articleAmerican Economic ReviewJan 30, 2026Closed access

Work from Home and the Office Real Estate Apocalypse

AGArpit GuptaVMVrinda MittalSVStijn Van Nieuwerburgh

Department of Finance · University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · +1 more institution

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Abstract

We show remote work led to large drops in lease revenues, occupancy, and market rents in the commercial office sector. We revalue New York City office buildings, taking into account both the cash flow and discount rate implications of these shocks, and find a 46 percent decline in long-run value. For all US office markets combined, we find a $556.8 billion value destruction. Higher-quality buildings were buffered against these trends due to a flight to quality, while lower-quality offices are at risk of becoming a stranded asset. These valuation changes have repercussions for financial stability and local public finances. (JEL E31, E32, G12, J22, M51, R33)

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Authors

3
  • AG
    Arpit GuptaCorresponding

    Department of Finance

  • VM
    Vrinda Mittal

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  • SV
    Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh

    Center for Economic and Policy Research

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Real estate
  • Lease
  • Valuation (finance)
  • Work (physics)
  • Economic rent
  • Cash flow
  • Cash
  • Market value
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