Sublease availability in Frankfurt is concentrated in older Class B and lower-tier Class A stock; trophy assets like Bankenviertel clear quickly even when the broader market shows 8.4% vacancy.
sublease">Sublease availability in Frankfurt is concentrated in older Class B and lower-tier Class A stock; trophy assets like Bankenviertel clear quickly even when the broader market shows 8.4% vacancy.
In Frankfurt, sublease availability concentrates in the older Class A and Class B segments — not in trophy product. Vacancy across the broad Class A index is 8.4%; the trophy tier in Bankenviertel is structurally tighter.
Subleases trade at a discount, but you inherit the prime tenant's term, get limited or no TI, and live with whatever fit-out">fit-out exists. For occupiers under a 24-month horizon, that tradeoff usually wins. For multi-year HQs, direct deals with rent-free and TI almost always produce better effective economics.
Look for direct deals with the landlord at sublease commencement (a "bypass" structure) — landlords will sometimes write a fresh long-term lease to take a problem space off the prime tenant's books. 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.
| city | Frankfurt |
|---|---|
| country | Germany |
| region | EMEA |
| classARentLocal | 55 EUR/sqft/yr |
| classARentUsd | $60/sqft/yr |
| vacancy | 8.4% |
| typicalLeaseYears | 7 |
| typicalRentFreeMonths | 9 |
| submarkets | 6 |
| primeYieldPct | 4.4% |
Reviewed by Samuel Okafor — EMEA contributing editor. Last updated 2026-04-15. See our methodology and editorial standards.