Certified Class A buildings in Frankfurt now command a measurable rent premium and are the default expectation for institutional tenants signing 10-year leases.

  • Trophy Frankfurt product (e.g., Bankenviertel) is overwhelmingly LEED Gold/Platinum or local-equivalent certified.
  • Green premium across major markets runs 5–15% on rent and shows in valuation cap rates.
  • Mandatory disclosure regimes are tightening globally; uncertified stock is increasingly hard to lease to investment-grade tenants.
  • Most Frankfurt ESG underwriting now pulls operational energy data, not just certification badges.

Frankfurt ESG-certified office stock

Certified Class A buildings in Frankfurt now command a measurable rent premium and are the default expectation for institutional tenants signing 10-year leases.

TL;DR

  • Trophy Frankfurt product (e.g., Bankenviertel) is overwhelmingly leed">LEED Gold/Platinum or local-equivalent certified.
  • Green premium across major markets runs 5–15% on rent and shows in valuation cap rates.
  • Mandatory disclosure regimes are tightening globally; uncertified stock is increasingly hard to lease to investment-grade tenants.
  • Most Frankfurt ESG underwriting now pulls operational energy data, not just certification badges.

What's certified in this market

Frankfurt's trophy inventory is overwhelmingly certified — LEED Gold/Platinum in markets that follow USGBC, BREEAM Excellent/Outstanding in UK and parts of EMEA, CASBEE in Japan, Green Mark in Singapore. Notable certified Frankfurt buildings include Omniturm (LEED Gold), Marienturm (LEED Platinum), Four Frankfurt (DGNB Platinum).

The rent premium is real

Across major Tier 1 markets, certified Class A buildings command a 5–15% rent premium versus equivalent uncertified stock. The premium is largest at the top of the curve (Platinum vs. uncertified Class A) and narrows in mid-tier comparisons.

What occupiers should ask for

In a Class A LOI, ask for: (1) current certification status and pathway to renewal, (2) operational energy intensity (kWh/sqm/yr) over the trailing 24 months, (3) green-lease provisions covering data sharing, and (4) tenant fit-out">fit-out alignment with the building's certification. German leases run 5-10 years with break rights. Rent reviews are indexed to the CPI (Verbraucherpreisindex). Tenant pays Nebenkosten (operating costs) on top of base rent. Cautio (security deposit) of 3-6 months is typical.

Key facts

cityFrankfurt
countryGermany
regionEMEA
classARentLocal55 EUR/sqft/yr
classARentUsd$60/sqft/yr
vacancy8.4%
typicalLeaseYears7
typicalRentFreeMonths9
submarkets6
primeYieldPct4.4%
trophySubmarketBankenviertel

Frequently asked questions

Do Frankfurt landlords pay for the ESG premium?
Tenants pay it through rent. The economic case is energy-cost savings + brand value + retention; the strategic case is futureproofing against tightening disclosure regimes.
Which certification matters most in Frankfurt?
LEED is the global default occupiers recognise; the local equivalent (BREEAM in the UK, CASBEE in Japan, Green Mark in Singapore) often carries equal or greater regulatory weight.

Editorial provenance

Reviewed by Samuel Okafor — EMEA contributing editor. Last updated 2026-04-15. See our methodology and editorial standards.

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Related topics

  • ESG / LEED for Tenants — How tenants evaluate, negotiate, and report on ESG performance in a Class A office lease.