Take-up of UK industrial & logistics space of over 100,000sq ft is ahead of both 2023 and 2024 volumes by 16% and 13% respectively, year-on-year, and 27% ahead of the long-term, pre-Covid average, according to Savills latest Big Shed Briefing.
Savills’ research also reveals there is currently a further 6.2 million sq ft under offer, which the company said will provide a healthy start to Q1 2026.
The report said the boost in take-up is mainly due to the resurgence of build-to-suit (BTS) activity, totalling 9.9 million sq ft nationally, a 7% increase on last year’s figure.
Whilst the report notes that this is not at the same levels seen during the pandemic, it adds that the rise is a step in the right direction.
Regionally the East Midlands accounted for 32% of BTS transactions, the West Midlands 11% and the South East 10% respectively.
Key deals, supported by Savills, included the Prologis’ DIRFT scheme and DP World’s London Gateway.
The report said Q3 2025 also saw net absorption turn positive for the first time since Q4 2022. This momentum continued into the last quarter, increasing from 2.7 million sq ft in Q3 to 3.6 million sq ft by year-end.
However, the report notes, despite this, overall supply has continued to move out and now stands at 64.1 million sq ft across 299 units, representing a national vacancy rate of 7.81%.
Kevin Mofid, head of EMEA industrial & logistics research at Savills, commented: “Although we have seen an increase in supply, fuelled by second-hand stock returning to the market, alongside 2.6 million sq ft of new speculative units completing in Q4 2025, overall the pipeline looks to be shrinking sharply.
“Observing the quantum of space currently under construction across the UK, it has fallen by 65% from its peak in Q2 2022. What’s more, there are also regional variations to consider, with locations such as the Midlands and North West experiencing quarterly contractions.”
From an occupier perspective, manufacturing related take-up accounted for a significant portion of the market representing 33%, an 8% increase year-on-year.
3PLs also remained active at 31.5%, with Savills seeing 3PLs share grow from 6.6 million sq ft in 2024 to 10.4 million sq ft this year, an increase of 57%.
The grocery retail sector has also seen a resurgence accounting for 7.4%, according to the report, with significant deals completed by M&S and Waitrose, amongst others across the South West, East Midlands and South East this year.
This follows the end of a number of legacy leases with the supermarkets, which the report said are now looking to evolve their supply chains, and invest in automation and future proofing.
Toby Green, Savills national head of industrial & logistics, adds: “Overall, 2025 has been decidedly more positive for the sector. We have seen the return of major corporates making long term strategic decisions, which correlates with data from our Savills occupier requirements index having seen a 12.3% lift year-on-year.
“Looking ahead, there remains a number of structural trends that will continue into 2026. For example, ESG will remain a factor, with 78% of take-up in 2025 for grade A units, against a pre-Covid average of 68%.
“There is also the increase in demand from defence related occupiers, plus resilient e-commerce growth.
“We will of course continue to face challenges, especially in relation to cost, with energy charges and a hike in minimum wage all materially impacting occupier growth strategies.
“However, all things considered, we believe we are through the most challenging period when it comes to rising supply and volatile take-up.”















