Walls, Steel, and Strain: A Closer Look at Tariff Policy and Its Long-Term Impact on Commercial Real Estate
By Jared Morgan, KW Commercial Analytics Team
Date Published: March 2025
In commercial real estate, risk is rarely as visible as a vacancy sign or a loan maturity. More often, it moves beneath the surface—slow, systemic, and structural. One of those slow-building risks is returning with force: U.S. trade policy. And in particular, tariffs.
By late 2024, the re-escalation of steel and aluminum tariffs, coupled with proposed duties on Chinese-manufactured goods and components critical to construction, set the stage for a fresh wave of pricing volatility. This time, however, the implications go deeper than commodity speculation. What we’re witnessing is a multi-layered pressure point on commercial development—and one that could drag into 2025 and beyond.
Tariffs aren’t new. Section 232 steel tariffs, originally implemented in 2018, were partially rolled back for allied nations in 2021. But in 2024, they were reimposed at a full 25% on broad categories of imported steel—stripping away exemptions and targeting not just finished materials, but also key intermediate goods used in tilt-wall construction, HVAC systems, and data center infrastructure. According to the U.S. International Trade Commission, over 20% of structural steel in U.S. construction still comes from abroad.
At the same time, construction cost indices continued to rise. Engineering News-Record’s Construction Cost Index (CCI) increased nearly 39% between 2020 and 2025, with most of that growth concentrated in the past 24 months. The Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Producer Price Index for new industrial building construction shows a similar trend. Material costs are rising. Labor costs remain high. And when tariffs enter that equation, the outcome isn’t just inflation—it’s erosion of feasibility.
We’re already seeing the impact in feasibility modeling. In early 2024, NAIOP reported that over 30% of planned industrial projects across the Sun Belt had been delayed or canceled, many citing material cost volatility as the lead factor. In multifamily, the squeeze is subtler but real. Higher steel and electrical gear prices are pushing mid-rise and podium developments past their equity tolerance, especially in high-regulation metros like Los Angeles, Seattle, and San Jose, where entitlements already drag timelines to 24–36 months.
Tariffs also introduce what I consider a second-order constraint: pricing ambiguity. When builders can’t lock in fixed delivery pricing on essential components—steel framing, electrical transformers, aluminum HVAC ducting—they shift risk to developers. That risk then pushes developers to demand higher returns, which in turn pushes exit cap rates, which ultimately makes financing harder to obtain.
If this seems like a cascade, that’s because it is.
And the effects aren’t uniform across asset classes. Retail, with generally lighter construction demands, has remained relatively insulated—especially in retrofit and conversion-heavy markets. Office, already under pressure from hybrid work dynamics, faces a double bind: declining revenue assumptions and rising tenant improvement costs. But the greatest exposure lies in industrial and data infrastructure development. These projects are materially intensive, often time-sensitive, and sensitive to electrical and structural specifications that cannot easily be value-engineered.
As of Q4 2024, KW Commercial tracked over a dozen industrial projects across Phoenix, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Central California that were postponed not for lack of demand—but due to structural pricing shifts in materials affected by tariffs.
This isn’t about sticker shock. It’s about delay, uncertainty, and diminished equity returns.
Moreover, tariffs do not just affect costs. They affect capital behavior. Global and institutional investors read trade policy not simply as an economic signal, but a political one. The reassertion of protectionist policy, particularly toward China, has introduced “strategic ambiguity” into site selection. Several EV battery and semiconductor manufacturing facility expansions were paused in Q3 2024, citing unpredictable cost models for imported subcomponents.
At KW Commercial, we’ve begun advising clients to include trade exposure as part of due diligence for construction-heavy investments—particularly in logistics, cold storage, and data center buildouts. In many cases, the question is no longer can the developer build it? but can they build it at a cost that still pencils when interest rates and global input costs both trend higher than anticipated?
Looking into 2025, we do not expect a rapid policy reversal. In fact, with a presidential election cycle behind us and bipartisan appetite for domestic manufacturing incentives remaining strong, tariff pressure may increase before it recedes. This means that for the near term, developers and capital partners will need to:
- Rethink contingency modeling
- Explore regional supply chain alternatives
- Push design for prefabrication and modularity where possible
- Adjust exit cap rates to reflect realistic construction and lease-up timelines
In short, real estate underwriting in 2025 cannot be blind to global trade mechanics. Tariffs are no longer the headline—they are the context.
The mistake would be to treat them as temporary.
The truth is, we are entering a new chapter in CRE feasibility, where inputs—materials, labor, time—are being repriced structurally. The strongest sponsors and brokerage teams will not be the ones who outguess policy.
They’ll be the ones who adapt to it faster than their competition.








