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European Office Take-Up in the First Half 11% Above the Five-Year Average

France and Germany Are Europe’s Most Undersupplied Office Markets
Professional and business services are driving the European office market. (iStock)
Professional and business services are driving the European office market. (iStock)
CoStar News
August 30, 2022 | 9:35 AM

Take-up in the European office market in the first half of 2022 reached 4.3 million square metres, 11% above the five-year first-half average, according to Savills' research.

Professional and business services remained the most active sector, with a 21% share of total take-up, in line with the first half of 2021. This was closely followed by technology, information and communication at 20%, and banking, insurance and finance at 20%, both of which recorded a 6% increase year-on-year.

Advanced manufacturing, pharma and industry has seen a drop in its share of take-up from 13% to 6%, bringing it back to levels recorded in 2020 after a noticeable jump in 2021.

When looking at the supply-demand ratio, most European office markets, led by France and Germany, remain undersupplied, with vacancy rates between 2% and 5% for Paris's central business district, Berlin, Cologne, Hamburg, Brussels, Munich and Stockholm.

Matthew Fitzgerald, director, EMEA cross border tenant advisory at Savills, said: “Given economic headwinds, one could easily paint a negative picture for European office take up moving forward. However, there is still strong demand for high quality space in good locations that match with company culture and corporate sustainability targets.”

Despite the volume of European real estate investment declining in the second quarter of 2022, offices traded for €43 billion during the first half of 2022, in line with the five-year first-half average, according to Savills. The asset class continues to take the largest share of total investment, recording 31% in 2022 so far.

Georgia Ferris, European research analyst at Savills, said: “The number of European office transactions slowed in July, to the lowest month seen in recent years according to RCA data. This is perhaps underpinned by investors being more selective and putting a focus on the quality of product, with a premium placed on prime grade A offices.”