---
title: "Boston vs Washington DC: Class A office comparison"
description: "Side-by-side Class A office comparison for Boston and Washington DC — rent, vacancy, talent, tax, lease norms, transit, and top submarkets."
canonical: https://classa.info/compare/boston-vs-washington-dc
pageType: comparison
lastUpdated: 2026-04-15T00:00:00.000Z
license: "CC BY 4.0 with attribution to Class A Atlas (https://classa.info)."
---

> Boston ($78/sqft, 19.5% vacancy) and Washington DC ($58/sqft, 19.4% vacancy) compete on different axes: Boston on talent depth and Washington DC on rent and tax.

## TL;DR

- Class A rent: Boston $78/sqft vs Washington DC $58/sqft.
- Vacancy: Boston 19.5% vs Washington DC 19.4%.
- Talent index: Boston 95 vs Washington DC 92.
- Corporate tax: Boston 28% vs Washington DC 27.1%.
- Premium flex/seat/month: Boston $1,140 vs Washington DC $880.

# Boston vs Washington DC: Class A office comparison

**Boston ($78/sqft, 19.5% vacancy) and Washington DC ($58/sqft, 19.4% vacancy) compete on different axes: Boston on talent depth and Washington DC on rent and tax.**

## TL;DR

- [Class A](/glossary/class-a) rent: Boston $78/sqft vs Washington DC $58/sqft.
- Vacancy: Boston 19.5% vs Washington DC 19.4%.
- Talent index: Boston 95 vs Washington DC 92.
- Corporate tax: Boston 28% vs Washington DC 27.1%.
- [Premium flex](/topics/lease-vs-flex)/seat/month: Boston $1,140 vs Washington DC $880.

## Market data side-by-side

| Metric | Boston | Washington DC|

| Region | Americas | Americas|
| Country | United States | United States|
| Class A rent (USD/sqft/yr) | $78 | $58|
| Class A rent (local) | 78 USD | 58 USD|
| Vacancy | 19.5% | 19.4%|
| Trend | flat | flat|
| Prime yield | 6.2% | 6.3%|
| Premium flex / seat / month (USD) | $1,140 | $880|
| Submarkets covered | 6 | 6|
| Corporate tax | 28% | 27.1%|

## Lease norms

| Metric | Boston | Washington DC|

| Typical term | 10 yrs | 10 yrs|
| Typical rent-free | 18 mos | 14 mos|
| Lease norms | Modified-gross with op-ex escalations. Rent-free 18-24 months on 10-year term standard. Lab leases carry distinct economics — base rent plus operating expenses plus utilities pass-through. | Modified-gross structures with operating-expense pass-throughs over a base year. Federal GSA leases are typically full-service with cap on operating-expense growth. Free rent of 14-18 months and TI allowances of $130-$150/sqft are typical on 10-year private-sector deals.|
| Tax note | Combined federal + Massachusetts corporate tax 28%. | Federal corporate income tax of 21% plus DC franchise tax of 8.25% drives a combined effective rate of about 27%. Class A office tenants are also subject to DC personal property tax on FF&E.|

## Talent

| Metric | Boston | Washington DC|

| Talent index (0–100) | 95 | 92|
| Talent note | Deepest STEM and life-sciences talent pool in the US — anchored by MIT, Harvard, BU. Average all-in compensation indexes 95. | Deepest federal-services and policy talent pool in the world. Strong legal, lobbying, defense, and consulting concentrations. Tech talent has grown rapidly post-2020 driven by AWS, Amazon HQ2, and federal cloud contracts.|

## Transit & commute

**Boston:** MBTA subway, commuter rail, and Logan Airport access. Silver Line connects the Seaport to South Station.

**Washington DC:** WMATA Metro (six lines) plus VRE and MARC commuter rail. Union Station anchors regional rail. Trophy office clusters all sit within a 5-minute walk of a Metro station.

## Top submarkets — Boston

- [**Cambridge & Kendall Square**](/cities/boston/cambridge-kendall) — [trophy tier](/topics/trophy-asset-selection) · $110/sqft/yr
- [**Kendall Square**](/cities/boston/kendall-square) — trophy tier · $105/sqft/yr
- [**Seaport**](/cities/boston/seaport) — trophy tier · $85/sqft/yr

## Top submarkets — Washington DC

- [**East End**](/cities/washington-dc/east-end) — trophy tier · $75/sqft/yr
- [**Southwest Waterfront**](/cities/washington-dc/southwest-waterfront) — prime tier · $64/sqft/yr
- [**Central Business District**](/cities/washington-dc/cbd) — prime tier · $60/sqft/yr

## Decision criteria

### Pick by cost

Washington DC is the cheaper Class A market on a USD basis.

### Pick by talent depth

Boston has the deeper talent index (95/100 vs 92/100).

### Pick by tax

Washington DC has the lower headline corporate tax (27.1% vs 28%). Local incentives can change the effective rate materially.

### Pick by lease optionality

Boston typical term is 10 years with 18 months free; Washington DC runs 10 years with 14 months free.

### Pick by transit

Boston: MBTA subway, commuter rail, and Logan Airport access. Silver Line connects the Seaport to South Station. Washington DC: WMATA Metro (six lines) plus VRE and MARC commuter rail. Union Station anchors regional rail. Trophy office clusters all sit within a 5-minute walk of a Metro station.

## Run a 4-city comparison

Score Boston, Washington DC and up to two more markets side-by-side on Class A rent, vacancy, talent, corporate tax, and premium flex pricing — all in USD.

[**Run a 4-city comparison →**](/tools/city-comparator)

## Frequently asked questions

****Is Class A office cheaper in Boston or Washington DC?****
: Washington DC is cheaper on a USD basis: $58/sqft vs $78/sqft.

****Which has better talent depth, Boston or Washington DC?****
: Boston indexes higher on talent depth (95 vs 92).

****Which has more sublease availability, Boston or Washington DC?****
: Boston carries higher vacancy (19.5% vs 19.4%) and therefore typically more [sublease](/topics/sublease-strategy)">sublease overhang.

****What lease term should I expect in Boston vs Washington DC?****
: Boston typical term is 10 years with 18 months rent-free; Washington DC typical term is 10 years with 14 months rent-free.

****How does transit and commuter access compare?****
: Boston: MBTA subway, commuter rail, and Logan Airport access. Silver Line connects the Seaport to South Station. Washington DC: WMATA Metro (six lines) plus VRE and MARC commuter rail. Union Station anchors regional rail. Trophy office clusters all sit within a 5-minute walk of a Metro station.

## Editorial provenance

Reviewed by [**Miriam Hollander**](/about/authors/miriam-hollander) — Lead market analyst. 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)

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Citation: Source: Class A Atlas (https://classa.info/compare/boston-vs-washington-dc), updated 2026-04-15T00:00:00.000Z.
