In 2025, developers in New York City have begun converting 4.1 million rentable square feet of office space in Manhattan into housing—the highest annual total since 2008, when 4.8 million square feet were converted. This shift reflects profound structural changes in the commercial real estate market.
The wave of conversions is being propelled by a tightening housing market, persistently elevated office vacancy rates, and a more favourable policy environment. In 2024, a new tax incentive program—known as section 467-m—was introduced at the state level. Under this scheme, office buildings repurposed as rental housing can receive property tax exemptions for decades, provided at least twenty-five percent of units are income-restricted. The rules took effect in January 2025.
Developers and analysts point to Midtown Manhattan as a key epicentre of activity. Since 2020, it has accounted for fifty-four point eight percent of conversion volume, overtaking Downtown as the primary zone for adaptive reuse projects. Among the more ambitious schemes is the transformation of 25 Water Street (formerly 4 New York Plaza), where a redevelopment plan exceeding 1,300 apartments is now under way. This project was the first to benefit from the 467-m program, and the first tenants began moving in earlier in 2025.
Other notable conversions include 5 Times Square, where developers are reprogramming office floors into 1,250 apartments, also using supportive zoning changes. Another project underway is Tower 57, slated to become more than three hundred and seventy residential units after its conversion by TF Cornerstone.
These efforts coincide with a severe housing shortage: Manhattan’s multifamily vacancy rate hovers around three percent, while thousands of households remain on waitlists for affordable housing. Citywide, upward of 135 million square feet of underused office space have been identified by officials as potential candidates for residential reuse, with estimates suggesting conversions could yield twenty thousand new homes.
Still, industry experts warn that the pool of viable buildings is narrowing. Physical constraints—floor plate size, ceiling height, mechanical systems—can make many offices unsuited to housing. The complexity, cost and regulatory hurdles of conversion also remain steep. As suitable stock dwindles, each new project becomes harder to execute.
For New York, this conversion boom signals a redefinition of its real estate fabric—not merely as an emergency fix for overbuilt offices, but as a central pillar in addressing the city’s chronic housing deficit.