Perth commercial property has spent the past decade trading at a discount to the eastern capitals, and that discount has narrowed but not closed. For yield-led private investors, family offices, and SMSF trustees, Western Australia remains one of the only metro markets in the country where a 6% plus net yield is still available on investment-grade stock, with credible tenant covenant and lease terms.
This guide covers the Perth commercial market for private buyers: the CBD, the metro fringe, the industrial corridors, and the regional service centres. It also flags the underwriting questions that are specific to WA, where the commodities cycle, lease law, and council planning all sit differently than the eastern states.
Perth's higher headline yield is partly a discount for distance and partly a discount for tenant covenant depth. The discipline on the buyer side is to separate which yield premium you are actually being paid for.
The Perth Commercial Market in 2026
The Perth CBD office market is in a slow recovery from the long post-mining-investment correction. Suburban office is thinly traded. Large-format retail along the major arterials is the most active investment-grade segment, and industrial in the Kewdale-Welshpool spine has been bid heavily by national logistics tenants.
Cap rates across the metro typically sit between 30 and 100 basis points above Sydney and Melbourne equivalents. The differential is wider on smaller assets and narrower on national-covenant, long-WALE stock.
1 Perth CBD and Fringe Office
CBD office is a tenant-led market in Perth and has been for several years. Incentives on new leasing remain elevated, and net effective rents are below face rents by a wide margin. For an investor, the question is how to value an asset where the income stream reported on the rent roll is not the income stream the next tenant will pay.
What to ask
- Incentive amortisation. The lease incentive (rent-free, fit-out contribution) is amortised over the lease term in the disclosed face rent. The net effective rent is the relevant number for valuation.
- WALE-weighted vacancy risk. A lease three years to expiry in a building with elevated current incentives is a tenancy that may not renew at face rent.
- Capex profile. Older B and C grade buildings have a capex liability that affects the holding-period return. The building inspector's report is not optional.
2 Suburban and Metro Office
Strata office in Subiaco, West Perth, Leederville, and Cottesloe trades as a hybrid commercial and owner-occupier market. Pricing reflects both. Sub-$3 million strata office in a near-CBD precinct is liquid; sub-$2 million whole-building suburban office is thinner and the buyer pool narrows quickly.
3 Industrial: Kewdale, Welshpool, Forrestdale, Henderson
The Perth industrial market has tightened materially since 2021. Kewdale and Welshpool remain the institutional core, Forrestdale and Hopeland are the developer-led growth corridor, and Henderson is the marine and defence base.
Underwriting drivers
- Clear height and door specification. Modern logistics needs 10 metre plus clear and adequate hardstand. Pre-2000 sheds are functionally obsolete for institutional tenants.
- Power and water capacity. Light manufacturing tenants need both; the disclosure should be in the property file.
- Tenant covenant. Listed national logistics versus a single-private-operator covenant prices differently. The yield will reflect it.
- Land value coverage. Older industrial in inner suburbs is often priced largely on the underlying land value, with the improvements adding little. The price-per-square-metre-of-land is a sanity check.
4 Large-Format Retail
Large-format along Albany Highway, Wanneroo Road, Great Eastern Highway, and the southern arterials is the most institutional segment of WA commercial outside CBD office and core industrial. National retailers (Bunnings, Officeworks, JB Hi-Fi, Spotlight, Anaconda, Total Tools, Repco) anchor most of the investable stock.
The yield premium against eastern equivalents reflects geographic concentration risk and the depth of the WA buyer pool. For a national-covenant single tenant with eight years plus remaining, the asset is functionally equivalent across states; the price is not.
5 Childcare, Medical, and Specialist
WA has a deep pool of single-tenant childcare assets across the outer metro, and a smaller but quality pool of medical consulting and allied health near major hospital precincts (Murdoch, Joondalup, Charlie Gairdner, Fiona Stanley). Operator covenant is the work; the building is usually purpose-built and difficult to repurpose.
6 Regional WA: Pilbara, South West, Mid West
Regional WA commercial is a different asset class to metro and requires a different brief. The Pilbara service-town assets are tied to the commodities cycle and the major mining occupier rotations. The South West (Bunbury, Busselton, Margaret River) has a more diversified economy and longer-dated investor appetite. The Mid West (Geraldton, Karratha edge) is thinly traded and brief-fit only.
For a yield-led buyer who understands the cycle, regional WA can offer net yields well above the metro band on credible covenant stock. The trade-off is illiquidity and a thinner buyer pool at exit.
7 WA-Specific Buyer-Side Considerations
Stamp duty
WA transfer duty is administered by Revenue WA and applies on the general schedule for commercial property. There is no off-the-plan or first-home relief for commercial buyers. Foreign purchaser additional duty is in force.
Lease law
The Commercial Tenancy (Retail Shops) Agreements Act 1985 governs retail leases in WA. The disclosure regime, statutory minimum lease term, and certification requirements affect how a retail lease can be amended at renewal.
Land tax
WA land tax is administered by Revenue WA on the aggregated unimproved value of all taxable land held by an owner. Trust ownership has specific assessment rules. Holding-cost modelling on the buyer side must include land tax in scope.
8 How We Run a WA Brief
An eight to fourteen week engagement is typical, with the variance driven by asset class. Industrial moves quickly; suburban office and regional WA move more slowly because the buyer pool is thinner.
We pull on the national agency network (CBRE, JLL, Colliers, Knight Frank, Cushman & Wakefield) plus the Perth boutiques and regional brokers who hold the sub-$10 million stock. We do not hold a captive WA office; the brief is run from our national mandate with local on-the-ground inspection support.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are WA commercial yields really higher, or is that just a headline?
They are genuinely higher on most asset classes for comparable covenant and lease term. The differential is widest on industrial and narrowest on national-covenant large-format. The premium is partly a geographic risk discount and partly a buyer-pool depth discount.
Can I run a yield-only brief in Perth?
Yes. WA is the easiest metro to brief for high-yield commercial in Australia. The discipline is to separate the structural yield (rent below market, capex-loaded building) from the cyclical yield (sector or location at a discount that may close).
Do you cover the Pilbara and Goldfields?
For specific briefs, yes. The economics on a generic mandate are difficult because the buyer pool is thin and the inspection logistics are different. Discuss it upfront.
How does WA tenant covenant compare to NSW or VIC?
National-covenant tenants are functionally identical across states. State-private-operator covenant is read on its own merits; WA has a smaller pool of investor-grade private operators than the eastern states, which is reflected in pricing.