Brooklyn Retail Faces a Slow Burn While the Borough Booms

Brooklyn retail lags behind population growth as high rents and slow leasing leave key neighborhoods waiting for activation.
Brooklyn retail lags behind population growth as high rents and slow leasing leave key neighborhoods waiting for activation.
  • Brooklyn’s retail sector is lagging behind residential and population growth in several neighborhoods.
  • High retail rents in Williamsburg and Downtown Brooklyn haven’t driven robust activity across the borough.
  • Retail leasing typically follows residential occupancy, creating natural delays in activation.
  • Mom-and-pop shops play a critical role in neighborhood character, but face credit and buildout hurdles.
Key Takeaways

Population Surge, Retail Slowdown

Bisnow reports that Brooklyn’s resurgence as a popular destination for young professionals has not resulted in a matching boom for retail, according to brokers and developers at Bisnow’s Brooklyn State of the Market. Even as the borough’s population reached 2.7M by 2025 and saw rapid economic recovery following the pandemic, retail leasing has lagged, particularly outside core corridors like Williamsburg and Downtown Brooklyn.

Rising Rents, Uneven Activity

Williamsburg and Downtown Brooklyn command some of the highest retail rents. North Sixth Street peaks at $400 PSF, while prime storefronts reach $600 PSF. Average one-bedroom rents now exceed $4,600 in these neighborhoods. At the same time, rent growth across the city has remained steady in recent months, supporting landlord confidence despite uneven retail activity. However, panelists noted that higher rents do not always mean stronger retail corridors. Downtown Brooklyn often generates more retail volume due to foot traffic and transit access.

Retail Lags Development

Despite a record 4,421 new residential units delivered last year in Downtown Brooklyn and thousands more underway in Crown Heights and Bed-Stuy, much of the new retail remains vacant. Developers and brokers agreed that retail leases typically trail behind residential leasing by years, as new residents need to create the demand required to attract shops, restaurants, and experiential tenants.

Challenges for Independent Retailers

The borough’s independent retailers help define local character but face barriers including landlord preferences for credit tenants and the cost of customizing retail spaces. Turnkey options are rare, making it difficult for small businesses to move in quickly. In Gowanus, Crown Heights, and Sunset Park, developers expect a similar pattern: retail will follow residential demand, but the process is gradual.

What’s Next for Brooklyn Retail

Major brands like Anthropologie and Toast have recently entered Brooklyn, stoking further interest along main thoroughfares such as Atlantic Avenue and Fourth Avenue. Panelists expect retail activity to increase in neighborhoods like Gowanus and Sunset Park as more residents move in and national retailers follow indie pioneers, but acknowledge the timeline may stretch over years as supply is absorbed and consumer demand matures.

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