AI is everywhere right now — and commercial real estate is no exception.
Tenants are using it. Landlords are experimenting with it. Brokers are integrating it.
But here’s the reality: AI is a tool, not a replacement. And when it’s used wrong, it shows.
AI-Generated Business Plans: We Can Tell
More and more tenants are showing up with business plans generated by AI.
On paper, they look polished.
Clean formatting. Confident language. All the right buzzwords.
But once you dig in, the issues are obvious:
- Generic market analysis
- Unrealistic financial projections
- No understanding of the specific location
- Missing operational details
AI can write a plan — but it doesn’t understand the business behind it.
And landlords can tell the difference between:
- A real operator
- And someone who prompted their way through a document
In commercial real estate, that difference matters. A lot.
Where AI Actually Helps
Used properly, AI is a solid starting point.
It can help with:
- Initial market research
- Brainstorming concepts
- Drafting rough business plans
- Understanding general lease terms
For someone just getting into the market, it lowers the barrier to entry.
But that’s where its strength ends — at the preliminary stage.
The Problem: AI Is Often Behind
One of the biggest issues with AI is that it relies on existing data — not real-time market conditions.
That creates a gap.
AI doesn’t know:
- What just leased last week
- Which landlords are quietly dropping rates
- Which spaces are about to hit the market
- How tenant demand is shifting right now
Commercial real estate moves fast, especially at the deal level.
By the time AI “knows” something, brokers have already acted on it.
Data ≠ Insight
AI is good at processing information.
It is not good at interpreting nuance.
It can’t:
- Read landlord intentions
- Navigate personality-driven negotiations
- Spot red flags in a deal structure
- Understand how one tenant impacts another
Two spaces can look identical on paper — same size, same rent — but perform completely differently depending on context.
That context is where deals are won or lost.
Why Brokers Still Matter
The role of a broker isn’t just to find listings.
It’s to:
- Filter opportunities
- Validate assumptions
- Structure deals properly
- Protect clients from mistakes they don’t even know to look for
AI doesn’t replace that — it just gives people a false sense of confidence if they rely on it too heavily.
The Reality: AI + Expertise > AI Alone
The best use of AI is as a supplement, not a decision-maker.
Use it to:
- Get started
- Explore ideas
- Understand the basics
Then rely on real expertise to:
- Execute
- Negotiate
- Close
Because in commercial real estate, the difference between a good deal and a bad one isn’t information — it’s judgment.
AI is changing the industry, but it’s not replacing it.
The tenants and landlords who win aren’t the ones using AI the most — they’re the ones using it correctly.
Thinking about leasing a space or expanding your business?
Use the tools available — but make sure you’re backing them with the right strategy.
Connect with our team to move beyond assumptions and make decisions based on what’s actually happening in the market.
