Skip to content
The Tenant Advisor
Envelope Linkedin
  • About
  • Tenant Representation
  • Healthcare Services
  • Clients
  • News
  • About
  • Tenant Representation
  • Healthcare Services
  • Clients
  • News

Why CON Laws Matter in Healthcare Real Estate

Hospital Campus - Houston Methodist The Woodlands Campus
  • by Coy Davidson | January 31, 2026

Share Post

Popular News Topics

  • Archive Classics
  • Healthcare
  • Houston
  • Industrial
  • Market Reports
  • Marketing
  • Office
  • Retail
  • Tenant Representation
  • U.S. Research

Certificate of Need (CON): How Regulation Shapes ASC and MOB Real Estate Development

A Certificate of Need, or CON, is a state-administered approval process that requires healthcare providers to prove community need before building, expanding, or acquiring certain facilities or services.
 
In CON states, healthcare growth is not purely market-driven. Permission comes first. Real estate follows.
 
CON requirements vary by state, but commonly apply to:
 
  • New hospitals or ambulatory surgery centers.
  • Added inpatient beds, operating rooms, or procedure rooms.
  • Major imaging equipment such as MRI, CT, or PET.
  • Expansion of regulated service lines like cardiac, oncology, or inpatient behavioral health.
 
Some states regulate aggressively. Others selectively. A growing number have eliminated CON entirely.
 
  • As of 2026, 35 states plus Washington, D.C. still have some form of CON laws.
  • 15 states do not have CON laws, including Texas, California, Arizona, Colorado, and Pennsylvania.

US states that have Certificate-Of-Need Laws

Certificate of Need Map of States
Image credit: PiMaster3, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

CON vs Non-CON States: The Core Difference

• Non-CON states: Expansion follows demand, capital, and speed to market
• CON states: Expansion follows approvals, timelines, and political process
 
This distinction directly impacts site selection, deal timing, feasibility, and capital risk.

Real Estate Implications for ASCs

  1. Site selection is regulatory first: In CON states, the optimal site is often the one most defensible in an approval process, not the one with the best demographics.
  2. Scarcity supports pricing: Approved or licensed ASCs behave like entitled assets. Existing facilities often trade at premiums due to replacement difficulty.
  3. Longer timelines increase carry risk: Land control, design, legal fees, and consultants can sit idle for years during reviews, objections, or appeals.
  4. Hospital alignment matters: Formal preference is rare, but hospital support can materially improve approval odds. Opposition can stop a project outright.
  5. Fewer but larger projects: CON frameworks tend to favor fewer approvals with broader service offerings to justify demonstrated need.

Real Estate Implications for MOBs

  1. MOBs absorb outpatient demand: When ASC approvals are constrained, outpatient care shifts into clinics, imaging, and specialty suites within MOBs.
  2. Flexibility is underwritten upfront: Developers favor designs that allow future imaging, minor procedures, or potential ASC conversion if rules change.
  3. Tenant stickiness improves: Limited relocation options in CON states support longer lease terms, renewals, and stable occupancy.
  4. Health systems shape leasing: Hospital systems often control referrals and influence CON outcomes, making hospital-adjacent MOBs more liquid.
  5. Regulatory insulation attracts capital: MOBs benefit from regulatory barriers without direct exposure to CON litigation risk.

 

Outpatient Growth in Healthcare

Why This Matters for Real Estate Decisions

 
  • Non-CON states: Real estate follows demand
  • CON states: Real estate follows permission
 
Understanding that difference is critical for operators, developers, and investors underwriting outpatient healthcare assets.

Recent News

Sketch of office space on a starbucks napkin

Stuff Gets Done on the Back of a Napkin

Why Technology Still Cannot Replace Face-to-Face Interaction in the Workplace The debate over remote work, hybrid schedules, and return-to-office mandates has generated more heat than light over the past few years. Having spent my career

Commercial leases: assignment and subletting

Assignment and Subletting Clauses in Commercial Leases

Transferring Leasehold Rights to Another Party When you’re negotiating a lease, the assignment and subletting clause probably isn’t the first thing on your mind. You’re focused on rent, term, tenant improvements, and getting a deal

how real estate commissions paid in office lease transactions

Real Estate Commissions: I Don’t Work for Free

What Does a Tenant Representative Actually Cost? There’s a conversation that a lot of commercial real estate agents, especially less experienced ones, would rather avoid: talking openly about how they get paid. I’ve never understood

Financial Analysis for Office Lease Transactions

Making Informed Lease Decisions Financial analysis is the backbone of every good lease decision. It’s the practical application of financial principles, combined with years of experience in the marketplace, to help occupiers understand what they’re

Featured transactions

  • Houston Methodist Hospital
    Houston, TX
  • KMG Chemicals - Forth Worth
    KMG Chemicals
    Fort Worth, TX
  • Houston Methodist The Woodlands Campus
    Houston Methodist The Woodlands Campus
    The Woodlands, TX
  • 4800 Fournace Place
    Houston Methodist Hospital
    Bellaire, TX

The Tenant Advisor

Coy Davidson, Senior Vice President, Colliers | Houston

1233 West Loop South, Suite 900, Houston, TX 77027

Envelope Linkedin

Commercial Real Estate Websites by CREgrow -
Design, Development, Hosting, Support, SEO

TREC Information About Brokerage Services
Texas Real Estate Commission Consumer Notice
Disclaimer & Terms of Use