Your Trusted Houston Commercial Real Estate Brokerage

Viking Enterprise LLC is part of eXp Commercial, an agent-led, cloud-based commercial real estate brokerage with agents across the globe.

Your Trusted Katy / Fulshear & Houston Commercial Real Estate Brokerage

Viking Enterprise LLC is part of eXp Commercial, an agent-led, cloud-based commercial real estate brokerage with agents across the globe.

Looking to invest, buy, sell or lease? We can help.

Looking to invest, buy, sell or lease? We can help.

OUR FEATURED TENANTS & CLIENTS

eXp Commercial - Viking Enterprise Team's real estate network provides unparalleled commercial real estate services to Tenants and Landlords around the Katy- Houston area. Our knowledge, experience, and reputation sets us apart from many firms.


A commercial property owner might have various plans that would necessitate the services of a commercial real estate broker. Some of the common scenarios include:

1. Selling the Property: If the owner decides it’s time to sell the property, a commercial real estate broker can help determine the market value, market the property effectively, and negotiate with potential buyers to get the best possible price.

2. Leasing Space: For property owners looking to lease out part or all of their commercial space, a broker can help find suitable tenants, negotiate lease terms, and ensure the lease agreements meet all legal requirements and serve the owner’s best interests.

3. Acquiring More Properties: Owners looking to expand their portfolio would benefit from a broker's knowledge of the market, access to listings, and negotiation skills to secure additional properties at favorable terms.

4. Property Management: While not all brokers offer this service, some commercial real estate brokers or their affiliates offer property management services. This can be particularly appealing for owners who prefer a hands-off approach or are managing properties from a distance.

5. Market Analysis: Owners considering future developments, renovations, or rebranding of their property might engage a broker for a comprehensive market analysis. This helps in understanding current market trends, the demand for different types of spaces, and potential returns on investment for various strategies.

6. Refinancing: In situations where a property owner is looking to refinance their property, a commercial real estate broker can provide valuable insights into the property’s current market value, assist in gathering necessary documentation, and even help in finding the best financing options.

7. Partnership or Investment Opportunities: Owners interested in exploring partnerships, joint ventures, or seeking investors for expansion or development projects might use a broker to find and vet potential partners or investors.

8. Consulting on Zoning and Use Changes: When contemplating a change in the use of the property or dealing with zoning issues, a broker with experience in local regulations and the specific property type can provide guidance and strategic planning assistance.

9. Exit Strategy Planning: For owners looking to plan an exit strategy from their investment, whether it’s through a strategic sale or a gradual winding down of operations, brokers can provide market insights, timing advice, and valuation services to optimize the exit process.

In any of these scenarios, the expertise and services provided by a commercial real estate broker can save the property owner time and money, while also providing access to a wider network of potential buyers, tenants, and industry professionals. Give us a call today!

Reviews

🏗️ Cannabis Rescheduling Could Unlock Billions for CRE: Hemp, Dispensaries & Industrial Space 🌿

🌿 Trump’s Marijuana Policy Shift: What It Means for Hemp, Cannabis & Commercial Real Estate 🏢

December 30, 2025•4 min read

🌿 Trump’s Marijuana Policy Shift: What It Means for Hemp, Cannabis & Commercial Real Estate 🏢

🏗️ Cannabis Rescheduling Could Unlock Billions for CRE: Hemp, Dispensaries & Industrial Space 🌿


What Trump’s Marijuana Policy Shift Means for the Legal Hemp Industry—and Commercial Real Estate

President Donald Trump has issued an executive order directing the reclassification of marijuana from a Schedule I drug to Schedule III. While this action does not federally legalize marijuana, it represents one of the most consequential federal drug policy shifts in decades—and it has direct implications for the legal hemp industry and commercial real estate.

For commercial property owners and investors, this move signals a potential inflection point in lending access, leasing risk, zoning flexibility, and tenant demand across retail, industrial, and specialized-use real estate.

Schedule III: Why This Matters

Moving marijuana to Schedule III places it alongside substances recognized as having accepted medical use. While interstate commerce and federal legalization remain off the table, rescheduling materially changes how the industry is treated from a tax and regulatory standpoint.

Most importantly, Schedule III eliminates the application of IRS Section 280E, which has long prevented cannabis operators from deducting ordinary business expenses such as rent, payroll, utilities, and insurance.

Immediate Impact: Tax Relief = Stronger Tenants

Under Section 280E, many cannabis operators paid effective tax rates exceeding 70%. With rescheduling, operators revert closer to the standard 21% corporate rate.

Industry research estimates cannabis companies paid more than $2.3 billion in excess federal taxes in 2024 alone. Removing that burden significantly improves:

¡Tenant profitability

¡Creditworthiness

¡Ability to sign longer leases

¡Capital reinvestment into facilities and expansion

For landlords, this translates into lower default risk and a more stable tenant base.

Commercial Real Estate Implications

1. Retail Leasing Expansion

Major operators such as Cresco Labs, Curaleaf, and Trulieve already operate hundreds of dispensaries nationwide. Improved margins and reduced regulatory stigma could accelerate:

¡New retail site selection

¡Conversion of underutilized strip centers

·Re-tenanting of formerly “non-bankable” spaces

As legal risk perception declines, more landlords—particularly those with institutional debt—may be willing to lease to cannabis tenants.

2. Industrial & Flex Space Demand

Beyond retail, rescheduling benefits cultivation, processing, testing, and distribution facilities. These uses favor:

¡Industrial warehouses

¡Flex/industrial campuses

¡Specialized HVAC and power-intensive buildings

For hemp operators in particular—already federally legal under the 2018 Farm Bill—this policy shift further legitimizes adjacent cannabis infrastructure, increasing investor appetite for specialized industrial assets.

3. Lending & Capital Markets: A Slow but Meaningful Shift

While rescheduling alone does not force banks to lend, it opens the door for clearer guidance from the Treasury and Justice Departments. Until then, many traditional lenders remain cautious.

That said, the direction of travel is clear:

¡More private credit participation

¡Improved underwriting confidence

¡Potential future bank entry

Once banks fully engage, cap rates, valuations, and transaction volume could reset meaningfully.

Zoning & Municipal Considerations

Municipal zoning restrictions—such as distance requirements from schools or churches—remain locally enforced. However, legal experts expect some jurisdictions to revisit restrictive policies now that marijuana is no longer categorized alongside heroin at the federal level.

This creates opportunities for:

¡Adaptive reuse projects

¡Rezoning plays

¡Early-mover landlord advantages

Hemp Industry Spillover Effects

The legal hemp industry stands to benefit indirectly through:

¡Normalized banking relationships

¡Shared infrastructure investment

¡Expanded research and product development

For commercial real estate investors, hemp processing, CBD manufacturing, and related logistics facilities may see increased institutional interest.

Industry Response

Trade groups like the National Cannabis Industry Association have called the move a foundational reform. Operators including Verano Holdings describe it as a necessary step toward normalized capital access, medical research expansion, and long-term industry stability.

What CRE Investors Should Watch Next

¡Treasury and DOJ banking guidance

¡State-level zoning changes

¡Institutional lender policy shifts

¡Sale-leaseback activity

¡Industrial redevelopment demand

Bottom Line for Commercial Real Estate

Trump’s marijuana rescheduling order does not flip a switch overnight—but it meaningfully de-risks cannabis and hemp tenants. For commercial real estate investors, this is not a cultural issue; it is a capital markets and tenant-credit story.

As tax burdens fall and financing pathways slowly open, cannabis-adjacent real estate could move from fringe to mainstream—creating both opportunity and competition for well-located assets.


https://www.houstonrealestatebrokerage.com/

https://www.houstonrealestatebrokerage.com/houston-cre-navigator

https://www.commercialexchange.com/agent/653bf5593e3a3e1dcec275a6

http://expressoffers.com/[email protected]

https://app.bullpenre.com/profile/1742476177701x437444415125976000

https://author.billrapponline.com/

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0F32Z5BH2

https://veed.cello.so/FOmzTty6oi9

https://creplaybookseries.billrapponline.com

https://creplaybook.billrapponline.com/


Š 2023-2024 Bill Rapp, Broker Associate, eXp Commercial Viking Enterprise Team


cannabis commercial real estatemarijuana rescheduling impacthemp industry real estatesection 280E Repealindustrial cannabis real estatecannabis retail leasingcannabis tax reform CREmarijuana banking reformcommercial real estate cannabis tenantsdispensary real estate trends
blog author image

Bill Rapp, CRE Broker

I am a Houston commercial broker, with residential experience, as well as a lending background. I have been in the real estate industry for 14 years and counting, and I have worked in many roles within the industry and each has given me a unique perspective of the industry as a whole. My dedication to clients is rooted in this industry knowledge, but also includes my desire to go the extra mile in networking to source off market opportunities for my clients. Me and my team at eXp Commercial have a cutting-edge technology package that gets the widest exposure for each transaction. eXp Commercial offers a nationwide network through which we can deliver the best exposure and professional advice to achieve our clients’ goals while also minimizing their risk. Clients appreciate my methodical method of discovery in our initial consultation. Through which we can get to know each other and their specific’s business’s needs and objectives on a granular level. Our processes help navigate each transaction and its potential pitfalls through to a successful outcome for our clients. It is my stated goal to provide our clients with extensive market analysis and expertise that fosters innovative solutions and rewarding commercial real estate opportunities.

Back to Blog

eXp Commercial - Viking Enterprise team real estate network provides unparalleled commercial real estate services to Tenants and Landlords around the greater Katy & Houston MSA area. Our knowledge, experience, and reputation sets us apart from many firms.

A commercial property owner might have various plans that would necessitate the services of a commercial real estate broker. Some of the common scenarios include:

1. Selling the Property: If the owner decides it’s time to sell the property, a commercial real estate broker can help determine the market value, market the property effectively, and negotiate with potential buyers to get the best possible price.

2. Leasing Space: For property owners looking to lease out part or all of their commercial space, a broker can help find suitable tenants, negotiate lease terms, and ensure the lease agreements meet all legal requirements and serve the owner’s best interests.

3. Acquiring More Properties: Owners looking to expand their portfolio would benefit from a broker's knowledge of the market, access to listings, and negotiation skills to secure additional properties at favorable terms.

4. Property Management: While not all brokers offer this service, some commercial real estate brokers or their affiliates offer property management services. This can be particularly appealing for owners who prefer a hands-off approach or are managing properties from a distance.

5. Market Analysis: Owners considering future developments, renovations, or rebranding of their property might engage a broker for a comprehensive market analysis. This helps in understanding current market trends, the demand for different types of spaces, and potential returns on investment for various strategies.

6. Refinancing: In situations where a property owner is looking to refinance their property, a commercial real estate broker can provide valuable insights into the property’s current market value, assist in gathering necessary documentation, and even help in finding the best financing options.

7. Partnership or Investment Opportunities: Owners interested in exploring partnerships, joint ventures, or seeking investors for expansion or development projects might use a broker to find and vet potential partners or investors.

8. Consulting on Zoning and Use Changes: When contemplating a change in the use of the property or dealing with zoning issues, a broker with experience in local regulations and the specific property type can provide guidance and strategic planning assistance.

9. Exit Strategy Planning: For owners looking to plan an exit strategy from their investment, whether it’s through a strategic sale or a gradual winding down of operations, brokers can provide market insights, timing advice, and valuation services to optimize the exit process.

In any of these scenarios, the expertise and services provided by a commercial real estate broker can save the property owner time and money, while also providing access to a wider network of potential buyers, tenants, and industry professionals. Give us a call today!

Find the perfect location for your business.

Let us help your business succeed.

🏗️ Cannabis Rescheduling Could Unlock Billions for CRE: Hemp, Dispensaries & Industrial Space 🌿

🌿 Trump’s Marijuana Policy Shift: What It Means for Hemp, Cannabis & Commercial Real Estate 🏢

December 30, 2025•4 min read

🌿 Trump’s Marijuana Policy Shift: What It Means for Hemp, Cannabis & Commercial Real Estate 🏢

🏗️ Cannabis Rescheduling Could Unlock Billions for CRE: Hemp, Dispensaries & Industrial Space 🌿


What Trump’s Marijuana Policy Shift Means for the Legal Hemp Industry—and Commercial Real Estate

President Donald Trump has issued an executive order directing the reclassification of marijuana from a Schedule I drug to Schedule III. While this action does not federally legalize marijuana, it represents one of the most consequential federal drug policy shifts in decades—and it has direct implications for the legal hemp industry and commercial real estate.

For commercial property owners and investors, this move signals a potential inflection point in lending access, leasing risk, zoning flexibility, and tenant demand across retail, industrial, and specialized-use real estate.

Schedule III: Why This Matters

Moving marijuana to Schedule III places it alongside substances recognized as having accepted medical use. While interstate commerce and federal legalization remain off the table, rescheduling materially changes how the industry is treated from a tax and regulatory standpoint.

Most importantly, Schedule III eliminates the application of IRS Section 280E, which has long prevented cannabis operators from deducting ordinary business expenses such as rent, payroll, utilities, and insurance.

Immediate Impact: Tax Relief = Stronger Tenants

Under Section 280E, many cannabis operators paid effective tax rates exceeding 70%. With rescheduling, operators revert closer to the standard 21% corporate rate.

Industry research estimates cannabis companies paid more than $2.3 billion in excess federal taxes in 2024 alone. Removing that burden significantly improves:

¡Tenant profitability

¡Creditworthiness

¡Ability to sign longer leases

¡Capital reinvestment into facilities and expansion

For landlords, this translates into lower default risk and a more stable tenant base.

Commercial Real Estate Implications

1. Retail Leasing Expansion

Major operators such as Cresco Labs, Curaleaf, and Trulieve already operate hundreds of dispensaries nationwide. Improved margins and reduced regulatory stigma could accelerate:

¡New retail site selection

¡Conversion of underutilized strip centers

·Re-tenanting of formerly “non-bankable” spaces

As legal risk perception declines, more landlords—particularly those with institutional debt—may be willing to lease to cannabis tenants.

2. Industrial & Flex Space Demand

Beyond retail, rescheduling benefits cultivation, processing, testing, and distribution facilities. These uses favor:

¡Industrial warehouses

¡Flex/industrial campuses

¡Specialized HVAC and power-intensive buildings

For hemp operators in particular—already federally legal under the 2018 Farm Bill—this policy shift further legitimizes adjacent cannabis infrastructure, increasing investor appetite for specialized industrial assets.

3. Lending & Capital Markets: A Slow but Meaningful Shift

While rescheduling alone does not force banks to lend, it opens the door for clearer guidance from the Treasury and Justice Departments. Until then, many traditional lenders remain cautious.

That said, the direction of travel is clear:

¡More private credit participation

¡Improved underwriting confidence

¡Potential future bank entry

Once banks fully engage, cap rates, valuations, and transaction volume could reset meaningfully.

Zoning & Municipal Considerations

Municipal zoning restrictions—such as distance requirements from schools or churches—remain locally enforced. However, legal experts expect some jurisdictions to revisit restrictive policies now that marijuana is no longer categorized alongside heroin at the federal level.

This creates opportunities for:

¡Adaptive reuse projects

¡Rezoning plays

¡Early-mover landlord advantages

Hemp Industry Spillover Effects

The legal hemp industry stands to benefit indirectly through:

¡Normalized banking relationships

¡Shared infrastructure investment

¡Expanded research and product development

For commercial real estate investors, hemp processing, CBD manufacturing, and related logistics facilities may see increased institutional interest.

Industry Response

Trade groups like the National Cannabis Industry Association have called the move a foundational reform. Operators including Verano Holdings describe it as a necessary step toward normalized capital access, medical research expansion, and long-term industry stability.

What CRE Investors Should Watch Next

¡Treasury and DOJ banking guidance

¡State-level zoning changes

¡Institutional lender policy shifts

¡Sale-leaseback activity

¡Industrial redevelopment demand

Bottom Line for Commercial Real Estate

Trump’s marijuana rescheduling order does not flip a switch overnight—but it meaningfully de-risks cannabis and hemp tenants. For commercial real estate investors, this is not a cultural issue; it is a capital markets and tenant-credit story.

As tax burdens fall and financing pathways slowly open, cannabis-adjacent real estate could move from fringe to mainstream—creating both opportunity and competition for well-located assets.


https://www.houstonrealestatebrokerage.com/

https://www.houstonrealestatebrokerage.com/houston-cre-navigator

https://www.commercialexchange.com/agent/653bf5593e3a3e1dcec275a6

http://expressoffers.com/[email protected]

https://app.bullpenre.com/profile/1742476177701x437444415125976000

https://author.billrapponline.com/

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0F32Z5BH2

https://veed.cello.so/FOmzTty6oi9

https://creplaybookseries.billrapponline.com

https://creplaybook.billrapponline.com/


Š 2023-2024 Bill Rapp, Broker Associate, eXp Commercial Viking Enterprise Team


cannabis commercial real estatemarijuana rescheduling impacthemp industry real estatesection 280E Repealindustrial cannabis real estatecannabis retail leasingcannabis tax reform CREmarijuana banking reformcommercial real estate cannabis tenantsdispensary real estate trends
blog author image

Bill Rapp, CRE Broker

I am a Houston commercial broker, with residential experience, as well as a lending background. I have been in the real estate industry for 14 years and counting, and I have worked in many roles within the industry and each has given me a unique perspective of the industry as a whole. My dedication to clients is rooted in this industry knowledge, but also includes my desire to go the extra mile in networking to source off market opportunities for my clients. Me and my team at eXp Commercial have a cutting-edge technology package that gets the widest exposure for each transaction. eXp Commercial offers a nationwide network through which we can deliver the best exposure and professional advice to achieve our clients’ goals while also minimizing their risk. Clients appreciate my methodical method of discovery in our initial consultation. Through which we can get to know each other and their specific’s business’s needs and objectives on a granular level. Our processes help navigate each transaction and its potential pitfalls through to a successful outcome for our clients. It is my stated goal to provide our clients with extensive market analysis and expertise that fosters innovative solutions and rewarding commercial real estate opportunities.

Back to Blog

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Let us help your business succeed.

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27815 Astoria Brook Ln

Katy, TX 77494 USA


9600 Great Hills Trail, Suite 150w Austin, TX 78759 |
855.450.0324 xx255

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Information About Brokerage Services eXp Commercial LLC #9010212

Viking Enterprise LLC #9009614

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27815 Astoria Brook Ln

Katy, TX 77494 USA

901 S Mopac Expwy, Bldg 2, Suite 350 Austin, TX 78746 | 512.474.5557Texas Real Estate Commission

Consumer Protection Notice Texas Real Estate Commission Information About Brokerage Services Reliance Retail, LLC #603091

Texas RS, LLC #9003193 | RESOLUT RE Is Licensed In Louisiana #0995694083