7251 W. Palmetto Park Rd

Properties for Lease

7251 W. Palmetto Park Rd

Address

7251 W. Palmetto Park Rd
Boca Raton, FL 33433
United States

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Property Type: Office
Base Rent: $20-$23 SF NNN
Listing Status: Active

Contact Info

Gary Broidis
Cell: 561-703-9298
Gary@atlanticcg.com

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Property Description

This office building is ideally located immediately west of the intersection of Palmetto Park Road and Powerline (aka Jog) Road. This property offers covered parking and plenty of additional parking on the site.

There are dozens of restaurants, cafes and coffee shops within walking distance of this property and I-95 is only 3 minutes away as well as The Florida Turnpike.

Location Description

Suburban

Additional Information Site Highlights Major Tenants
County: Palm Beach
Building Size: 54,000 SF
Operating Expenses: $16.37 SF
Min. Divisible Space: 978 SF
Max. Contiguous Space: 1,813 SF
Total SF Available: 2,791 SF
Year Built: 1985
Lot Size: 1.5 Acres
  • Rent is $20-$23/SF plus $16.37/SF Operating Expenses including utilities and janitorial
  • Ideally Located Near I-95 and the Florida Turnpike
  • Abundant Parking (Covered Parking Available)

 

 

Recent News

Stores remain dominant, even as digital, AI shopping grows

Physical stores still dominate retail, with 77% of purchases made in-person in 2025—even as AI and e-commerce continue to grow. According to EY research, most consumers still prefer to shop for fresh food, snacks, and beverages offline, and 94% make final purchase decisions in-store after browsing online.

EY’s Jon Copestake warns retailers not to underestimate the value of brick-and-mortar. While AI tools assist shoppers, few trust them to complete purchases. Instead, stores are crucial for discovery, promotions, and building loyalty.

Forward-thinking retailers are reimagining their physical spaces with services like rentals, repairs, and immersive experiences. As Copestake says, “If you're cutting stores, you may be missing a significant trick.”

Revoked Visa Programs, Increased Deportations Heighten Risks To Construction Labor Force

In Doral, once-busy streets and shops are suddenly quiet as fear spreads among immigrant communities following the rollback of legal protections like TPS and the CHNV parole program. The Biden-era policy had allowed over 500,000 immigrants from countries like Venezuela and Haiti to live and work legally in the U.S., but recent reversals by the Trump administration have left many without work authorization—and too afraid to leave home.

The impact is already being felt in South Florida’s construction and development sectors, where immigrants make up more than 25% of the workforce. With workplace raids increasing and employers required to use E-Verify under Florida’s SB 1718, developers may face labor shortages, project delays, and rising costs. Industry leaders warn that this could be just the beginning.

Mall traffic dips in June, half-year traffic mostly positive

Mall traffic dipped slightly in June 2025, ending a two-month streak of growth, as shoppers pulled back following a spring surge possibly fueled by anticipated tariff hikes. Indoor malls showed the most resilience, with visits down just 0.7% year-over-year, while outlet malls saw the steepest decline at 4.4%.

Despite the June slowdown, the first half of 2025 painted a largely positive picture: indoor mall visits rose 1.8%, open-air centers grew 0.6%, and average visit duration increased across all formats—indicating stronger consumer engagement. Notably, indoor malls edged past pre-pandemic levels for the first time, up 0.3% from 2019.

The recovery continues, with open-air centers maintaining the most consistent post-COVID performance, and indoor malls closing the gap. As Placer.ai notes, the mall rebound story is still unfolding.