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PRIVACY
Commercial Property

Cardiff office demand ‘subdued’ as vacancy rate rises

Avison Young's latest Big Nine report warned on lack of new construction

Central Square, in Cardiff city centre(Image: John Myers)

Office demand in Cardiff remained “subdued” in the second quarter, the latest report from property giant Avison Young shows.

The firm’s on the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s office activity showed take-up in the Welsh capital in Q2 totalled 39,800 sq ft – down 53% on the first quarter and 67% below the 10-year quarterly average.

Across the nine º£½ÇÊÓÆµ cities in the report – also including Birmingham, Bristol, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester and Newcastle – overall take-up fell 25% on Q1, to 1.6m sq ft.

In Cardiff, the professional services sector made up 42% of total demand. The largest deal of the quarter saw engineering consultancy Stantec let 9,400 sq ft at One Central Square.

Office vacancy rose to 9.4%, which Avison Young said was a “record high for the market”. It said the change was driven by increasing vacancies in secondary office space, with Grade A vacancy unchanged at 0.3% for the third consecutive quarter. The report adds: “No space is currently under construction across the market”.

It added: “While rental growth is expected in the second half of 2025, office prime rents remain at £28.00 per sq ft. Rent frees remain at 18 months on a 10 year lease.”

Other key deals included Gleeds’ deal for 4,917 sq ft of space at Hodge House in St Mary Street.

Across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, Avision Young said the Big Nine office markets saw the strongest H1 take-up since 2019. Cities “significantly outperforming” the 10-year first half average included Bristol (21%), Manchester (27%) and Newcastle (37%).