Industry analysts are forecasting a continued tightening of warehouse market conditions across the United States through 2026, driven by improving demand, higher absorption of space and constrained new supply — trends that could put upward pressure on rents and reduce vacancy rates in key logistics hubs.
According to recent industry reporting, net absorption — the difference between leased space and space vacated — outpaced new facility completions in late 2025 for the first time since 2022, indicating growing utilisation of existing warehouse inventory. Analysts anticipate net absorption could reach around 200 million square feet in 2026, up from 155 million square feet in the prior year, while new warehouse deliveries are projected to fall slightly, helping tighten overall market balance.
Current vacancy rates in the U.S. warehouse sector have already peaked and are expected to decline toward roughly 7.1 %–7.2 % by the end of 2026, from around 7.4 % at the close of 2025. Market observers say this shift reflects stronger tenant demand amid easing oversupply and a slower pace of new construction compared with previous years.
Warehouse absorption improvements are occurring across a range of facility sizes, with leasing momentum boosted by record annual lease signings in 2025 and renewed interest from e‑commerce and distribution users. While average occupancy rates remain high, analysts caution that tightening availability could push rents upward in leading logistics markets, supporting property owners’ revenue outlooks.
The outlook suggests warehouse landlords and logistics real estate investors will likely benefit from steadier demand and improved fundamentals, even as macroeconomic uncertainties and development cost pressures continue to shape sector dynamics through 2026.
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