U.S. Retail Supply Is Tightening, But Few Developers Plan To Build New Product
Only 64.2 million square feet of new retail space was under construction nationwide during the first quarter of 2026, a decline of roughly 8% from 70 million square feet in Q1 2025 and well below the 10-year average of 90 million square feet, according to CoStar Group data. The pullback in construction reflects a difficult development environment as sharp rises in land prices, construction costs, and interest rates over recent years have pushed required rents well above prevailing market levels for many retail formats. Beyond cost pressures, developers remain cautious following years of heightened supply risk awareness, while competition for sites from higher-density residential, industrial, and mixed-use projects further constrains retail development opportunities, particularly in infill locations. Despite tight construction pipelines, retail transaction volume reached $15.3 billion in Q1 2026, up 5% year-over-year, with national vacancy at 4.4% and institutional investors expanding allocations to the sector as retailers favor measured, capital-disciplined expansion strategies.
The TikTok effect: How viral trends are changing visual merchandising
The average viral trend on TikTok lasts just five to 10 days before attention shifts, and with 42% of Gen Z consumers in the U.S. discovering new products on TikTok, brands need to move much faster than the traditional six to 24 month product-to-shelf timeline. TikTok has become a powerful launchpad for products with over 1.04 billion active monthly users, putting retail cycles into overdrive as brands capitalize on the platform's ability to spark viral moments and drive high demand. Examples include chef influencer Tineke Younger's viral mac and cheese recipe leading to a Nestlé Carnation collaboration for limited-edition Kickin' Jalapeño Flavored Evaporated Milk, and the infamous "Labubu" dolls generating 1.4 million-plus TikTok posts leading to chaotic scenes in UK stores. Gen Z-focused brands like Halara, Edikted, and Cider are testing physical retail through pop-up stores to create immersive brand experiences and translate TikTok buzz into real-world engagement using temporary store formats with flexible fixture setups and trend-responsive visuals.
Consumer sentiment falls to record low as gas prices, inflation worries rise
The University of Michigan Index of Consumer Sentiment fell 10% in May 2026 to 44.8, marking the third consecutive monthly decline and dropping just below the previous historical low seen in June 2022, as supply disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz continued to lift gasoline prices. The Current Conditions Index plunged 12.8% to 45.8 and is down 22% year-over-year, while the Index of Consumer Expectations declined 8.3% to 44.1, with consumers anticipating business conditions will worsen over both short and long time horizons. Nearly 40% of consumers offered unsolicited comments about gas prices during interviews, up from 33% the previous month, with lower-income consumers and those without college degrees posting particularly strong declines as these groups are more sensitive to increases in gas costs, which have risen sharply by more than 50% since the start of the Iran conflict. Consumers expect prices to rise 4.8% over the next year, up from 4.7% in April, with longer-term inflation expectations also climbing sharply, raising concerns that inflation will spread beyond fuel prices even in the long run
Retail sales grow in April
Retail sales rose for the seventh consecutive month in April 2026 despite rising gas prices and persistent inflation, with core retail sales increasing 0.34% month-over-month and 5.53% year-over-year according to the CNBC/NRF Retail Monitor. Total retail sales, excluding automobile dealers and gasoline stations, rose 0.34% month-over-month and 5.73% year-over-year, with spending supported by a steady labor market, wage growth, and significant tax refunds. Clothing stores led all retail categories with a 9.75% year-over-year increase, followed by sporting goods stores at 8.55% and health and personal care stores at 8.42%, while building and garden supply stores were the only category to decline year-over-year, falling 2.74%. For the first four months of 2026, total sales were up 6.07% year-over-year and core sales increased 5.99%, though April's growth slowed slightly from March's gains of 0.4% month-over-month and 6.59% year-over-year.
How retail landlords are finding revenue beyond the rent roll
Retail landlords are shifting their strategy from being passive real estate owners to active operators, looking for revenue streams beyond traditional rent rolls. As retail properties are increasingly viewed as "community infrastructure," landlords are monetizing foot traffic, physical space, and data through five key methods
Spirit Airlines' Shutdown Puts $250M Broward HQ In Limbo
Spirit Airlines has officially ceased all operations as of May 2, 2026, leading to the immediate shutdown of its newly completed global headquarters at Dania Pointe in Broward County, Florida. This final collapse follows years of financial instability, two prior bankruptcy filings, and a failed federal bailout attempt.
Landlords Are Being Sued More Than Ever, Pushing Liability Insurance Up
Commercial property owners are facing a sharp spike in liability insurance premiums, driven by a dramatic surge in lawsuits and a trend known as "social inflation." The report highlights that federal tort cases, particularly premises liability claims like slip-and-falls and wrongful deaths, rose 20% between 2022 and 2024. This litigation wave has caused general liability rates to spike by as much as 30% in recent months.
CoStar: Retail rent growth slows to 1.9% in Q1
U.S. retail asking rent growth has significantly moderated, slowing to +1.9% year-over-year in Q1 2026. This marks the slowest pace of growth in over a decade and continues a downward trend that began in 2024. While the retail sector remains fundamentally healthy with low vacancy rates, the market is shifting from post-pandemic highs toward a "new normal.




