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Market Report

Baltimore Office Market Report

1Q 2026

Market Builds on Last Year’s Performance Gains Even as Trends Shift at the Submarket Level

Corporate lessees reconfigure presence locally. Despite disruptions to the public sector, Baltimore’s overall office vacancy rate fell last year for the first time in half a decade, underscoring the strength of local private industry. Prominent white-collar firms are recommitting to the market. TESSCO moved into a larger space in Hunt Valley last year, while PricewaterhouseCoopers will relocate to Locust Point in 2026. The Harbor area, in general, remains a focal point for space demand, with local vacancy falling 200 basis points last year. Outside the city, Ellicott City-Columbia also saw a sharp vacancy drop as tenants filled much of 2024’s completions. This year, a handful of large projects will account for the bulk of the market’s smaller overall delivery slate, split mainly between the city of Baltimore and Howard County. Such localized supply pressures could dampen submarket-level performance gains, but the metro overall is expected to see a greater vacancy decline in 2026 than in 2025.

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