REITs invest in the majority of real estate property types, including offices, apartment buildings, warehouses, retail centers, medical facilities, data centers, cell towers and hotels.
Nareit’s REIT Directory provides a comprehensive list of REIT and publicly traded real estate companies that are members of Nareit. The directory can be sorted and filtered by sector, listing status, and stock performance.
Each year Nareit collects tax reporting data for each Nareit member. View this year's data or explore the archive.
Nareit’s 2026 outlook addresses the topics that have been on the minds of real estate investors, including valuation divergences, compelling opportunities, and global strategies.
REITwise will take place March 24-26 in Hollywood, FL. This event is the leading educational conference for REITs, covering technical, regulatory, and operational updates.
For 65 years, Nareit has led the U.S. REIT industry by ensuring its members’ best interests are promoted by providing unparalleled advocacy, investor outreach, continuing education and networking.
CEO David Weinreb says partnership with ESPN has taken the Seaport to the next level.
More than 800 industry professionals gathered to learn about the latest developments impacting the real estate sector.
Shortly after going public in late 2006, DCT Industrial Trust Inc. embarked on an ambitious plan to reposition its 57 million-square-foot portfolio, a process which is nearly complete.
Denny Oklak has overseen Duke Realty'’s dramatic evolution.
Lauren Moss highlighted how Vornado's commitment to community-focused sustainability at scale in New York City’s busiest transit hub is setting the standard for the modern workplace.
The call for improved diversity goes well beyond the real estate industry, and the movement continues to gain momentum.
TIER REIT, a public non-listed REIT, has emerged from a multi-year rebranding process.
Fitwel’s Certified Metrics platform seeks to create standardized benchmark for social metrics.
The game-on, game-off nature of tariff actions has introduced uncertainty into the U.S. financial and economic markets.
Analysts are projecting institutional lenders could place record amounts of capital into commercial real estate in 2014.
The REIT sector overall entered this crisis period from a stronger position than in previous market downturns in terms of operational performance, balance sheet strength and sources of liquidity available for the potentially lean months ahead.
Duke Realty’s Legacy and Chesapeake Commerce Centers brought thousands of jobs to Baltimore and New Jersey.
Coronavirus crisis will accelerate corporate moves to strengthen remote capability, analysts say.
I think it’s very difficult to make any thoughtful (let alone empirically based) case for predicting that the current real estate market cycle is nearing its end. The evidence simply isn’t there.
REITs will have opportunities in 2017 where non-REITs maybe have challenges.