Hybrid policies in Indianapolis have compressed total demand but increased per-sqft quality requirements — the surviving demand is institutional Class A, not Class B.
Hybrid policies in Indianapolis have compressed total demand but increased per-sqft quality requirements — the surviving demand is institutional Class A, not Class B.
Most Class A occupiers in Indianapolis now plan for 60–80% peak in-office occupancy. Sizing on peak (not average) is the only way to avoid permanent spillover. Use the Office Space Calculator with hybrid-mode density.
Meeting-room intensity has roughly doubled. Phone-booth count has tripled. Hot-desking is the rule for under-50% in-office days; assigned desks for higher attendance bands. Hospitality-grade amenity is now table stakes.
| city | Indianapolis |
|---|---|
| country | United States |
| region | Americas |
| classARentLocal | 26 USD/sqft/yr |
| classARentUsd | $26/sqft/yr |
| vacancy | 19.2% |
| typicalLeaseYears | 10 |
| typicalRentFreeMonths | 12 |
| submarkets | 5 |
| primeYieldPct | 7.4% |
Reviewed by Class A Atlas Editorial Desk — House byline · global editorial team. Last updated 2026-04-15. See our methodology and editorial standards.