1.8M+ commercial properties — free access, no paywall

Commercial Real Estate Intelligence

Office. Retail. Warehouse. Industrial.

Full property data from county appraiser offices — assessed values, building details, lot sizes, owner information. Every address visible. No paywall.

Browse Properties
-- Properties
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Browse by Property Type

Normalized across all states — consistent categories regardless of source

Office

Multi-story offices, professional buildings, banks

Retail

Storefronts, shopping centers, supermarkets

Warehouse / Distribution

Warehousing, distribution centers, logistics

Light Industrial

Light manufacturing, food processing, lumber

Heavy Industrial

Heavy manufacturing, mineral processing

Hospitality

Hotels, motels, restaurants, bars

Multi-Family (10+)

Apartment complexes, large residential

Mixed Use

Retail + office/residential combinations

Featured Commercial Properties

High-value properties from our database

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How KBCommercialRE Works

County appraiser data, normalized and searchable

1

Appraiser Data Ingestion

We source property data directly from county appraiser offices — assessed values, building specs, owner history.

2

Property Type Normalization

Each state uses different codes. We normalize everything into consistent categories — office, retail, warehouse, industrial.

3

Search & Filter

Filter by property type, state, value range, building size. Every address visible. Full data, no paywall.

4

Get Alerts

Set up daily alerts for your target property types and areas. New properties delivered to your inbox.

Get Commercial Property Alerts

Receive daily email alerts when new commercial properties are added in your target areas.

Commercial Real Estate FAQ

Understanding commercial property data

What is assessed value vs. market value?
Assessed value is determined by the county property appraiser for tax purposes. Market value (just value in Florida) is the appraiser's estimate of what the property would sell for. Assessed value is often lower due to caps and exemptions. Both are useful for evaluating commercial properties.
What do the property type codes mean?
Every commercial property has a use code assigned by the county appraiser. Florida uses 3-digit DOR codes (e.g., 048 = Warehouse), while other states use their own systems. KBCommercialRE normalizes all codes into categories like Office, Retail, Warehouse, Light Industrial, Heavy Industrial, Hospitality, and more — so you can search consistently across states.
What's the difference between light and heavy industrial?
Light industrial properties include light manufacturing, food processing, packaging plants, lumber yards, and similar operations. Heavy industrial includes heavy manufacturing, mineral processing, and open storage yards. The distinction matters for zoning, environmental considerations, and investment strategy.
How is warehouse/distribution different from industrial?
Warehouse/distribution centers (DOR code 048) are used primarily for storage and logistics — receiving, storing, and shipping goods. Industrial properties are used for manufacturing and processing. Warehouse properties are a major asset class for REITs and logistics investors, especially with e-commerce growth driving demand.
Where does the data come from?
All data comes from county property appraiser offices — the same public records used by title companies, lenders, and government agencies. We aggregate data from multiple states and normalize property types for consistent searching. Data is refreshed regularly as appraiser offices update their records.

Commercial Properties by State

Browse commercial real estate across all 50 states

About KBCommercialRE.com

KBCommercialRE.com aggregates commercial real estate data from county property appraiser offices across multiple U.S. states. Our database includes office buildings, retail storefronts, shopping centers, warehouses, distribution centers, light and heavy industrial facilities, hotels, restaurants, multi-family apartment complexes, and vacant commercial land.

Every state classifies properties differently. Florida uses 90 distinct 3-digit DOR codes for commercial properties (010-099). New Jersey uses class codes like 4A (Commercial) and 4B (Industrial). New York uses 3-digit property classes. KBCommercialRE normalizes all of these into consistent, searchable categories — so whether you're comparing a warehouse in Miami to one in Newark, the data is structured the same way.

All data is free to access. Every property address is visible without sign-in. Assessed values, building square footage, lot sizes, year built, construction class, and owner information are all included. This is public record data from government appraiser offices.

KBCommercialRE is operated by KB Software LLC. For support, contact [email protected].