and another driven by business owners seeking to control real estate costs and build long-term equity.
Key takeaways from the quarter’s performance include:
- Momentum: Sales volume spiked dramatically in September, though the underlying velocity of individual asset sales remained relatively consistent throughout the quarter. This indicates a stable base of activity supplemented by larger, less frequent portfolio transactions.1
- Pricing: Valuations are highly polarized. Newly constructed medical office buildings and well-located office condos commanded prices exceeding $500/SF, and in one case nearly $1,000/SF. In contrast, larger, older assets in less desirable locations traded at significant discounts, some below $150/SF.1 The near-total absence of sales for stabilized, institutionally-owned assets renders traditional valuation metrics, such as capitalization rates, largely irrelevant for understanding the bulk of Q3’s activity.
- Outlook: The Las Vegas office market is stabilizing but remains a challenging environment for investors. With new construction effectively stalled and leasing demand narrowly focused on a specific subset of high-quality properties, investment opportunities will be asset-specific and strategy-dependent.3 Demand from owner-users will continue to provide a solid foundation for sales activity, particularly for assets under 10,000 square feet.
Macro-Environment: Economic & Office Market Fundamentals
- Las Vegas Economic Context: A Tale of Two Economies
The economic landscape influencing the Las Vegas office market is multifaceted, characterized by headwinds in its dominant tourism sector alongside growing resilience in its diversifying local economy.
The leisure and hospitality sector, which accounts for over a quarter of local employment, is navigating a period of softness.4 Analysts have noted subdued visitor volume throughout 2025, leading to declines in key hotel metrics like occupancy and revenue per available room (RevPAR).5 This trend is compounded by rising affordability concerns among visitors, which could temper discretionary spending and prolong the sector’s recovery into 2026.3
In contrast, the broader local economy shows encouraging signs of fundamental strength and diversification. The Las Vegas metro area continues to experience robust population and household growth, up 1.9% year-over-year as of Q2 2025.3 This demographic expansion is supported by rising wages, with the median household income reaching $81,100, a 3.6% annual increase.3 While the region’s unemployment rate of 5.8% remains elevated compared to national averages, it is projected to decline, supported by growth in sectors like healthcare and professional services.3
Office-using employment presents a more complex picture. After a strong post-pandemic recovery, the sector was impacted by national contractions in finance and professional services, leading to a 2.7% decline in local office-using jobs in the year prior to Q4 2024.4 However, more recent data from mid-2025 indicates that job growth in these sectors has improved, suggesting a potential bottoming-out and stabilization of demand for office space.8
- Overall Office Market Health: A Tenant’s Market with Pockets of Strength
The Las Vegas office market is showing clear signs of stabilization, though conditions generally remain favorable for tenants. After a challenging first quarter that saw a major vacation of Class C space push vacancy to 12.1%, the market responded with 178,352 square feet of positive net absorption in the second quarter—the third consecutive quarter of occupancy gains.3 By the end of the first half of 2025, overall vacancy had ticked down to 12.0%, indicating a gradual but steady absorption of excess space.10
Leasing activity is overwhelmingly driven by smaller tenants, with 95% of all deals executed in Q2 2025 being for spaces under 10,000 square feet.3 This aligns with national trends where small and mid-sized businesses are the primary drivers of office expansion.2 Class B properties captured the largest share of leasing volume in the second quarter, suggesting that many tenants are seeking a middle-ground solution that balances cost with quality.3
A critical factor shaping the market’s future is the near-complete standstill of the construction pipeline. No new office projects broke ground in the second quarter, and several high-profile developments, including Halo Tower and UnCommons Building 5, remain stalled as developers await significant pre-leasing commitments before commencing construction.3 This lack of new supply will have significant long-term implications for the market.
This supply constraint is occurring alongside a well-documented “flight to quality” among tenants. A clear bifurcation is evident in the market, with tenants consistently migrating from older, less-amenitized buildings to newer, high-quality suburban properties.2 This trend is quantified in the market’s absorption figures: in Q2 2025, Class A properties recorded over 176,000 square feet of positive net absorption, while Class C properties saw tenants vacate a net 53,210 square feet of space.3 Submarkets with a high concentration of premium office product, such as the Southwest, are the primary beneficiaries of this migration.
The divergence between leasing and sales market drivers is a crucial dynamic for investors to understand. The leasing market is clearly being shaped by a flight to quality, where tenants are focused on securing premium, amenitized spaces in suburban submarkets like the Southwest to attract and retain employees.3 This has led to positive absorption and relative strength in the Class A and high-end Class B segments. However, an analysis of the quarter’s sales transactions reveals a completely different set of drivers. The bulk of closed sales involved older, smaller, Class B and C assets, frequently acquired by owner-users such as “Pastry Academy Llc” and “Neurology Vegas Llc”.1 This indicates that while corporate tenants are chasing quality, small business owners are chasing stability and affordability. They are not competing for the same “trophy” assets. Therefore, an investor cannot use leasing trends as a direct proxy for sales demand. A successful investment strategy must recognize these parallel markets and be tailored accordingly—either to acquire and lease premium assets to top-tier tenants or to acquire and sell functional, value-oriented buildings to the robust owner-user market.
Furthermore, the complete halt of new construction is setting the stage for a future supply shock for high-quality office space. With no new projects breaking ground and several planned developments indefinitely stalled, the inventory of modern, desirable office space is now fixed for the foreseeable future.3 As the persistent flight-to-quality trend continues to absorb the existing high-end inventory, the lack of a “relief valve” of new supply will inevitably create a shortage of this product type within the next 18 to 24 months. This will grant significant pricing power to the owners of existing, well-located Class A and top-tier Class B buildings. Rental rates for this specific asset class are poised to accelerate, diverging even further from the rest of the market. This points to a clear strategic opportunity for investors to acquire high-quality assets now, before the supply squeeze becomes acute and valuations for this product type increase.
Q3 2025 Sales Market Performance: A Quantitative Analysis
- Overall Market Momentum: A September Surge
The third quarter began with steady, consistent sales activity before culminating in a dramatic surge in volume in September. July saw 13 transactions close for a total of $21.1 million, followed by August with 15 transactions totaling $25.7 million. September’s activity eclipsed the previous two months combined, with 16 transactions accounting for $87.9 million in sales volume.1
This spike was primarily driven by a single, large portfolio transaction: the State of Nevada’s acquisition of four office properties from Amigo Warm Springs LLC for a combined $49.1 million.1 Excluding this portfolio, September’s volume would have been a still-impressive $38.8 million, representing a significant increase over the prior months. The relative stability in the
number of transactions per month suggests that the underlying market activity from individual buyers and sellers remains consistent, with large portfolio deals acting as a significant but less frequent catalyst.
Figure 1: Month-over-Month Sales Volume & Transaction Count (Q3 2025)
| Month | Sales Volume ($M) | Transaction Count |
|————|——————-|——————-|
| July | $21.1 | 13 |
| August | $25.7 | 15 |
| September | $87.9 | 16 |
Note: September volume includes a $49.1M portfolio sale.
- Pricing & Valuation Trends: A Market of Extremes
Pricing in the Las Vegas office market is highly dependent on asset quality, location, and tenancy. The quarter’s weighted average price per square foot was $299.85/SF. A more representative median price of $292.44/SF suggests that the overall average was not overly skewed by a few high-priced sales.1
The range in pricing was vast, illustrating the market’s deep bifurcation. At the low end, an older, multi-tenant building at 800 E Charleston Blvd in the Central East Las Vegas submarket sold for an allocated price of $107.71/SF. At the high end, a new, single-tenant net-leased medical building at 4372 W Ann Rd in North Las Vegas traded for $991.91/SF.1 For the subset of transactions where both asking and final sale prices were available, properties on average traded at
94% of their initial asking price. This indicates that while sellers are achieving valuations close to their initial expectations, the market still affords buyers some room for negotiation.
Table 1: Q3 2025 Overall Market Summary Statistics
| Metric | Value |
| Total Sales Volume | $134,703,426 |
| Total Transactions | 44 |
| Total Square Footage Sold | 449,219 SF |
| Weighted Average Price/SF | $299.85 |
| Median Price/SF | $292.44 |
| Average Price/SF | $336.19 |
| Average Time on Market (Days) | 199 |
Source: Analysis of CoStar sales data 1
- Time on Market: Patience is Required
The average time on market for properties sold during the third quarter was 199 days, or approximately 6.5 months.1 This figure varied significantly, from off-market transactions with zero days on market to properties that required extensive marketing periods, such as 6010 S Durango Dr, which was on the market for 802 days before selling.1 This extended marketing timeline is consistent with broader market commentary citing prolonged decision-making cycles from both tenants and buyers due to ongoing economic uncertainty.3
Deep Dive Analysis: Uncovering Submarket & Asset Class Trends
- Geographic Focus: The Dominance of Suburban Submarkets
An analysis of sales data by geography confirms the trends observed in leasing activity: capital and transaction velocity are heavily concentrated in the valley’s suburban submarkets, while the downtown core remains quiet.
- Southwest Las Vegas: This was the most active submarket by transaction count, with 10 sales totaling $23.3 million. It commanded some of the highest pricing in the valley, with a weighted average of $380.01/SF, reflecting its deep inventory of high-quality office product and strong tenant demand noted in market reports.1
- South Las Vegas: This submarket dominated the quarter in total sales volume at $78.1 million, overwhelmingly due to the State of Nevada’s portfolio purchase. Even excluding that deal, it saw significant activity with 9 transactions. Its weighted average price of $299.41/SF is robust and indicative of a healthy mix of assets.1
- Central East Las Vegas: A high-velocity submarket with 9 transactions, this area represents the market’s value segment. Its low average price of $195.42/SF attracts owner-users and value-add investors seeking affordable, functional properties.1
- West Las Vegas: This submarket saw moderate activity with 5 transactions at a solid average price point of $300.35/SF.1
- Northwest & North Las Vegas: While seeing fewer transactions, these submarkets achieved some of the quarter’s highest per-square-foot prices, driven by sales of new, high-quality medical office buildings.1
- Downtown: The Downtown submarket was notably absent from the Q3 sales data. This lack of investment sales activity corroborates market reports that describe it as having the highest vacancy rate in the valley, largely as a result of the sustained tenant migration to suburban locations.3
Table 2: Q3 2025 Sales Metrics by Submarket
| Submarket | Transaction Count | Total Sales Volume | Total SF Sold | Weighted Avg. $/SF | Avg. Time on Market (Days) |
| South Las Vegas | 9 | $78,140,840 | 260,984 | $299.41 | 185 |
| Southwest Las Vegas | 10 | $23,309,990 | 61,340 | $380.01 | 350 |
| Central East Las Vegas | 9 | $6,015,568 | 30,783 | $195.42 | 108 |
| West Las Vegas | 5 | $8,125,000 | 27,052 | $300.35 | 240 |
| Northwest Las Vegas | 4 | $7,716,505 | 15,542 | $496.50 | 280 |
| SE Las Vegas/Henderson | 3 | $3,274,475 | 8,781 | $372.90 | 141 |
| North Las Vegas | 2 | $8,411,400 | 6,840 | $1,229.74 | 188 |
| Downtown Las Vegas | 2 | $624,712 | 5,800 | $107.71 | N/A |
Source: Analysis of CoStar sales data. Note: Some portfolio sales span multiple submarkets or lack specific submarket data. Downtown transaction was part of a portfolio with an allocated price. 1
Figure 3: Geographic Concentration of Q3 2025 Office Sales
The geographic distribution of sales underscores the market’s suburban focus. Transaction volume and count were heavily concentrated in the Southwest, South, and Central West submarkets. The Central East submarket showed high transaction velocity but at much lower price points. The Downtown core, in contrast, saw negligible investment sales activity, reflecting its current leasing challenges.
- Asset Quality Focus: A Clear Divide in Building Class Performance
Sales data analyzed by building class provides quantitative evidence of the market’s bifurcation and the premium placed on quality.
- Class A: This segment saw only 2 transactions but achieved the highest weighted average price of $404.30/SF. This reflects both the scarcity of available Class A assets for sale and the high demand for premium properties when they do trade.1
- Class B: This was the most active segment of the market, accounting for 23 transactions and the highest total sales volume ($106.3 million) and square footage sold (334,801 SF). Its strong average price of $317.58/SF indicates that this is the core of the market where well-capitalized investors and larger owner-users are most active.1
- Class C: This class saw a high number of individual sales (17 transactions) but at a significantly lower average price point of $212.18/SF. This segment is almost exclusively the domain of local owner-users and value-add investors acquiring older, smaller, and more affordable buildings.1
Figure 2: Average Price per Square Foot by Building Class (Q3 2025)
| Building Class | Weighted Average Price/SF |
|—————-|—————————|
| Class A | $404.30 |
| Class B | $317.58 |
| Class C | $212.18 |
Source: Analysis of CoStar sales data 1
The pricing and velocity data reveals that the definition of “value” has bifurcated in the Las Vegas market. For tenants and the institutional capital that follows them, value is found in high-quality Class A and B buildings located in amenitized suburban submarkets like the Southwest and West. The premium sales prices and rental rates in these areas are justified by the need to attract and retain a skilled workforce.2 In contrast, for a large contingent of local business owners and private investors, value is found in functionally adequate but more affordable Class C buildings, often located in central submarkets like the Central East. The high transaction velocity in this segment, despite lower pricing, is driven by buyers seeking to control their long-term occupancy costs and insulate themselves from the volatility of the leasing market. These are not competing segments but rather parallel ecosystems. The buyer of a $212/SF Class C building is not cross-shopping a $404/SF Class A property. This distinction is critical for investors, who must clearly define whether their strategy is to compete in the premium leasing market or to serve the needs of the private capital and owner-user sales market, as the risks, metrics, and potential returns are entirely different.
Notable Transactions & Investment Landscape
- Key Transaction Spotlight
The five largest transactions of the quarter accounted for over 70% of the total sales volume and offer a clear window into the primary forces shaping the market.
Table 4: Top 5 Transactions of Q3 2025
| Rank | Property Address | Submarket | Buyer | Seller | Sale Price | Size (SF) | Price/SF | Key Notes |
| 1 | State of Nevada Portfolio (4 Properties) | South Las Vegas | State of Nevada | Amigo Warm Springs Llc | $49,115,840 | 193,244 | $254.17 | Government user portfolio acquisition |
| 2 | 880 Grier Dr | South Las Vegas | Gatehouse Partners | Local Asset Management | $17,500,000 | 81,000 | $216.05 | 100% occupied investment sale; 9.5% Cap Rate |
| 3 | 900 S Pavilion Center Dr | Northwest Las Vegas | Local Asset Management | R&R Partners | $17,500,000 | 68,760 | $254.51 | 79.6% occupied; likely value-add play |
| 4 | San Martin Medical Campus (2 Properties) | Southwest Las Vegas | Montecito Medical | Madrona F & F Llc | $10,200,000 | 20,410 | $499.75 | Medical office portfolio; high PSF pricing |
| 5 | 6010 S Durango Dr | Southwest Las Vegas | Comprehensive Digestive Institute | Lv Quanta Investments Llc | $7,750,000 | 25,098 | $308.79 | Owner-user acquisition by medical group |
Source: CoStar sales data 1
These top transactions tell a compelling story. The largest deal was not an investment sale but rather a strategic acquisition by a government entity, which serves to absorb a large block of space but does not reflect private sector sentiment. The two $17.5 million sales show different aspects of the market: the 880 Grier Dr transaction was one of the quarter’s only true investment sales of a stabilized asset, demonstrating that national capital will still pursue well-located, cash-flowing properties. The 900 S Pavilion Center Dr sale to a local operator at partial occupancy suggests a value-add or repositioning strategy. Finally, the San Martin Medical Campus and Durango Drive sales highlight the two most powerful forces in the private market: the premium placed on medical office space and the consistent, strong demand from owner-users.
- Investment Outlook & Strategic Recommendations
A defining characteristic of the Q3 2025 sales market was the profound lack of reported capitalization rates.1 This is not a data-reporting anomaly; it is a clear signal that the market is not being driven by traditional, yield-focused investors acquiring stabilized assets.
The primary driver of transaction volume is the owner-user: businesses purchasing buildings for their own occupation. This is evident in numerous transaction notes and buyer profiles within the sales data.1 The financial calculation for an owner-user is fundamentally different from that of an investor. Their decision is based on comparing mortgage payments to current and future lease obligations, the benefits of long-term operational stability, and the potential for asset appreciation, often facilitated by attractive SBA financing. Their motivation is not immediate yield on cost.
This market composition has direct strategic implications for buyers and sellers:
- For Buyers/Investors: Traditional underwriting based on market-wide cap rate comparables is not a viable strategy in the current environment, as reliable comps are scarce and potentially misleading. Investment theses should be built on intrinsic value, replacement cost analysis, and the potential for future lease-up at realistic, sustainable rental rates. One of the most viable strategies may be to acquire well-located vacant or near-vacant buildings and target the deep pool of owner-user buyers upon disposition.
- For Sellers: Marketing a property directly to the owner-user community may yield a higher valuation than positioning it as a stabilized investment. Marketing efforts should emphasize features that are attractive to a business operator—efficient layouts, ample parking, prominent signage, and the potential for SBA financing—rather than focusing solely on in-place income.
In conclusion, the Las Vegas office market is navigating a complex transition. While leasing fundamentals remain challenging for landlords of commodity space, the sales market is actively supported by a deep and resilient pool of private, local, and owner-user capital. The long-term outlook is shaped by the current lack of new construction, which will inevitably create future opportunities in the high-quality segment of the market. For the remainder of 2025 and into 2026, the prevailing trends of suburban dominance, owner-user-driven sales, and a bifurcated market are expected to continue. Success in this environment will require investors to be nimble and to pursue targeted, niche-specific strategies rather than attempting to invest in the market as a whole.


