What Tertiary Markets Teach Us About Resilient Growth
By Russ Robbers, KW Commercial | Yakima, Washington
Date Published: April 2025
In the commercial real estate world, we tend to chase headlines: Sunbelt booms, coastal comebacks, mega-projects in gateway cities. But often, the most instructive lessons—the ones that show us how real resilience is built—come from markets no one is writing about. Places like Yakima. Or Muncie. Or Cheyenne.
Tertiary markets may not trend on LinkedIn, but they’re telling a story every investor should be listening to in 2025. A story about durability. About margin. About tenants that stay, rent that holds, and properties that outperform when volatility takes center stage elsewhere.
I’ve worked in this space long enough to know: tertiary doesn’t mean “secondary’s ugly cousin.” It means steady. And if you know what to look for, it often means strategic.
The Misunderstood Middle
Let’s start with definitions. A tertiary market isn’t just “small.” It’s generally a metro area with a population under 200,000, often centered around a single urban core with an economic anchor: a regional university, a medical hub, an agricultural base, or a legacy manufacturing footprint.
In Yakima, for example, we’re supported by agriculture (we produce 75% of the nation’s hops), healthcare, and logistics. We don’t move in cycles—we move in currents. When rates rise, we stay active. When institutional capital retreats, local money fills the gap. And when developers get spooked by macro shifts, our builders quietly pull permits and keep going.
In Q4 2024, Yakima County posted a 93.4% average multifamily occupancy rate (YVREB), with rent growth holding at 2.9% annually. Not explosive. But dependable. The kind of dependable that makes 10-year hold strategies possible.
Resilient by Nature, Not by Chance
Why are tertiary markets showing resilience when bigger markets are struggling to stabilize?
1. Low Volatility in Rent & Occupancy
In primary markets, cap rates are sensitive to shifts in Treasury yields, tech employment, and institutional risk-off sentiment. But in tertiary markets, valuations are more closely tied to actual, in-place cash flow. Our tenants don’t churn at the same rate. Turnover is slower. Absorption is shallower—but more predictable.
That means:
- Fewer concessions
- Longer average tenancy
- More consistent collections (especially in workforce and senior housing)
During the post-COVID rent spikes of 2021–2022, tertiary markets didn’t run as hot—but they also didn’t crash in 2023–2024. We held steady.
2. Modest Supply Pipelines
In most tertiary markets, the pipeline is shallow for one reason: cost of capital and regulatory process still function at a scale that matches reality. We don’t have speculative towers. We have local builders working with local banks on five- to thirty-unit projects.
That means the absorption pressure is lower, and new product doesn’t saturate the market. In 2024, Yakima added just 212 new multifamily units. That’s not going to collapse a market—even if every one sits empty for a quarter (they didn’t).
Compare that to a place like Austin, where over 20,000 units hit the market in 12 months. That kind of supply test doesn’t exist in tertiary towns.
3. Community-Based Tenancy
Many tertiary market landlords still have direct relationships with tenants. That means fewer delinquencies, faster maintenance, and less adversarial dynamics. It also means tenants stay longer. And when economic hardship hits, landlords can offer flexibility—and tenants respond with loyalty.
Try calling the property manager of a 400-unit midrise in Dallas and asking for a one-month payment plan. Now try calling your landlord in Yakima who’s owned the building for 22 years. You’ll get a different answer.
What Smart Investors Are Learning
Institutional capital is starting to notice. In fact, CoStar data from 2024 shows a 9.6% increase in tertiary market acquisitions by regional family offices and high-net-worth investors. The reason? Predictability.
These buyers are looking for:
- In-place yields north of 6%
- Lower competition for deals
- Cost basis well below replacement cost
- Limited need for heavy repositioning
Tertiary markets provide those elements.
And here’s the kicker: these assets don’t fluctuate as wildly on the reappraisal cycle. When values in big cities are falling 20–30% from peak, our market might correct by 5–10%. That makes lending easier. Refinance timelines more flexible. And equity planning more rational.
The Limits and the Lessons
Let’s be clear—tertiary markets aren’t a magic bullet. They come with risks:
- Limited liquidity: If you want to sell a $5M asset in Yakima, you’re probably calling 10 buyers—not 100.
- Smaller tenant base: Lose an anchor tenant, and you might feel it for two quarters.
- Concentration risk: If your town’s economic base is tied to one employer or industry, macro shocks can be felt deeply.
But that’s what makes them valuable in a portfolio context. They offer ballast. When paired with higher-growth, higher-volatility plays, tertiary assets provide steadier income, better tenant retention, and often more favorable cap rates on entry.
In 2024, cap rates in Yakima for stabilized multifamily averaged 6.4%—a full 150 basis points above similar-quality product in the Puget Sound. That delta is real. And it’s not based on risk—it’s based on perception.
A Broker’s Final Thought: What These Markets Actually Teach Us
We don’t have cranes on every block. We don’t have high-speed rail. We don’t have glossy renderings of rooftop lounges and robotic parking garages.
But we have something else:
- Stable rent rolls
- Generational ownership
- Tenants who stay longer than a lease term
- Sellers who still return your calls
In 2025, that might just be the edge. Because resilience isn’t built during the boom. It’s revealed during the slowdown.
And in tertiary markets?
We’ve been practicing resilience for a long time.








