Keyser Blog | Commercial Real Estate Advocates

Which Commercial Real Estate Sectors Will Tariffs Impact the Most?

Written by Jonathan Keyser | 5:26 PM on September 12, 2025

Tariffs—particularly those on semiconductors, steel, and other core imports—have cascading effects across multiple industries. From a commercial real estate perspective, here are the sectors likely to be impacted most:

 

1. Industrial & Manufacturing Facilities

  • Why: Tariffs on semiconductors and related components incentivize domestic production to avoid higher import costs. That translates into demand for advanced manufacturing plants, clean rooms, and supporting supplier facilities.
  • Impact:
    • Surge in build-to-suit industrial projects for chipmakers, EV battery manufacturers, and aerospace suppliers.
    • Logistics hubs located near major highways and airports become vital for handling raw materials and distribution.
    • Supply chain partners (tooling, packaging, testing firms) will need specialized space close to anchor facilities like TSMC in Arizona.

2. Logistics & Warehousing

  • Why: Higher tariffs on imports push companies to reconfigure supply chains for U.S.-based sourcing. Inventory “just-in-time” strategies shift toward “just-in-case,” meaning more storage.
  • Impact:
    • Increase demand for Nearshoring in Mexico
    • Growth in regional warehousing and cold storage for companies hedging against import delays.
    • Increased demand for last-mile distribution facilities to shorten delivery times as imported goods become more expensive.

3. Office & R&D Campuses

  • Why: Semiconductor fabs and advanced manufacturers require not just factories, but also large engineering, design, and research offices. Tariffs accelerate the onshoring of R&D alongside production.
  • Impact:
    • Demand for high-spec office and lab space in markets like Phoenix, Scottsdale, and Chandler.
    • Increased clustering around universities and innovation districts, like Tempe and Phoenix, as firms expand engineering teams domestically.

4. Data Centers

  • Why: Chips power cloud infrastructure, AI, and digital services. Tariffs that slow semiconductor imports may create near-term delays in equipment availability. In the long term, domestic production capacity enhances stability.
  • Impact:
    • Short-term supply constraints on servers and electrical equipment are delaying data center expansions.
    • High demand for power and water is also narrowing the field of potential sites.
    • Longer-term surge in U.S. demand for purpose-built hyperscale campuses, especially near affordable power sources.

Key Insight for Arizona’s Commercial Real Estate Industry

Given Arizona’s unique positioning—with TSMC’s $165B investment and a growing EV/battery ecosystem—the industrial, R&D, and supporting office sectors will see the most significant direct upside if tariffs push more production onshore.

 

Over the next 12-24 months, the Phoenix commercial real estate industry is likely to see a significant boom in office and industrial property demand.

 

 

Commercial Real Estate FAQs

  1. Which CRE sectors are most directly impacted by tariffs?
    Tariffs will impact the semiconductor, industrial, manufacturing, aerospace, logistics, and data center industries the most.
  2. How do tariffs influence office and R&D space demand?
    Tariffs will accelerate the onshoring of research, engineering, and manufacturing. This creates stronger demand for high-spec office and lab campuses in markets like Phoenix.
  3. What is a last-mile distribution center?
    A last-mile distribution center supports the final step in the delivery process where goods are transported from a warehouse or distribution center to the end customer, typically emphasizing speed, efficiency, and cost-effectiveness in reaching the consumer's doorstep. Last-mile facilities are usually located in urban or suburban areas—for example, in residentially dense parts of Greater Phoenix such as Chandler, Tempe, Mesa, Peoria, Arcadia, Tolleson, and Deer Valley.