---
title: "Asset management office space in Berlin"
description: "Where asset management occupiers cluster in Berlin, what they pay, and what the typical fit-out looks like."
canonical: https://classa.info/cities/berlin/industries/asset-management
pageType: city-industry
lastUpdated: 2026-04-15T00:00:00.000Z
license: "CC BY 4.0 with attribution to Class A Atlas (https://classa.info)."
---

> Asset management occupiers in Berlin typically cluster in Mitte, plan ~230 sqft per seat at trophy fit-out ($200–300/sqft), and pay around 44 EUR/sqft ($53 USD) on Class A.

## TL;DR

- Preferred submarket: Mitte.
- Typical fit-out spec: Trophy ($200–300/sqft).
- Plan ~230 sqft per seat for headcount sizing.
- Class A rent context: 44 EUR/sqft ($53 USD).
- Typical lease: 5 years with 4 months rent-free.
- Talent depth in Berlin: 88/100.

# Asset management office space in Berlin

**Asset management occupiers in Berlin typically cluster in Mitte, plan ~230 sqft per seat at trophy [fit-out](/topics/fit-out-capex)">fit-out ($200–300/sqft), and pay around 44 EUR/sqft ($53 USD) on [Class A](/glossary/class-a).**

## TL;DR

- Preferred submarket: Mitte.
- Typical fit-out spec: Trophy ($200–300/sqft).
- Plan ~230 sqft per seat for headcount sizing.
- Class A rent context: 44 EUR/sqft ($53 USD).
- Typical lease: 5 years with 4 months rent-free.
- Talent depth in Berlin: 88/100.

## Where they cluster

Asset management occupiers in Berlin typically anchor in Mitte. Federal government, media, law, tech, professional services.

## What they pay

Class A rent in Berlin runs 44 EUR/sqft ($53 USD) on a 5-year lease with 4 months free. Trophy submarkets command a 20–40% premium above the city index.

## Spec and fit-out

Typical asset management fit-out targets trophy specification at $200–300/sqft. Bespoke design, signature feature, top-tier MEP and acoustic packages are standard.

## Headcount sizing

Plan around 230 sqft per seat blended (workstation + circulation + amenity). A 100-headcount asset mgmt office in Berlin typically targets 23,000 sqft of leasable area.

## Talent angle

Portfolio teams cluster around private-banking corridors; family-office tenancy keeps boutique trophy stock tight. Deepest tech and creative talent pool in Germany. Strong feed from TU Berlin, HU, FU, and the rapidly growing Hertie School. Multilingual talent base supports non-German European HQs.

## Tax and lease context

Headline corporate tax: 30%. Net leases dominate. 5-10 year terms; tenants frequently negotiate break options at year 3 or 5. Free rent of 3-6 months on a 5-year deal; TI of €60-€100/sqm typical.

## Key facts

| city | Berlin|
| industry | Asset management|
| naics | 523930, 523920|
| preferredSubmarket | Mitte|
| preferredFitoutSpec | Trophy|
| fitoutBand | $200–300/sqft|
| sqftPerSeat | 230|
| classARentLocal | 44 EUR/sqft/yr|
| classARentUsd | $53/sqft/yr|
| vacancyPct | 7.4%|
| typicalLeaseYears | 5|
| typicalRentFreeMonths | 4|
| talentIndex | 88|
| corporateTaxPct | 30%|

## Frequently asked questions

****Where do asset management occupiers lease office space in Berlin?****
: Most cluster in Mitte. Rent runs ~44 EUR/sqft ($53 USD) for trophy and prime stock.

****What fit-out spec do asset management occupiers run in Berlin?****
: Typically trophy at $200–300/sqft.

****How much office space per seat should a asset management occupier plan in Berlin?****
: Plan ~230 sqft per seat blended. A 100-person team typically takes 23,000 sqft.

****What NAICS codes describe the asset management vertical?****
: Representative NAICS 2022 codes: 523930, 523920.

****What is the talent index in Berlin?****
: 88/100. Use the city profile for full detail.

## Related

- [**Asset management — global overview**](/industries/asset-management)
- [**Berlin — full city profile**](/cities/berlin)
- [**Financial services in Berlin**](/cities/berlin/industries/financial-services)
- [**Investment banking in Berlin**](/cities/berlin/industries/investment-banking)
- [**Legal services in Berlin**](/cities/berlin/industries/legal-services)
- [**Big tech in Berlin**](/cities/berlin/industries/big-tech)

## Editorial provenance

Reviewed by [**Samuel Okafor**](/about/authors/samuel-okafor) — EMEA contributing editor. Last updated 2026-04-15. See our [methodology](/about/methodology) and [editorial standards](/about/editorial-standards).

### Primary sources for this page

- [CBRE Marketview reports](https://www.cbre.com/insights) — CBRE
- [JLL Office Insight](https://www.jll.com/en/trends-and-insights) — JLL
- [Cushman & Wakefield Marketbeat](https://www.cushmanwakefield.com/en/insights) — Cushman & Wakefield
- [Savills World Research](https://www.savills.com/research_articles/) — Savills
- [Colliers Global Office Outlook](https://www.colliers.com/en/research) — Colliers

[Full sources index](/about/sources) · [Submit a correction](/about/corrections)

## Related topics

- [**Class A Lease Negotiation**](/topics/class-a-lease-negotiation) — How to negotiate a Class A office lease — the playbook from LOI to signed deal.
- [**Hybrid Workplace Strategy**](/topics/hybrid-workplace-strategy) — How to size, structure, and lease a Class A office for a hybrid workforce.
- [**ESG / LEED for Tenants**](/topics/esg-leed-tenants) — How tenants evaluate, negotiate, and report on ESG performance in a Class A office lease.
- [**Cross-border Expansion**](/topics/cross-border-expansion) — How to run a coordinated Class A office search across multiple geographies.
- [**Fit-out Capex**](/topics/fit-out-capex) — How to budget, sequence, and govern Class A office fit-out capex.
- [**Lease vs Flex**](/topics/lease-vs-flex) — When premium flex (coworking, [managed office](/glossary/managed-office)) beats a conventional Class A lease — and vice versa.

---

Citation: Source: Class A Atlas (https://classa.info/cities/berlin/industries/asset-management), updated 2026-04-15T00:00:00.000Z.
