E - PAPER

CURRENT MONTH

LAST MONTH

VIEW ALL
  • HOME
  • NEWS ROOM
  • COVER STORY
  • INTERVIEWS
  • DRAWING BOARD
  • PROJECT WATCH
  • SPOTLIGHT
  • BUILDING BLOCKS
  • BRAND SYNC
  • VIDEOS
  • HAPPENINGS
  • E-MAGAZINE
  • EVENTS
search
  1. Home
  2. INTERNATIONAL

Data Centers, Senior Housing Lead 2026 Real Estate Growth: PwC-ULI

PwC and ULI’s Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2026 highlights data centers, senior housing, and Dallas-Fort Worth as the key drivers of growth and resilience next year.

BY Realty+
Published - Monday, 10 Nov, 2025
Data Centers, Senior Housing Lead 2026 Real Estate Growth: PwC-ULI

The global real estate industry is entering a new era, one defined by adaptability, innovation, and shifting fundamentals. According to Emerging Trends in Real Estate® 2026, the annual outlook jointly released by PwC and the Urban Land Institute (ULI), investors are pivoting toward high-growth sectors such as data centers and senior housing, while markets like Dallas-Fort Worth continue to dominate the national landscape.

Now in its 47th year, the report reflects insights from more than 1,700 leading real estate investors, developers, lenders, and advisors across the US and Canada. It offers a comprehensive view of how the industry is recalibrating amid economic headwinds, demographic transitions, and accelerating technological change.

“The past few years have tested the industry’s ability to pivot,” said Andrew Alperstein, Partner, PwC US Real Estate. “We are seeing a renewed focus on core fundamentals and capital deployment into growth-driven areas. From AI infrastructure to senior housing, opportunities in 2026 will favor those combining speed, insight, and a long-term view.”

Angela Cain, Global CEO of ULI, added, “Technology continues to shape the U.S. economy, and real estate is starting to harness that power. With interest rate cuts on the horizon and strong demand in sectors like data centers, senior housing, and self-storage, we’re seeing cautious optimism heading into 2026.”

Dallas-Fort Worth Tops the List Again

For the second consecutive year, Dallas-Fort Worth has emerged as the #1 “Market to Watch” in the report. The metro area’s expanding tech ecosystem, deep talent pool, and strong infrastructure continue to attract investors and developers alike.

Following closely behind are Jersey City, Miami, Brooklyn, Houston, Nashville, Northern New Jersey, Tampa-St. Petersburg, Manhattan, and Phoenix, each demonstrating regional strengths that align with shifting demographic and business trends.

Markets with diversified economies, robust connectivity, and expanding population bases are emerging as clear winners, while overleveraged or slow-to-adapt regions may face continued volatility.

Sector Shifts Define the New Growth Story

The Emerging Trends 2026 report delves deeply into the evolving dynamics across key asset classes. Amid global uncertainty and higher financing costs, investors are focusing on sectors that offer resilience, utility, and long-term relevance.

Data Centers: Powering Ahead Amid Constraints

The surge in artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and digital services is fueling unprecedented demand for data centers. With national vacancy rates below 2% and most facilities pre-leased before completion, supply constraints are shaping a highly competitive development landscape.

However, the challenge lies in power availability. Many developers are targeting markets with reliable and scalable energy access, as limited grid capacity threatens to slow down expansion. This has made cities like Dallas, Phoenix, and Northern Virginia particularly attractive for investors seeking digital infrastructure exposure.

As Alperstein noted, “Power access is the new zoning. The ability to secure long-term, reliable energy supply is now a primary driver of site selection.”

Senior Housing: Boomers Bring the Next Wave

By 2026, the first wave of baby boomers will turn 80, setting off what the report calls a “historic inflection point” for senior housing. Limited new supply, changing care models, and shifting preferences are creating a major opportunity for developers.

Occupancy levels have reached record highs, and developers are diversifying offerings across the spectrum: from independent living-lite communities to wellness-driven, tech-enabled facilities. The next phase of growth will be defined by service innovation and affordability, particularly as aging populations seek comfort, convenience, and community without the institutional feel of traditional care homes.

Self-Storage: From Utility to Lifestyle Asset

The self-storage sector is undergoing a quiet reinvention. Once viewed as a utility asset, it is now becoming a hybrid investment class catering to modern mobility and flexible living.

High housing costs, smaller urban homes, and lifestyle trends favouring flexibility have propelled demand. A new subsegment, storage condos, is also gaining traction, enabling individuals and small businesses to purchase personalized spaces that blend industrial utility with private ownership.

This evolution underscores how self-storage is shifting from a necessity to a lifestyle choice and a niche investment category.

Student Housing: A Complex, Changing Outlook

After strong recovery in 2024 and 2025, student housing faces a more complicated path forward. The sector benefited from simplified federal financial aid, a surge in high school graduates, and growing international enrolments.

However, 2026 could bring challenges. Demographic slowdowns, visa delays, and escalating construction costs are expected to test the sector’s resilience. While near-record occupancy and rent growth have boosted investor confidence, analysts expect selective corrections as supply pipelines adjust to slower demand growth.

Office Market: Stabilizing, But Uneven

The office sector continues to reflect a divided recovery. Premium, well-located “trophy” buildings are commanding record rents, especially in major metros like New York and San Francisco. Yet, lower-grade and peripheral properties continue to struggle with high vacancies and declining valuations.

This bifurcation between Class A and B/C stock, signals that office recovery will remain uneven. Developers are increasingly repurposing older assets into mixed-use or residential projects, a trend expected to accelerate through 2026 as urban planning evolves to accommodate hybrid work models.

A Market in Reinvention

Across all sectors, the 2026 outlook suggests one constant: the real estate industry is not standing still. It is reshaping itself around technology, demographic shifts, and new investor expectations.

As Angela Cain of ULI summarized, “The most successful players will be those who combine insight with agility.”

With the Federal Reserve signaling possible rate cuts and inflation gradually easing, sentiment across the industry has turned cautiously optimistic. Yet the next chapter of real estate growth will be defined less by location and more by innovation, efficiency, and strategic reinvention.

From data centers to senior housing, the future belongs to those who recognize that real estate is no longer just about physical space, it’s about the infrastructure, services, and intelligence that power it.

RELATED STORY VIEW MORE

Data Centers, Senior Housing Lead 2026 Real Estate Growth: PwC-ULI
How Real Estate Investment Unlocks Second Citizenship Across Global Destinations
Dubai Real Estate Records $5.6 Billion in Weekly Transactions

TOP STORY VIEW MORE

Urban Extension Road-II Transforms Delhi-NCR’s Real Estate Connectivity and Growth

The fully operational 74-km Urban Extension Road-II is redefining connectivity across Delhi-NCR, unlocking massive real estate potential in Dwarka, Gurgaon, Panipat, and Sonipat corridors.

06 November, 2025

Embassy REIT Q2 Revenue Rises 13%, NOI Grows 15% Y-o-Y

06 November, 2025

India’s InvIT Market Set to Triple by 2030 Amid Infrastructure Boom

06 November, 2025

NEWS LETTER

Subscribe for our news letter


E - PAPER


  • CURRENT MONTH

  • LAST MONTH

Subscribe To Realty+ online




Get connected with us on social networks!
ABOUT REALTY+

Started in 2004, Realty+, an exchange4media group publication is one of the most respected real estate magazines in India with offices in Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru.

Useful links

HOME

NEWS ROOM

COVER STORY

INTERVIEWS

DRAWING BOARD

PROJECT WATCH

SPOTLIGHT

BUILDING BLOCKS

BRAND SYNC

VIDEOS

HAPPENINGS

E-MAGAZINE

EVENTS

OTHER LINKS

TERMS AND CONDITIONS

PRIVACY-POLICY

COOKIE-POLICY

GDPR-COMPLIANCE

SITE MAP

REFUND POLICY

Contact

Mediasset Holdings 3'rd Floor, D-40, Sector-2, Noida (Uttar Pradesh), Pincode - 201301

tripti@exchange4media.com
realtyplus@exchange4media.com

+91 98200 10226


Copyright © 2024 Mediasset Holdings.
Rental Mobil bandung,Sewa Mobil Bandung, Rental bandung, Sewa Mobil, Jual Mesin Antrian, Harga Mesin Antrian, Mesin Antrian Murah, Jual KIOSK,Mesin Antri, Berita Terkini, Info Bray,Info Tempat Wisata,Portal Berita,Jasa Website