Introduction
After more than a decade of consistent growth, global logistics real estate rents declined by 5% in 2024 as market conditions normalized after historic growth during the pandemic.1 An influx of new supply—coupled with positive but subdued demand rooted in economic, financial market and supply chain uncertainty—pushed vacancy rates up in most markets across the globe.
2024 RENT GROWTH
Global: -5% U.S./Canada: -7% Europe: -1%
Source: Prologis Research.
The Prologis Rent Index combines expert local market insights with proprietary data to analyze net effective rental growth trends across North America, Europe, Asia, and Latin America. Regional and global rates are weighted by market revenue (market stock multiplied by the average rental rate). Prologis Rent Index is based on taking rents on leases signed, differing from often quoted asking rents; the gap between the two was wide in 2024.
Takeaways
- Annual rent growth in the U.S. and Europe was negative for the first time since the global financial crisis of 2007-2009, offsetting just a portion of pandemic-driven outperformance. Year-end 2024 market rents were 59% higher in the U.S. and 33% higher in Europe than year-end 2019, so leases rolling in 2025 still face a significant increase in most locations.
- Excess supply pressured net effective rents in specific markets (e.g., Phoenix, Dallas, Hungary, Poland, Juarez) as lease-up times lengthened. Concessions, such as free rent, returned to pre-pandemic norms in U.S. and Europe.
- A wide gap between market rents and replacement cost rents (15% in the U.S., varying globally) curtailed new construction starts, which fell by an estimated 30% in 2024.
- New leasing activity favored high-quality properties, widening the difference by around 100 bps between Class A, Class B and Class C rents, particularly for properties with sustainable features and robust power access.
- Global market rents decreased 2% in 2024, excluding Southern California. This rent cycle is still a story of concentrated effects. The Southern California market recorded improved leasing activity in 2024, but rents continued to correct following substantial outperformance in 2020 to 2022.
Global Trends and Outlook
Trend #1: Uncertainty pushes decision-making into 2025.
Cautious decision-making amid elevated interest rates and persistent economic uncertainties slowed leasing activity in 2024. Global net absorption fell 14% below pre-pandemic levels, with declines of 30% in the U.S. and 20% in Europe.2 Delayed decisions, consolidation efforts, limited capital access and ongoing supply chain uncertainties suppressed absorption rates as users leveraged existing capacity, moderating rent growth. Additionally, evolving consumer preferences and shifting trade policies added complexity to distribution strategies. As excess space is absorbed and consumption stays steady, leasing activity is expected to improve in 2025, driven by rollover demand from 2024 and structural supply chain needs.
Trend #2: Flight-to-quality boosts Class A rents.
New leasing activity highlighted a flight-to-quality with resilient pricing for newer properties across the globe. Class A properties grew their market share of demand, leading to pricing normalization in Class A while Class B/C properties dropped rents to attract customers. Customers seeking cost reductions consolidated into larger modern facilities, often located farther from end-users. In the U.S., annual rent growth in the newest buildings outperformed older buildings by approximately 100 bps. Elevated move-outs from less functional properties were a factor that led concessions to return to pre-pandemic norms after falling to historically low levels during the pandemic. Globally, concessions were responsible for roughly half of market rent movements.1
Trend #3: Oversupply risk fades further.
There is limited future downside to rents as supply risk has largely passed. Supply risks diminished in 2024 as globally, starts dropped 33%1 and deliveries fell an expected 29% y/y.2 Significant deliveries in 2023 and early 2024 created near-term challenges in supply-heavy markets (e.g., Phoenix, Poland, Hungary). Declining market rents, restricted capital access, elevated construction costs and difficulty accessing critical infrastructure slowed new projects. Fewer completions ahead will allow market conditions to rebalance and allow market rents to narrow the gap with replacement cost rents.
Trend #4: Replacement cost rents moved further above market rents.
Replacement cost rents grew while market rents fell in 2024. In the U.S., market rents are 15% below replacement cost rents. Outside the U.S., conditions vary widely with most markets having a gap between market and replacement cost (e.g., Europe, Japan, Brazil), sometimes significantly so (China). In contrast, Mexico's market rents in most markets are now above replacement cost rents, although practical realities around land, labor and power availability still act as governors of new supply. Brazil’s elevated bond yields are expected drive replacement rents upwards, which could curb new supply.
Trend #5: Market rents decreased 2% globally in 2024, excluding Southern California.
The Southern California market recorded improved leasing activity in 2024, but rents continued to correct following substantial outperformance from 2020 to 2022, when market rents more than doubled. Other global regions and U.S. markets also recorded significant rent growth during this period, but at a much slower pace than Southern California. Coupled with positive demand drivers and the broad-based pullback in new supply, markets outside Southern California are likely to outperform again in 2025.1