Class B office in Sydney typically trades 30–60% below Class A on rent, with materially higher vacancy and a much harder lease-up profile.
Class B office in Sydney typically trades 30–60% below Class A on rent, with materially higher vacancy and a much harder lease-up profile.
Flight-to-quality has compounded since 2020. Tenants signing 10-year leases default to certified, amenitised Class A — Class B can't compete on talent attraction or ESG scoring. Sydney mirrors this global pattern.
Cost-sensitive operations, back-office functions, satellite teams, and budget-constrained scale-ups still find Class B fit-for-purpose. The premium for Class A should always be evaluated against actual ROI, not brand.
| city | Sydney |
|---|---|
| country | Australia |
| region | APAC |
| classARentLocal | 1480 AUD/sqft/yr |
| classARentUsd | $96/sqft/yr |
| vacancy | 12.6% |
| typicalLeaseYears | 7 |
| typicalRentFreeMonths | 30 |
| submarkets | 6 |
| primeYieldPct | 5.5% |
Reviewed by Kenji Watanabe — APAC contributing editor. Last updated 2026-04-15. See our methodology and editorial standards.