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Milan’s Via Montenapoleone Is the Most Expensive Retail Destination in the World

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LONDON — Milan’s Via Montenapoleone is the most expensive retail destination internationally, outstripping competitors across the U.S., Europe and the Far East, according to Cushman & Wakefield’s latest “Main Streets Across the World” report.

Each year, Cushman looks at the retail rental rates of the most prestigious shopping streets, ranks them on a rent-per-square-foot basis, and analyzes the trends in supply and demand.

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The international real estate firm said that in 2024 global rents across 130 top locations were nearly 6 percent above pre-pandemic levels, with growth of more than 4 percent year-on-year.

Via Montenapoleone, which ranked at number two last year, topped the chart with rents of $2,047 per square foot annually, 11 percent higher than last year.

Upper Fifth Avenue, between 49th and 60th Streets, in Manhattan ranked second, with rents of $2,000, broadly flat against the previous year.

In third place was New Bond Street in London with rents pitched at $1,762 per square foot annually, 13 percent higher than the year before.

Shoppers on New Bond Street in London.
Shoppers on New Bond Street in London.

Tsim Sha Tsui, or the main shopping street in Hong Kong, came in at number four, charging $1,607 per square foot annually, 7 percent higher than last year. Paris’ Avenue des Champs Elysées was ranked fifth, with stores costing $1,282, or 10 percent above the previous year.

Other top 10 destinations included Ginza, Toyko; Pitt Street Mall in Sydney, and Myeongdong in Seoul.

Cushman noted that Via Montenapoleone is the first European shopping street to top the rankings, while the U.S. was the strongest performing region in the world with rent growth nearly 11 percent higher year-on-year, a “significant increase” over 2023.

Miami’s Design District led the U.S. rental growth, surging more than 66 percent year-on-year, and 150 percent over the past four years.

“This explosive growth reflects the continuing retail strength in Miami and the extraordinary demand from designer brands, world-class restaurants, and art and experiential tenants,” the report said.

“The Miami Design District has become a key destination for consumers driving competition for space from occupiers and developers alike,” it added.

The Brunello Cucinelli store in Miami’s Design District.
The Brunello Cucinelli store in Miami’s Design District.

There is more to come in the hot south Florida city, with plans to develop a 65,000-square-foot mixed-use project incorporating both retail and office components.