2026 Lehigh Valley Industrial Absorption & Vacancy Deep Dive

2/26/2026

2026 Industrial Absorption & Vacancy Deep Dive 

Lehigh Valley + Eastern Pennsylvania Logistics Markets (Broker-Advisory Brief)

 

Executive Takeaways

Industrial in Eastern PA entering 2026 is best described as:

Not boom-time tight

Not distressed

Normalizing into a healthier two-sided market

That means:

Vacancy is off the floor (not the 2–3% “anything leases” environment), but still supportive in well-located submarkets.

Absorption is more selective, with tenants prioritizing:

  • Location (I-78/I-81/I-476 adjacency)
  • Building specs (clear heights, dock ratios, trailer parking)
  • Execution certainty (permitting, delivery timing)

The biggest mistake I see in 2026 underwriting is assuming 2021–2022 lease-up velocity still applies.

 

What “Absorption” and “Vacancy” Really Mean in 2026 Decision-Making

  • Vacancy is a lagging indicator.
  • Vacancy tells you what’s already happened.
  • It does not tell you what will lease next.

In 2026, “headline vacancy” can mask two very different realities:

New Class A bulk space:

  • Can be slower to absorb if there’s a wave of deliveries. 
  • Well-located mid-size (100k–250k SF): can remain tight and liquid.
  • Absorption is now segmented
  • Tenants have become pickier.

Absorption is concentrating in:

  • Buildings with strong labor access
  • Buildings with trailer parking & site depth
  • Buildings near established nodes (Trexlertown/Route 33/I-81 interchanges)
  • Buildings with flexible divisibility (multiple tenant options)

 

2026 Industrial Cycle Position: Where We Are

Here’s the broker shorthand for 2026:

2019–2022:

  • Demand spike + supply chase 
  • Extreme absorption
  • Rent spikes
  • Ultra-low vacancy

2023–2025:

  • Supply catches up
  • Deliveries increase
  • Lease-up takes longer
  • Tenants gain leverage in certain pockets

2026:

  • Market bifurcation
  • Prime corridors remain landlord-favorable for the right product
  • Over-delivered nodes become tenant-favorable until space burns off

 

Lehigh Valley: 2026 Vacancy & Absorption (Practical Range View)

Framing the Lehigh Valley in 2026:

  • Still one of the most strategic port-adjacent distribution markets in the U.S.
  • But also one of the markets that attracted the most speculative development 

Result:

  • Absorption remains positive in the long view, but lease-up velocity is no longer automatic 

 

Vacancy Expectations by Product Type (2026 Planning Ranges) 

Class A bulk (500k–1.2M SF) 

  • Vacancy tendency: mid-single digits to low double digits depending on deliveries and submarket
  • Absorption pattern: chunky (one lease moves the needle) 

Mid-size modern (100k–300k SF)

  • Vacancy tendency: low to mid single digits
  • Absorption: steadier; deeper tenant pool

Older Class B (low clear, limited docks)

  • Vacancy tendency: mixed; can be sticky unless discounted
  • Absorption: price-driven

Broker note: In 2026, many tenants who would have taken anything in 2021 are now insisting on modern specs or negotiating hard.

 

Corridor-by-Corridor Read (Lehigh Valley Lens)

I-78 Corridor (Trexlertown / Macungie / Bethlehem Township adjacency)

  • 2026 posture: still the premium spine
  • Vacancy behaves best on infill/constraint-limited sites
  • Spec mega-boxes can face longer lease-up if multiple deliver in the same window

Absorption drivers:

  • Port-driven distribution
  • Consumer goods + 3PLs
  • Regional last-touch operations

Risk in 2026:

  • New deliveries stacking in the same quarter
  • Tenant “flight to quality” leaving older product behind

 

Route 33 Corridor (Palmer / Forks / Nazareth influence) 

  • 2026 posture: strong, expanding, and more flexible than prime I-78
  • Particularly attractive for mid-size and flex industrial
  • Strong north-south connectivity improves tenant pool diversity

Absorption drivers:

  • Regional distribution
  • Light manufacturing
  • Contractor and service industrial

Route 22 / Established Commercial-Industrial Bands

  • 2026 posture: more redevelopment and repositioning than new bulk
  • Good for smaller footprints, service industrial, and users who need access over brand-new

 

Class A Warehouse Pushback’s Impact on Industrial Vacancy (Yes, It Matters)

Municipal resistance doesn’t just slow new supply.

It changes the vacancy story by submarket:

  • Townships tightening approvals may reduce future deliveries, which can tighten vacancy in 2027–2029.
  • But in the near term, places that already approved/constructed large waves of buildings can show higher vacancy until absorbed.
  • So the “pushback” is a future supply constraint—which can be bullish for land already in the pipeline, and bullish for existing modern inventory.

 

2026 Absorption: What’s Leasing and What’s Sitting 

Leasing faster in 2026

  • Buildings with: 36’–40’ clear (or market-competitive)
  • Trailer parking / site depth
  • Strong dock ratios
  • Immediate interstate access
  • Flexible demising options

Leasing slower in 2026

  • Commodity mega-boxes delivered into a “stacked delivery” period
  • Product with weak labor access or truck routing constraints
  • Older low-clear buildings priced like Class A (mispricing is common)

 

“What Vacancy Means for Landowners and Sellers” (Broker Advisory)

If you’re selling industrial land in 2026:

The buyer will underwrite:

  • Longer lease-up than 2021
  • Higher concession assumptions in some submarkets
  • More entitlement/political risk
  • Higher cost of capital sensitivity

What that does to land residual value:

Compresses land budget unless:

  • Site is uniquely positioned (true interchange adjacency, utilities locked, minimal offsite work)
  • You can support mid-size buildings instead of only mega-box
  • You can demonstrate timeline certainty

 

Practical 2026 Vacancy/Absorption Scenarios (Underwriting) 

Here are three underwriting “modes” you can apply to projects:

Scenario A: Prime Node / Constrained Supply

  • Vacancy assumption: lower
  • Lease-up: steady
  • Rent growth: modest
  • Best fit: infill, interchange, utilities-in-place

Scenario B: Competitive Node / Delivery Wave

  • Vacancy assumption: higher
  • Lease-up: slower, concession-heavy
  • Rent growth: flat to modest
  • Best fit: only if land basis is right and product is differentiated

Scenario C: Secondary Node / Mid-Size Focus

  • Vacancy assumption: moderate
  • Lease-up: strong if building size matches demand
  • Rent growth: stable
  • Best fit: flex parks, 100k–250k SF, multi-tenant strategy

 

2026–2028 Outlook (Where This Likely Heads)

My broker read:

  • 2026 is digestion.
  • 2027–2028 are stabilization and re-tightening in constrained nodes, especially if pushback reduces new approvals.

The “next winners” are likely:

  • Sites that support mid-size industrial and flex
  • Redevelopment/industrial infill where approvals are easier than greenfield conversion
  • Corridors with strong labor access and predictable truck routing

 

Developer Underwriting Checklist for 2026 Industrial Projects

  • Confirm entitlement timeline risk (warehouse pushback)
  • Model lease-up conservatively (don’t use 2021 comps)
  • Separate assumptions by product type (bulk vs mid-size vs flex)
  • Price in concessions (TI/free rent) where delivery waves exist
  • Verify utility capacity early (especially sewer and electric)
  • Stress test cap rates and exit values (capital markets matter again)
  • Consider divisibility strategy to widen tenant pool