Charlotte Retail Jumps the Line as Rents Outrun U.S. Average

Charlotte’s retail landlords just crossed a line they had never reached before: asking rents across the metro have climbed above the national average, according to market reporting CoStar published today.

Charlotte Led the Country in Rent Growth

In 2025, Charlotte outpaced every other major U.S. retail metro, with asking rents rising about 7.4% and total returns near 11.6%, according to CoStar. The firm’s rankings blend availability, percent leased, rent growth and sales volume into a composite score that pushed Charlotte ahead of better-known coastal markets.

Why Rents Are Rising

A combo of white-collar job growth, new suburban households and a relatively restrained pipeline of fresh retail space has left storefronts tight, especially neighborhood spots under 10,000 square feet. Retail vacancy in the metro sat at just 2.9% in Q3 2025, Colliers reported, a detail highlighted in local coverage from Bisnow. With that little space sitting empty, landlords have had little reason to bargain.

Investors Are Back

Institutional buyers have been circling Charlotte’s tightly leased neighborhood centers, bidding up prices and helping keep rents firm at well-stabilized strip centers. CenterSquare Investment Management’s $11.4 million purchase of the Shoppes at Indian Trail is one recent example, underscoring investor demand for essential-service retail in the region as reported in dropped $11.4M on an Indian Trail hub.

What It Means For Small Shops

For independent retailers, the shift from “affordable” to “premium” rent territory stings. Higher asking rates and slim availability are squeezing mom-and-pop operators and forcing more deliberate site selection. Many local businesses are weighing creative approaches like conversions, co-tenancy and pop-ups to keep costs in check. National coverage tying retail strength to population and job gains suggests landlords will keep the upper hand in high-growth markets, a dynamic that could favor chains and grocery-anchored centers over smaller independents, according to Forbes…

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