Artificial Intelligence: Real Estate Revolution or Evolution?
89%
C-suite leaders believe AI can help solve major CRE challenges
Future of Work Survey, JLL Research, 2025
700+
companies providing AI-powered Real Estate Tech solutions by end of 2024
JLL Research
2.04M sqm
Real estate footprint of AI companies in the US as of May 2025
JLL Research
Key findings
As the capabilities of AI agents continue to astonish the world in 2025, AI is becoming increasingly powerful.
- AI has enormous potential to reshape real estate, with near and long-term impacts ranging from the emergence of new markets and asset types to innovations in investment and revenue models.
- A rapidly expanding AI ecosystem and its supporting infrastructure will drive demand for real estate in different markets across the globe.
- There are increasing number of AI-powered real estate technology solutions. Organizations will need to consider how they can harness AI strategically and ethically, piloting applications before scaling to deliver value.
Generative AI vs Agentic AI – what is the difference?
First, it’s important to clarify the scope of discussion by differentiating the definitions of definitions of AI, generative AI, and agentic AI. AI, in a broad sense, uses algorithms to perform tasks that require the ability to learn from experience, understand complex concepts, recognize patterns, interpret the nuances of natural language and independently make decisions.
Generative AI is a subset of artificial intelligence that focuses on what its name implies – generating new content, designs or solutions. It employs advanced algorithms to create outputs, including synthetic data, images, text and music.
Agentic AI is believed to be the next phase of AI capabilities. It refers to systems that are not only capable of generating outputs but can also autonomously pursue goals, make contextual decisions, and take actions over time without continuous human prompting. These agents can plan, execute, and adapt tasks based on evolving objectives and feedback from their environment—bringing AI closer to a form of digital autonomy.
In this article, we will focus on AI in a broader context and discuss its impact on real estate, while specifically emphasizing the role of generative AI and agentic AI where applicable.
AI Capabilities
AI uses machine learning and deep learning algorithms to perform tasks that require the ability to learn from experience, understand complex concepts, recognize patterns, interpret the nuances of natural language and independently make decisions. Generative AI is a subset of AI that focuses on creating new content, designs or solutions.
3 Perspectives on how AI will transform real estate
With AI, we anticipate a similar five-fold impact in the long run. While it remains to be seen how AI will be applied to specific sectors like healthcare and how much this growth will generate space demand, some influences are already emerging.
1. Geolocation: AI companies and investments have been observed to cluster around established tech markets. Going forward, growth is likely to be concentrated in locations where AI talent is available, namely tech hubs, innovation centers and universities.
2. Altered demand among assets: AI development calls for more and better data centers, energy grids and connectivity infrastructure.
3. New asset and product types: the birth of the ‘real intelligent building’ is imminent. AI-compliant infrastructure will become a default just as internet connections are a default feature of current buildings. AI will also help deliver net-zero buildings with high sustainability performance.
4. Revenue and investment: AI-powered underwriting and processes will enable faster transactions and more efficient understanding of properties and markets, catalyzing investments at a global scale. AI-compliant infrastructure and the ability to plug in multiple systems could also enable the expansion of ‘space as a service’ models and new revenue streams for landlords and developers.
5. Design and space function: AI will allow for experience-driven design and highly customizable environmental settings.
AI companies and supporting infrastructure will drive demand for real estate
AI sector as real estate occupiers
The growing AI ecosystem will continue to expand in selected tech hubs
Foundation model developers, such as OpenAI, are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the AI ecosystem. Companies involved in semiconductor hardware, cloud computing platforms, model hubs and application development all represent a growing occupier segment. The commercial real estate opportunity looks even brighter when considering the additional companies that will emerge as pre-trained foundation models are modified for specific use cases.
In 2024, private investment in AI within the US alone hit US$109 billion, doubling the amount in 2023. China showed the second largest investment of US $9.3 billion. The AI focus area with the most investment was medical and healthcare; followed by data management, processing and cloud computing; and Fintech. Additionally, enterprise use cases for generative AI represent a substantial opportunity. The GDP related to AI is anticipated to grow with a 18.6% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) through 2030 (PwC). According to our research, the growth in AI is also translating into increased real estate demand from this sector. In the US alone, AI companies nearly doubled their footprint in just two years, occupying more than 2.04 million square meters. This footprint is expected to grow to 5.2 million square meters in 2030.
37% of AI companies are based in the U.S.
Existing AI companies prefer specific locations. In the U.S., for example, 42% of AI companies are concentrated in the San Francisco Bay Area, followed by Boston, Seattle and New York. AI startup growth is expected to continue to center around these major tech hubs in the near future.
U.S. sector distribution of AI company occupied
AI in PropTech will continue to grow. JLL research shows that as of end of 2024, among 7,000 global PropTech companies, about 10% (700 companies) are currently providing AI-powered solutions, including both AI native products and AI-augmented products. Venture capital (VC) is the main driving force backing the development of AI products. Among all AI-powered PropTech companies, around 62% are VC-backed. About 20% of companies are in the very early incubator, angel or seed stage; 25% are at early-stage VC rounds; and 15% are at late-stage VC rounds. Overall, this ecosystem is young and energetic, with most (83%) generating revenues or making profits, signaling long-term potential for the market.
Act Now: Harnessing AI strategically and responsibly
There are still considerable uncertainties about the future impact of AI, the full range of its rapidly expanding capabilities and how these capabilities will be assimilated into specific industry sectors. It is crucial for real estate investors, developers and corporate occupiers to stay informed and strategic, considering how to leverage the power of AI to support your business objectives and how to do it in a responsible and ethical way.
As the regulatory landscape for AI evolves to keep pace with its growth, businesses must be vigilant about three types of emerging regulations:
Market standards and protocols concerning data quality, IP rights, privacy and data security.
Regulations to mitigate societal risks, such as measures to protect the labor market from shock or safety standards for autonomous vehicles.
Environmental legislation, notably that aimed at mitigating carbon emissions from the growing digital economy.
Organizations will need to reflect on a number of key questions as they consider the right path forward: What does the growth in AI mean for your investment and location strategies across existing (or emerging) asset classes? What existing or future applications of AI do you need to be prepared for and pilot now? What are the potential business and societal risks?
Understanding how artificial intelligence will impact your business and creating a test and implementation strategy will be key to mitigating risk and harnessing the potential for growth.
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