Northwest Vegas Office Rents Sizzle as Class A Space Gets Snapped Up

Northwest Las Vegas, essentially the Summerlin to Centennial Hills corridor, is quietly stealing the spotlight in the Valley’s office market as tenants line up for newer Class A buildings. That hunger for shiny, modern space is nudging local asking rents above the metro average and reshaping where companies decide to sign on the dotted line.

Fresh data from this quarter shows the northwest submarket now commanding higher rents than much of the rest of the valley. According to Colliers, average asking rent in the northwest hit $2.90 per square foot FSG, compared with a valley-wide average of $2.63. Brokers quoted by the Las Vegas Review‑Journal say strong demand for newer offices in neighborhoods like Summerlin and Centennial Hills is driving that gap.

Where the Premium Shows Up

Colliers’ Q1 report breaks the northwest premium down by product type. Class A space in the area averaged about $3.48 per square foot FSG, while the region’s overall office average sat closer to $2.63. The northwest submarket carries roughly 9.66 million square feet of total office inventory. Colliers also noted that the removal of less desirable office space should translate into higher occupancy for the projects that remain, after conversions trimmed inventory this quarter, including the reclassification of roughly 54,046 square feet. According to Colliers, the northwest also holds one of the largest pools of available sublease space, highlighting how supply is shifting around the submarket rather than meaningfully expanding.

Data Do Not Exactly Line Up, but the Trend Is Clear

Not every data provider scores the quarter the same way. CBRE reports vacancy falling to about 12.0 percent and roughly 123,000 square feet of net absorption in Q1 2026, with gains concentrated in well-located, higher quality buildings. Those figures differ in scale from Colliers’ absorption tally, yet both firms describe a flight to quality that is boosting newer, amenity-rich space even as the broader office market keeps adjusting.

What It Means for Tenants and Landlords

Industry reports suggest this flight to quality is likely to keep upward pressure on rents for modern product, while older or less amenitized buildings either convert to other uses or compete with hefty concessions. Cushman & Wakefield’s Q1 MarketBeat notes that tenant demand remains focused on “amenity-rich environments” and warns that tight Class A availability can put additional pressure on pricing as new supply struggles to keep pace. That setup raises costs for tenants hunting for move-in-ready space and makes pre-leasing a critical step for developers planning new northwest projects…

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