Fashion and luxury occupiers in Dallas typically cluster in Uptown, plan ~200 sqft per seat at trophy fit-out ($240–360/sqft), and pay around 36 USD/sqft ($36 USD) on Class A.
Fashion and luxury occupiers in Dallas typically cluster in Uptown, plan ~200 sqft per seat at trophy fit-out">fit-out ($240–360/sqft), and pay around 36 USD/sqft ($36 USD) on Class A.
Fashion and luxury occupiers in Dallas typically anchor in Uptown. Investment management, law, consulting, corporate HQs, healthcare.
Class A rent in Dallas runs 36 USD/sqft ($36 USD) on a 10-year lease with 16 months free. Trophy submarkets command a 20–40% premium above the city index.
Typical fashion and luxury fit-out targets trophy specification at $240–360/sqft. Bespoke design, signature feature, top-tier MEP and acoustic packages are standard.
Plan around 200 sqft per seat blended (workstation + circulation + amenity). A 100-headcount luxury office in Dallas typically targets 20,000 sqft of leasable area.
Design and merchandising leadership clusters near luxury retail corridors; showroom and gallery programming drives premium fit-out spend. Deep finance, technology, healthcare, and consulting talent. Major university feed from UT Dallas, SMU, and the broader Texas system. Cost-of-living and tax advantage continues to drive in-migration.
Headline corporate tax: 22.5%. Modified-gross structures with operating-expense pass-throughs. 10-year terms standard. Free rent of 14-18 months and TI of $80-$140/sqft typical on a 10-year Class A deal. Concession-rich market.
| city | Dallas |
|---|---|
| industry | Fashion and luxury |
| naics | 315, 448 |
| preferredSubmarket | Uptown |
| preferredFitoutSpec | Trophy |
| fitoutBand | $240–360/sqft |
| sqftPerSeat | 200 |
| classARentLocal | 36 USD/sqft/yr |
| classARentUsd | $36/sqft/yr |
| vacancyPct | 24.3% |
| typicalLeaseYears | 10 |
| typicalRentFreeMonths | 16 |
| talentIndex | 84 |
| corporateTaxPct | 22.5% |
Reviewed by Miriam Hollander — Lead market analyst. Last updated 2026-04-15. See our methodology and editorial standards.