China's 15th Five-Year Plan Signals Transformative Changes for Real Estate
China's 15th Five-Year Plan Signals Transformative Changes for Real Estate
Senin, 24 November 2025 | 10:36
HONG KONG SAR -
Media OutReach Newswire - 24 November 2025 - Global real estate services firm Cushman & Wakefield has released its
The 15th Five-Year Plan — Reshaping China's Real Estate Market Landscape for the Next Five Years
report. It provides an expert interpretation of the communique from the
Fourth Plenary Session of the 20th CPC Central Committee, and explores
how the new Five-Year Plan (FYP) will influence China's real estate
market from 2026 to 2030.
The 15th FYP marks a notable juncture in China's pursuit of its "Two
Centenary Goals." It serves as the operational blueprint connecting to
the 14th Five-Year Plan and laying the foundation for modernization by
2035, and will also reshape the future landscape of China's commercial
real estate market.
During the 14th FYP period, China faced unprecedented challenges: the
COVID-19 pandemic, rising anti-globalization sentiment, and geopolitical
volatility. These factors slowed global economic momentum and created
complex pressures on China's growth trajectory. Consequently, the nation
faces mounting pressures on both domestic and international fronts,
necessitating timely and coordinated policy solutions.
In response to these challenges, the government has adopted a strategic
framework focused on "domestic circulation as the core, reinforced by
international circulation."
The 15th FYP serves as the operational blueprint for executing this
strategy. It outlines a comprehensive set of priorities aimed at driving
sustainable and inclusive growth over the next five years, including
the building of a modern industrial system, technological self-reliance,
domestic market cultivation, and high-level opening up.
Cushman & Wakefield identifies five major impacts on real estate:
New Productive Forces Driving Office and Industrial Demand
The FYP prioritizes a modern industrial system to optimize traditional
industries, expand emerging industries, and position for the future.
Strategic sectors such as new energy vehicles and biomedicine have
already achieved large-scale growth. New energy vehicle production
reached 12.8 million units at the end of 2024, with a compound annual
growth rate of 72% and a global market share of 76.4%. In the first five
months of 2025, China's share of global large-scale pharmaceutical
industry transactions surged to 42%. And in AI manufacturing
technologies, China leads globally in industrial robot installations,
with 276,300 units in 2023 — six times Japan's total. Over the next five
years, policy and capital support for industrial and technology
enterprises will likely spur demand for office space and industrial
parks, enabling a recovery and new growth phase.
Growth trend of China's new energy vehicle industry
Growth trend of China's new energy vehicle industry
Domestic Demand Expansion Boosting Retail Development
The 15th FYP highlights a model of "new demand leading new
supply, and new supply creating new demand," marking a shift from
reliance on material investment and supply-side reforms to leveraging
both supply and demand. Over the past few decades, China has achieved
success in "investing in physical assets" such as infrastructure, real
estate, and manufacturing equipment, but investment in human capital and
public welfare has lagged behind.
The FYP signals a policy shift toward addressing public concerns such as
education, social security and employment, healthcare, and housing.
Policies such as childcare subsidies and free preschool education aim to
unlock consumption potential. Consumer infrastructure REITs have become
a market hotspot, with all 11 listed products posting strong gains. As
at October 15, 2025, two REITS — Cathay Shih Mei and E Fund Huawei
Farmers' Market — recorded gains exceeding 70%. As the government
continues to stimulate consumption and consumer-focused REITs expand,
retail assets should attract growing investor interest, prompting brand
repositioning and exploration of new demographics and demand sources.
High-Quality Opening-Up Attracting Global Capital
Despite global protectionism, China's two-way opening-up has yielded
significant results. As a core asset class for global capital allocation
to the RMB, Panda bonds have surpassed RMB1 trillion in issuances,
benefiting from financing cost advantages. The FYP's policy certainty
and defined targets, together with expectations for RMB appreciation,
are also expected to attract global capital back into China's capital
markets. Over the medium to long term, China asset classes such as
retail properties, industrial logistics facilities, data centers, and
office buildings are likely to garner growing interest from
international investors.
Number and scale of Panda bond issuances
Number and scale of Panda bond issuances
Livelihood Improvements Supporting Real Estate Growth
The FYP highlights real estate sector development within the context of
improving people's livelihoods, reflecting a fundamental shift in the
role of real estate in national economic development. Total real estate
investment as a share of China's GDP dropped to 7.4% in 2024 from nearly
15% in 2014, while remaining under the United States' average of around
12%. Future market growth policies will focus on the construction of
affordable housing, the development of the rental market, and urban
renewal.
Trend of real estate development investment as a percentage of GDP
Trend of real estate development investment as a percentage of GDP
Accelerating Green Transformation
The FYP prioritizes sustainability in the real estate industry, with
approximately 100 national-level zero-carbon industrial parks to be
established by the end of the FYP period. A UN Environment Program
report for 2024-2025 shows that the global construction industry
accounts for 34% of carbon emissions, indicating a significant
opportunity for emissions reduction in the real estate sector. ESG
considerations are increasingly shaping the sector, with ESG principles
becoming a key indicator for evaluating the value of commercial real
estate projects.
Sabrina Wei, Chief Policy Analyst and Head of Research, North China, Cushman & Wakefield,
said, "The 15th Five-Year Plan, as a blueprint for the 'accelerated
period' of modernization, is driving China's economy to shift from
investment and export dependence to a new model underpinned by domestic
demand and coordinated supply and demand.
The positive impacts of key FYP themes will see the commercial real
estate industry usher in an upgrade period across four subsectors:
industrial real estate, retail properties, cross-border asset
allocation, and green real estate. In the next five years, the combined
effects of policy dividends, capital inflows, and consumption upgrades
will open up greater development space for China's commercial real
estate, helping the industry achieve high-quality transformation."