- Park Avenue office vacancy for Class A/B buildings is just 6.9%, and only 3.8% in trophy towers.
- Leasing demand is led by financial and legal services firms seeking prime locations.
- Large blocks of available space are virtually nonexistent, leading to creative leasing deals.
- No significant new office construction on Park Avenue is expected until at least 2029.
Financial Firms Drive Leasing
The Park Avenue office market continues to surge in 2026. Financial and legal firms are filling nearly all available space, according to The Real Deal.
Recent deals at 280 Park Avenue highlight the trend. Elliott Investment Management, Wells Fargo, and PJT Partners leased a combined 90,000 SF. As a result, only 19,000 SF remains available. Meanwhile, leasing activity pushed other buildings to capacity. At 100 Park Avenue and 99 Park Avenue, recent deals brought both properties to full occupancy.
Tight Market Conditions
According to JLL, Park Avenue’s overall vacancy for Class A and B space stands at 6.9%. This level sits near the lowest point recorded since 2018. In trophy towers, vacancy drops even further to just 3.8%.
In 2025, leasing activity reached 3.8M SF. However, limited availability constrained total deal volume. At the same time, public real estate markets have faced pressure, with fewer companies choosing to go public and more capital staying private.
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Creative Solutions for Tenants
With large blocks scarce, tenants are piecing together space across several buildings. The Carlyle Group recently leased over 200,000 SF across two towers, even requiring the termination of existing tenants at 245 Park Avenue to create a single 150,000 SF block. As demand outpaces supply on Park Avenue, some firms are shifting to nearby corridors, boosting occupancy on Lexington, Sixth, Madison, and Third Avenues.
Limited New Supply
No significant new office developments are anticipated on Park Avenue until at least 2029, signaling that tight market conditions will continue. The trend underscores Midtown’s ongoing appeal for major financial and legal tenants, reinforcing Park Avenue’s role as a premier business corridor in New York City.



