Q1 2026 Market Overview
Key market statistics at a glance
+27% vs 2025
Record high
Multifamily boost
Selective lending
Sources: Mortgage Bankers Association, CMBS market data, Q1 2026
CRE lenders are re-engaging, so much so that analysts from the Mortgage Bankers Association expect commercial mortgage originations to reach roughly $805 billion in total this year (a 27% increase compared to 2025).
But even though the market is finding its footing, it’s not out of the woods just yet. Certain asset types are still visibly stressed.
Office CMBS delinquency reached a record high of 12.34% in January this year, hinting at what could be deeper trouble across older and poorly leased office assets.
Stabilization is not spread evenly
Multifamily and industrial remain relatively strong, and retail is back from a slump and continuing to benefit from limited new supply and steady consumer activity.
Some office markets, especially in high-quality buildings located in stronger urban cores, are also seeing better leasing and higher rents.
But the tension from the past few years is still evident, even though inflation has cooled from its peak.
Still-elevated interest rates, along with tariffs on steel and aluminum, are continuing to slow down new construction and refinancing activity.
Sector Scorecard
CRE sector performance — Q1 2026
Strong
Coastal and job-rich metros show resilient demand. GSE lending cap raised by 20.5%.
Stable
Cooled from post-COVID peak. Urban infill and key logistics hubs stay in demand.
Recovering
Grocery-anchored centers outperform. Limited new supply strengthens landlord position.
Stressed
CMBS delinquency at record 12.34%. Trophy/Class A resilient; older assets lag badly.
“Banks are indeed showing more appetite than they did in 2024 or 2025; they have become even stricter in scrutinizing property income, sponsor strength, lease rollover, tenant quality, and exit plans,” explains Keith Thomas, CEO and founder, here at Private Capital Investors.
“Private lenders like us are stepping in to fund deals that may not fit traditional bank requirements.”
Weak office assets remain exposed
There’s steady demand for trophy and Class A buildings in deep talent markets like San Francisco, but leasing is still slow in cities that used to be corporate leasing strongholds, including Chicago and Washington, D.C.
Still dependable: Multifamily
Multifamily was still among the most resilient commercial real estate sectors in Q1 2026 because demand still exceeded available supply in coastal metros and areas with strong job bases.
Debt availability for multifamily is also looking much stronger this year. Government-sponsored Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac received a 20.5% increase in their lending caps, giving them more room to finance apartment deals.
Still, some analysts are cautioning against relying too much on this CRE segment, saying that rent growth could soften if job losses rise.
Some Sun Belt cities built a lot of new apartments after the pandemic, and those markets now need time to fill those units.
Owners with loans coming due may have a better chance of refinancing in 2026, but only if the property already performs well.
If your property needs more time to stabilize, commercial bridge loans might be the way forward.
You can use the proceeds to pay off a maturing loan or renovate the property before it qualifies for longer-term financing.
Industrial demand has cooled
Industrial real estate is no longer running at the extreme pace it did right after COVID-19.
But even though leasing has softened from its peak, urban infill locations and major logistics hubs (including California’s Inland Empire and parts of Texas) continue to attract big-box warehouse markets that need these facilities to shorten delivery routes.
Nearshoring and onshoring, alongside tariff uncertainty and geopolitical risk, are also causing more companies to reconsider where they store and manufacture their goods, keeping demand alive for manufacturing and logistics space tied to critical supply chains.
Industrial is still a strong sector, but lenders won’t fund every warehouse just because it has an industrial label. They want to know whether the building can actually attract and keep tenants.
Retail is becoming stronger
Retail Breakdown
Retail sector: winners vs. laggards in Q1 2026
Those who wrote off the retail sector too early are having to rethink that call as grocery-anchored centers and neighborhood shopping centers continue to perform above expectations.
Fewer new properties are being built, so existing properties face less competition.
That helps landlords keep units or spaces filled and gives them a better chance of holding rents steady or raising them.
The strongest retail properties are those that meet everyday needs, particularly in downtown areas where office attendance has recovered:
- Grocery
- Pharmacy
- Fitness
- Medical
- Quick-service restaurants
- Local services
The same can’t be said for weaker regional malls.
There’s more capital available
Capital conditions are better, but the market is not handing out easy capital.
Borrowers with transitional assets may still face pushback from banks that, now more than ever, want clean income, strong sponsorship, and a clearly documented exit before they lend.
“Q1 2026 looks better for CRE overall, but many owners are still carrying problems from the last few years. They may have a loan coming due or be dealing with lower occupancy, among other issues that make banks hesitant,” Keith Thomas, CEO and founder.
“Private lending can fund deals that fall into the category of not quite being bank-ready, but too viable to walk away from. As private lenders, we can underwrite the asset and the borrower’s plan, not just whether the deal fits a traditional lending box,” he adds.
Opportunities in distressed assets
Distressed CRE can create buying or refinancing opportunities in 2026, but only when the problem is fixable. A lower price does not automatically make a property a good deal.
Commercial property investors need to diagnose the cause of distress. Is the property struggling because the loan is coming due at a bad time? Or is the building itself losing tenants because it is outdated, poorly located, or in a weak submarket? Those are very different situations.
What should CRE borrowers and investors do in 2026?
Investors should avoid treating the national market as one story. The better question is not whether CRE is recovering, but in which submarket, at what basis, and with what debt structure.
The basics of raising CRE capital have not changed. Lenders will want to see:
- Current rent rolls
- Trailing financials
- Debt maturity details
- Leasing updates
- Capital expenditure plans
- Realistic exit strategies
- Direct explanations if there is any uncertainty around income or occupancy
Capital Checklist
What lenders want to see in 2026
Current rent rolls
Trailing financials
Debt maturity details
Leasing updates
Capital expenditure plans
Realistic exit strategy
Strong sponsor background
Income & occupancy explanation
"Private lending can fund deals that fall into the category of not quite being bank-ready, but too viable to walk away from. As private lenders, we can underwrite the asset and the borrower's plan, not just whether the deal fits a traditional lending box."
— Keith Thomas, CEO & Founder, Private Capital Investors
Private Capital Investors can help commercial real estate borrowers secure financing for deals that traditional lenders view as too transitional in this more selective market. Fill out this loan request form or call 972-865-6206.







