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JBG SMITH Properties
Annual Report 2024

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FY2024 Annual Report · JBG SMITH Properties
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2024 Annual Report
The Grace and Reva 
(recently delivered multifamily assets)

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“Since our public launch 
in 2017, the cornerstone 
of our capital allocation 
strategy has been 
maximizing long-term 
NAV per share growth.
Our focus now will be 
no different.” 
Fe b ru a r y 1 8, 2 02 5
Our Fellow Shareholders:
Much has changed since our last earnings release, most of which 
is very specific to the Washington metro area. It is, perhaps, a gross 
understatement to declare the current environment unpredictable, 
especially for the local real estate market. On the other hand, since 
the pandemic the DC market has desperately needed a turnaround, 
both in terms of public safety and office attendance. It could well 
be that the recent actions by the new Administration will deliver just 
that. It could also be that dramatic efforts to shrink government 
employment may offer nothing but more headwinds. The only thing 
we know for certain is it’s too early to tell. That said, plan beats 
no plan 100% of the time, and we always have a plan. We believe 
that office values have bottomed. We believe that the value of our 
holdings, especially in National Landing, has improved as a product 
of their location, unique demand drivers, and the placemaking and 
use diversification we’ve implemented. We believe that the value of 
our National Landing assets will increase as we continue to execute 
our business plan and stabilize the office, residential, and retail 
assets there.
Since our public launch in 2017, the cornerstone of our capital 
allocation strategy has been maximizing long-term NAV per share 
growth. Our focus now will be no different. Since the pandemic 
began, we have repurchased approximately 40% of our shares; and 
as long as our share price fails to reflect the underlying, intrinsic 
value of our business, we believe share repurchases funded via 
asset sales at (or hopefully above) NAV will continue to be our most 
accretive allocation of capital. In a climate where office valuations 
are near cyclical lows with limited liquidity, the most efficiently 
priced source of capital will likely come from multifamily assets, 
specifically in DC where our holdings are less concentrated. With the 
recent increase in our buyback authorization, we have the capacity 
to repurchase approximately $840 million of additional shares, and 
we intend to do just that for as long as pricing remains accretive. 
As we continue pursuing our mixed-use strategy, we will also remain 
focused on the strategic core of our business and our unique 
differentiators as an operator, developer, and capital allocator.
The following are highlights from the quarter and the year. 
Water Park
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2 0 2 4  A N N U A L  R E P O R T


2024 Accomplishments
Completed The Grace and Reva, Two 
Multifamily Towers in the Heart of 
National Landing Totaling 808 Units
•	As of year end, the towers were 68.6% leased 
and continue to lease faster than any of our 
other multifamily deliveries since 2017.
•	We expect these assets to deliver $23.1 
million of annualized NOI once stabilized.
Completed $373.7 Million of Dispositions 
at Attractive Valuations
•	Achieved a weighted average capitalization 
rate of 5.4%
•	Significant transactions included:
	
❍$162.5 million sale of our 50% share in 
Central Place Tower, a 551,000 square-foot 
office tower in the Rosslyn submarket of 
Arlington, Virginia
	
❍$110.1 million sale of 2101 L Street, a 
375,000 square-foot office building in the 
Central Business District submarket of 
Washington, DC
	
❍$86.8 million sale of Fort Totten Square, 
a 345-unit multifamily asset with 
approximately 131,000 square feet of retail 
in the Brookland/Fort Totten submarket of 
Washington, DC
	
❍$14.3 million sale of North End Retail, a 
27,000 square-foot retail asset in the U 
Street/Shaw submarket of Washington, DC 
Achieved Strong Operating Performance 
Despite Macroeconomic Headwinds
•	Occupancy of the In-Service multifamily 
portfolio ended the year at a stable 94.8%.
•	Same Store Multifamily NOI increased 3.9% 
for the year, driven by 4.5% revenue growth.
•	Completed 614,000 square feet of office 
leases with a weighted average lease term 
of 6.5 years, including 320,000 square feet 
of new leases in National Landing – our 
strongest year of new leasing in National 
Landing since 2019
Realized G&A Savings of Approximately 
8% in 2024, for a Total of Approximately 
34% Savings since 2019
•	Continued to reorganize teams and 
maximize efficiency
Addressed Over $620 million of Debt in 
Challenging Market Conditions
•	Including the refinance of The Grace and 
Reva with a $273.6 million agency loan, 
allowing us to borrow additional proceeds 
and lock in a favorable 5.19% all-in rate 
ahead of stabilization, an execution that we 
believe would not be replicable in today’s 
debt capital markets.
Continued as a Market Leader in 
Sustainability and Housing Affordability
•	Received a 5-star ranking in the GRESB 
Assessment for both our diversified operating 
portfolio and development pipeline and 
recognized as a 2024 Global and Regional 
Sector Leader – Existing Portfolio and 
Regional Sector Leader - Development - 
Residential Sector.
•	Presented with Nareit’s Leader in the 
Light and Impact at Scale awards for our 
commitment to implementing sustainable 
practices in National Landing.
•	LEO Impact Capital, formerly the Washington 
Housing Initiative, surpassed its goal of 
financing 3,000 workforce housing units.
2
J B G  S M I T H

Capital Allocation 
Our capital allocation strategy is grounded in our primary goal of maximizing long-
term NAV per share. We focus on opportunistically monetizing our most liquid assets 
where we can achieve premiums to NAV and investing where we see the greatest 
potential for NAV per share growth. Share repurchases continue to be our most 
accretive use of capital, and as long as our share price fails to reflect NAV, we intend 
to take advantage of the arbitrage. Our capital allocation strategy has resulted in a 
significantly lower share count and a more highly concentrated portfolio in National 
Landing, where we continue to see opportunity for outsized growth.
During the fourth quarter, we sold 2101 L Street, a 375,000 square-foot office 
building in Washington, DC’s Central Business District, for $110.1 million. During 2024, 
we closed $373.7 million of dispositions, representing an average capitalization rate 
of 5.4%. Additionally, we entered into a firm contract, subject to customary closing 
conditions, to sell 8001 Woodmont, a 322-unit multifamily asset in Bethesda, MD. It 
is our only multifamily asset in Bethesda, a submarket where we see more tempered 
rent growth long term, but it garnered unexpectedly strong pricing and buyer pool 
depth. We expect the sale to close during the first quarter of 2025.
Given the substantial discount of our share price relative to NAV, we have allocated 
a significant amount of our capital to share repurchases. Our strong balance sheet 
and substantial liquidity enable us to take advantage of this disparity. Over the 
course of 2024, we repurchased 10.9 million shares at an average price of $15.60, 
amounting to $170.7 million. Since launching our share repurchase program in 2020, 
we have repurchased 58.9 million shares, which is almost 40% of the shares and OP 
units outstanding as of December 31, 2019, at an average price of   $19.70, totaling 
$1.2 billion.
We anticipate that new investments, including share repurchases, developments, 
and acquisitions, will primarily be financed through asset recycling, either in advance 
or retrospectively. We continue to seek opportunities to dispose of additional assets 
that are most liquid in today’s capital markets at values at or above NAV. In a 
climate where office valuations are near cyclical lows with limited liquidity, the most 
efficiently priced source of capital will likely come from multifamily assets, specifically 
in DC where our holdings are less concentrated.
In parallel, we continue to advance the entitlement and design of our nearly 9.0 
million square-foot Development Pipeline, substantially all of which we expect will 
be entitled by the end of 2025. During the fourth quarter, we submitted entitlement 
applications for 2100 and 2200 Crystal Drive, two former office assets we took out of 
service for conversion to hospitality and multifamily uses. Additionally, we submitted 
new entitlement applications for Potomac Yard Landbays G and H, which we believe 
reflect more viable business plans that will generate greater land value in the current 
environment. Once construction costs and interest rates normalize, we will be well- 
positioned with a compelling portfolio of shovel-ready growth opportunities to 
capitalize through land sales, ground leases, and joint ventures.
We have seen signs of improvement in the private capital markets, particularly in the 
multifamily space. Despite a flattening forward SOFR curve and an expectation of 
fewer rate cuts through 2025, strong investor interest in DC metro multifamily was 
on display through the end of 2024. As reported by Berkadia, transaction volume 
was up 86.3% from 2023 to $5.7 billion – an increase and a total that would have 
represented a pre-2019 record. The lion’s share of that activity, $3.5 billion, was in 
Northern Virginia, signaling that market’s particular appeal to investors, although 
the District also posted significant growth in volume. In-place cap rates were 
also typically in the high 4.0% to mid-5.0% range, which while reflecting the rate 
environment, is also rapidly approaching “normal” as investors underwrite significant 
“We focus on 
opportunistically 
monetizing our most 
liquid assets where we 
can achieve premiums 
to NAV and investing 
where we see the 
greatest potential for 
NAV per share growth.”
Reva gym 
recently delivered multifamily asset
3

(
 
)
2 0 2 4  A N N U A L  R E P O R T

rent growth. The majority of these transactions were for relatively new, amenity-
rich complexes in walkable urban neighborhoods across the DMV, pointing to 
investor interest returning in these markets. While investors are primarily focused on 
acquisitions, we are starting to see increased interest in multifamily development in 
the same submarkets, which may lead to greater opportunities to monetize portions 
of our development pipeline.
Financial and Operating Metrics 
For the three months ended December 31, 2024, we reported Core FFO attributable 
to common shares of $11.6 million, or $0.14 per diluted share. Annualized NOI was 
in line with last quarter, totaling $267.6 million, excluding assets that were sold or 
taken out of service. Our multifamily portfolio ended the quarter at 92.9% leased 
and 91.0% occupied, and our In-Service multifamily portfolio was 96.2% leased and 
94.8% occupied. Our office portfolio ended the quarter at 78.6% leased and 76.5% 
occupied. Our portfolio generated negative 6.5% and positive 1.3% Same Store NOI 
growth for the three months and year ended December 31, 2024.
As of December 31, 2024, our Net Debt to Annualized Adjusted EBITDA was 11.7x. 
Based on the previously disclosed known and expected tenant vacates and an 
increase in interest expense as we complete our remaining under-construction asset 
and cease capitalizing interest on it, we expect continued decreases in our earnings 
and increases in our Net Debt to Annualized Adjusted EBITDA during the first half 
of 2025. We expect the impacts on these metrics will be lessened by: (i) additional 
income from the delivery and stabilization of newly constructed multifamily assets 
(The Grace, Reva, The Zoe, and Valen); (ii) rent growth in our existing multifamily 
portfolio given the limited multifamily supply pipeline in the DC metro area; and (iii) 
office demand in National Landing from prospective tenants seeking proximity to 
the Pentagon, local tech talent, and the placemaking attractions we have delivered.
Our floating rate exposure remains low, with 91.4% of our debt fixed or hedged as 
of the end of the fourth quarter, after accounting for in-place interest rate swaps 
and caps. The floating rate exposure is tied to our revolving credit facility and assets 
where the business plan warrants preserving flexibility. We continue to be well 
positioned with respect to our near-term debt maturities. This year we have $340.7 
million of debt maturing, representing less than 13% of total debt; approximately 
90% is secured by a multifamily asset, an asset class which has proven to be readily 
financeable, even in challenging debt capital markets. Our remaining debt has 
a weighted average maturity of 3.7 years, after adjusting for by-right extension 
options. Our primarily non-recourse asset-level financing strategy continues to be 
most valuable in an environment like today, providing a floor on our downside risk.
Operating Portfolio
Multifamily Trends
Our In-Service multifamily portfolio ended the quarter at 96.2% leased, down 0.8% 
quarter over quarter, and 94.8% occupied, down 0.9% quarter over quarter due 
to seasonally low demand. In our Same Store multifamily portfolio, we increased 
effective rents by 0.8% for new leases and 4.6% upon renewal, largely driven by our 
assets in National Landing, while achieving a 60.0% renewal rate. Our multifamily 
portfolio Same Store NOI for the three months ended December 31, 2024 decreased 
3.9%, primarily driven by higher repair and maintenance expenses and lower 
occupancy, partially offset by higher rents. Our multifamily portfolio generated 3.9% 
Same Store NOI growth for the year ended December 31, 2024, driven primarily by 
4.5% revenue growth.
“While investors are 
primarily focused 
on acquisitions, we 
are starting to see 
increased interest 
in multifamily 
development, which 
may lead to greater 
opportunities to 
monetize portions 
of our development 
pipeline.” 
The Batley 
4
J B G  S M I T H

(multifamily asset)

“We continue making 
excellent progress 
leasing The Grace and 
Reva. Move-ins began 
in February 2024, and 
the pace of leasing 
continues to exceed 
all five of our other 
multifamily deliveries 
since 2017.” 
2001 South Bell Street  
(under construction multifamily 
asset)
We continue making excellent progress leasing The Grace and Reva. Move-ins began 
in February 2024, and the pace of leasing continues to exceed all five of our other 
multifamily deliveries since 2017. As of year end, The Grace and Reva were 68.6% 
leased. Notably, the residents of The Grace and Reva primarily work in three key 
industries that constitute a large part of the office tenant base in National Landing: 
professional services, defense, and technology. Amazon’s recent announcement 
mandating a return to a five-day in-office workweek underscores a broader trend 
among employers toward increased in-person work. This mandate is particularly 
beneficial for our new multifamily assets in National Landing, as it is likely to 
attract Amazon employees to the submarket. During the fourth quarter, we saw an 
approximately 35% increase in Amazonians at The Grace and Reva, and Amazonians 
comprised 24% of applications in January compared to approximately 16% in the 
fourth quarter and less than 8% prior to the return-to-office announcement. We 
believe that the amenity-rich environment we have developed in National Landing, 
along with the short commutes these buildings provide, are key factors contributing 
to their successful leasing performance thus far.
DC Metro Multifamily Trends (based on CoStar, Berkadia, 
and Apartment List data)
Against the backdrop of the uncertainty of a presidential transition, the DC metro 
area apartment market continues to thrive. Occupancy ended the year at 93.8% 
while rents grew by 3.1% compared to growth in other gateway markets of 0.7%. 
We saw only two new starts during the fourth quarter. Units under construction as 
a share of inventory declined further to only 2.2%, positioning the DC metro area 
for significant rent growth – some of which we are already starting to experience 
as recent deliveries are being leased up. National Landing’s rent growth stands out 
over the past two years with a Berkadia analysis ranking it the top submarket in 
the entire DC metro region for 2022 – 2024 rent growth (18.0%), largely driven by 
its amenity transformation and economic growth. We remain optimistic that the 
limited for-rent and for-sale inventory (prolonged by a flatter forward rate curve) 
and positive employment and population growth trends will drive growth in the 
multifamily market. While moves by the new Administration to shrink the size of the 
federal workforce may present a regional headwind, they represent only a portion of 
demand for our portfolio of largely new assets with a diverse base of residents, the 
majority of whom are concentrated in the private sector.
Office Trends
Our office portfolio ended the quarter at 78.6% leased, down 2.1% quarter over 
quarter, and 76.5% occupied, down 2.6% quarter over quarter. In the fourth quarter, 
we executed 118,000 square feet of leases with a weighted average lease term of 8.5 
years. For second generation leases, the rental rate mark-to-market was negative 
3.0%.
Over the last three years, we averaged approximately 150,000 square feet of new 
leasing per year in National Landing, excluding Amazon leases, and in 2024 we 
executed 320,000 square feet of new leases. Our prospect pipeline remains stronger 
than it has been in years. Leasing in National Landing continues to be driven 
primarily by office users who fall into three categories: (i) government contractors 
seeking growth and expansion; (ii) companies who need SCIF/secure facility space; 
and (iii) technology-related new tenants largely attracted by the recent delivery 
of our placemaking interventions. Further, we continue to see strong demand 
from defense and technology tenants for office space in National Landing, with 
approximately 82% of our 2024 leasing activity coming from tenants in those 
industries. Our 2024 office retention rate in National Landing was approximately 
5
2 0 2 4  A N N U A L  R E P O R T


40%, well below the approximately 70% average retention rate we’ve seen in the 
recent past. We have very modest lease roll over the next five years, averaging 
approximately 6.5% per year, and we expect our retention rate to improve given 
approximately 70% of our remaining tenancy in National Landing comprises 
defense-tech tenants.
Our leasing efforts are focused on buildings with long-term potential, concentrating 
occupancy in areas of National Landing that we have enhanced through our 
placemaking initiatives and that are accessible via multi-modal transportation. 
As such, we have taken out of service 1800 South Bell Street, 2100 Crystal Drive, 
and 2200 Crystal Drive as we plan to redevelop or convert these assets to other 
uses. Additionally, we plan to take 1901 South Bell Street out of service since we 
have determined it is no longer a viable office asset as is, and we are studying 
redevelopment and conversion opportunities. In total, we will have taken over 1.0 
million square feet of office space out of service in National Landing. Our rationale 
for reducing competitive stock in National Landing remains the same: to help foster 
a healthier long-term office market while repurposing older, underutilized buildings 
for redevelopment or conversion to multifamily housing, hospitality, or other 
complimentary uses that will support a vibrant mixed-use environment.
Northern Virginia Office Trends (based on JLL and CBRE 
data)
Although the Northern Virginia market ended the year with JLL quoting negative 
net absorption overall (-2.0 million square feet, or 1.4% of inventory) we continue 
to believe that the market has largely found its bottom with the bulk of any federal 
reductions likely coming in the District where more civilian agencies are based. 
Leasing activity, as measured by CBRE, shows an 18% improvement over 2023 to 8.2 
million square feet. Similarly, at year end, JLL expected large block (50,000+ square 
feet) leasing levels for 2024 to surpass 2023 given deals in progress. Leasing activity 
has swung hard to favor renewals (~60%) – a result of the high cost of new buildouts 
and the near total cessation of new development activity. JLL also reports that 
trophy vacancy in Northern Virginia is 13.5% on a direct basis versus 23.2% for the 
overall market, signaling a significant reduction in available first-generation space. 
This lack of available new space inures to the benefit of renewals and, when coupled 
with an increasing slate of office buildings identified for demolition or conversion, 
speaks to the beginnings of a reduction in supply across the board. Contraction 
activity is also becoming more limited, with CBRE reporting only two of the top 10 
deals of the quarter representing contractions. The two largest deals of the quarter 
were both renewals at flat square footages representing nearly 500,000 square feet 
of space. With many companies driving toward more stringent return-to- office 
policies and Northern Virginia accounting for the lion’s share of employment and 
government contract spend in the region, we believe that these trends all augur for a 
recovery off the bottom.
The entire region’s office market, however, must be considered against the backdrop 
of a rapidly evolving and uncertain federal environment. The federal hiring freeze, 
(which notably exempts national security employees), the federal employee buyout 
offers, and the latest executive order calling for a reduction-in-force and limits to 
backfilling attrition all represent headwinds to the regional economy. At the same 
time, however, the Administration’s immediate call to bring the federal workforce 
back to the office comes with benefits. The Government Accountability Office noted 
that in 2023, 17 of the 24 largest agencies used just 25% of their space. Even if the 
new Administration’s posture toward federal workers caused a 25% overall reduction 
of the workforce, it would still benefit the region to bring the remaining 75% back 
to the office full-time – particularly in DC which has borne the brunt of low federal 
occupancy. While considerations like union contracts and legal challenges may blunt 
some of the immediate impacts, we believe returning to in-person work will help 
restore vibrancy to the city and could even drive some net new office demand.
1770 Crystal Drive
 
(commercial asset)
“Our leasing efforts are 
focused on buildings 
with long-term 
potential, concentrating 
occupancy in areas of 
National Landing that 
we have enhanced 
through our placemaking 
initiatives and that are 
accessible via multi-
modal transportation.”
6
J B G  S M I T H


* * *
At the Nareit conference in November 2021 many channeled the late, great 
Sam Zell with “stay alive ‘till ‘25”. 2025 is here, and we are not just alive, we 
are thriving. After several extremely busy years, we are now completing the 
first phases of our dramatic transformation of National Landing with even 
more enhancements on the brink of delivery. We have right-sized our office 
business and believe the next few years will usher in a period of strong
recovery from the bottom in that sector, as evidenced by our best leasing 
year since 2019. We have delivered new world-class housing, street retail, 
and amenities that rival any development anywhere in the country. We 
have allocated capital away from low risk-adjusted return uses into highly 
accretive share buybacks. I credit our seasoned and dedicated team for 
the hard work required to accomplish all the above while simultaneously 
increasing efficiency and cutting G&A by 34% since 2019. While our local 
landscape has significantly changed and the future is uncertain, it has 
been and will continue to be in times like these that this team truly earns 
its keep. And regardless of the challenges ahead, we remain committed to 
maximizing long-term NAV per share – the North Star that will continue to 
guide our actions through 2025 and beyond.
As always, we thank you for your continued trust and confidence. 
Sincerely,
W. Matthew Kelly 
Chief Executive Officer
Surreal
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2 0 2 4  A N N U A L  R E P O R T


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UNITED STATES 
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
Washington, D.C. 20549 
FORM 10-K 
 
 
 
☒ ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024 
OR 
 
 
 
☐ 
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 
For the transition period from ___________ to ___________ 
Commission file number 001-37994 
 
JBG SMITH PROPERTIES 
 
(Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter) 
 
Maryland 
81-4307010 
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization) 
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
4747 Bethesda Avenue 
Bethesda 
MD 
20814 
Suite 200 
 
 
(Zip Code) 
(Address of Principal Executive Offices)
 
 
 
 
Registrant's telephone number, including area code:   (240) 333-3600 
 
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: 
 
Title of each class 
     
Trading Symbol(s) 
     
Name of each exchange on which registered 
Common Shares, par value $0.01 per share 
 
JBGS 
 
New York Stock Exchange 
 
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None 
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes  ☒  No  ☐ 
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act. Yes ☐  No  ☒ 
Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the 
preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the Registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 
90 days. Yes ☒  No ☐ 
Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulations S-
T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files). Yes ☒  No ☐ 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth 
company. See the definitions of "large accelerated filer," "accelerated filer," "smaller reporting company" and "emerging growth company" in Rule 12b-2 of the 
Exchange Act. 
Large accelerated filer   ☒ 
Accelerated filer   ☐  
Non-accelerated filer   ☐  
Smaller reporting company   ☐ 
Emerging growth company  ☐ 
 
 
 
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised 
financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.  ☐ 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and attestation to its management's assessment of the effectiveness of its internal control over 
financial reporting under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting firm that prepared or issued its audit report. 
☒ 
If securities are registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Exchange Act, indicate by check mark whether the financial statements of the registrant included in the filing 
reflect the correction of an error to previously issued financial statements.  ☐ 
Indicate by check mark whether any of those error corrections are restatements that required a recovery analysis of incentive-based compensation received by any of the 
registrant’s executive officers during the relevant recovery period pursuant to § 240.10D-1(b).  ☐ 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act)  Yes  ☐  No  ☒ 
As of February 14, 2025, JBG SMITH Properties had 82,454,040 common shares outstanding. 
As of June 30, 2024, the aggregate market value of common stock held by non-affiliates of the Registrant was approximately $1.3 billion based on the June 30, 2024 
closing share price of $15.23 per share on the New York Stock Exchange. 
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE 
Part III incorporates by reference information from certain portions of the registrant's definitive proxy statement for its 2025 annual meeting of shareholders to be filed 
with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days after the end of the fiscal year to which this report relates. 
 

2 
JBG SMITH PROPERTIES 
ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K 
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2024 
TABLE OF CONTENTS 
 
9 
 
 
 
 
     
Page 
 
 Definitions 
3 
 
 
PART I 
 
Item 1. 
 Business 
7 
Item 1A.  Risk Factors 
18 
Item 1B.  Unresolved Staff Comments 
34 
Item 1C.  Cybersecurity 
34 
Item 2. 
 Properties 
36 
Item 3. 
 Legal Proceedings 
40 
Item 4. 
 Mine Safety Disclosures 
40 
 
 
PART II 
 
Item 5. 
 Market For Registrant's Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of 
Equity Securities 
41 
Item 6. 
 [Reserved] 
43 
Item 7. 
 Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations 
43 
Item 7A.  Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk 
61 
Item 8. 
 Financial Statements and Supplementary Data 
63 
Item 9. 
 Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure 
111 
Item 9A.  Controls and Procedures 
111 
Item 9B.  Other Information 
113 
Item 9C.  Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdictions that Prevent Inspections 
134 
 
 
PART III 
 
Item 10.  Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance 
135 
Item 11.  Executive Compensation 
135 
Item 12.  Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder 
Matters 
135 
Item 13.  Certain Relationships and Related Transactions and Director Independence 
135 
Item 14.  Principal Accounting Fees and Services 
135 
 
 
PART IV 
 
Item 15.  Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules 
136 
Item 16.  Form 10-K Summary 
144 
 
 Signatures 
145 
 
 
 

3 
DEFINITIONS 
Defined terms used in this Annual Report on Form 10-K: 
"2000/2001 South Bell Street" refers to 2000 South Bell Street and 2001 South Bell Street, an under-construction 
multifamily asset. 
"2023 Term Loan" refers to the $120.0 million term loan maturing in June 2028. 
"ADA" means the Americans with Disabilities Act. 
"Amazon" refers to Amazon.com, Inc. 
"Annualized rent" means: (i) for multifamily assets, or the multifamily component of a mixed-use asset, the in-
place monthly base rent before free rent as of December 31, 2024, multiplied by 12, and (ii) for commercial assets, or the 
retail component of a mixed-use asset, the in-place monthly base rent before free rent, plus tenant reimbursements as of 
December 31, 2024, multiplied by 12. Annualized rent excludes rent from leases that have been signed but the tenant has 
not yet taken occupancy (not yet included in percent occupied metrics) and percentage rent. 
"At JBG SMITH Share" and "Our share" refer to our ownership percentage of consolidated and unconsolidated assets 
in real estate ventures, but exclude our 10.0% subordinated interest in one commercial building and our 33.5% 
subordinated interest in four commercial buildings, as well as the associated non-recourse mortgage loans, held through 
unconsolidated real estate ventures; these interests and debt are excluded because our investment in each real estate venture 
is zero, we do not anticipate receiving any near-term cash flow distributions from the real estate ventures and we have not 
guaranteed their obligations or otherwise committed to providing financial support. 
"BOMA" means Building Owners and Managers Association International. 
"CBRS" means the Citizens Broadband Radio Service. 
"CIRP" means cybersecurity incident response plan. 
"Code" refers to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. 
"Combination" refers to our acquisition of the management business and certain assets and liabilities of JBG.  
"Development pipeline" refers to assets that have the potential to commence construction subject to receipt of full 
entitlements, completion of design and/or market conditions where we (i) own land or control the land through a ground 
lease or (ii) are under a long-term conditional contract to purchase, or enter into, a leasehold interest with respect to land. 
"Estimated potential development density" reflects management's estimate of developable gross square feet based on 
our current business plans with respect to real estate owned or controlled as of December 31, 2024. Our current business 
plans may contemplate development of less than the maximum potential development density for individual assets. As 
market conditions change, our business plans, and therefore, the estimated potential development density, could change 
accordingly. Given timing, zoning requirements and other factors, we make no assurance that estimated potential 
development density amounts will become actual density to the extent we complete development of assets for which we 
have made such estimates. 
"Exchange Act" refers to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. 
"FATCA" means the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act. 
"FATCA withholding" refers to a FATCA withholding tax. 

4 
"FIRPTA" means the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act of 1980, as amended. 
"Falkland Chase" refers to Falkland Chase-South & West and Falkland Chase-North. 
"Formation Transaction" refers to the Separation and the Combination. 
"Free rent" means the amount of base rent and tenant reimbursements that are abated according to the applicable lease 
agreement(s). 
"FFO" means funds from operations, a non-GAAP financial measure computed in accordance with the definition 
established by Nareit in the Nareit FFO White Paper - 2018 Restatement. See Item 7, "Management's Discussion and 
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations-FFO" for further discussion. 
"GAAP" means accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. 
"GSA" means the General Services Administration, the independent U.S. federal government agency that manages real 
estate procurement for the federal government and federal agencies. 
"In-service" refers to multifamily or commercial operating assets that are at or above 90% leased or have been operating 
and collecting rent for more than 12 months as of December 31, 2024. 
"IRS" means the Internal Revenue Service. 
"ISO" means the International Organization for Standardization. 
"JBG" refers to The JBG Companies. 
"JBG Legacy Funds" refers to the legacy funds formerly organized by The JBG Companies. 
"JBG SMITH" refers to JBG SMITH Properties together with its consolidated subsidiaries. 
"JBG SMITH LP" refers to JBG SMITH Properties LP, our operating partnership, together with its consolidated 
subsidiaries. 
"JBG Excluded Assets" refers to the assets of the JBG Legacy Funds that were not contributed to JBG SMITH LP in the 
Combination. 
"LTIP Units" means long-term incentive partnership units. 
"MAAL" means modeled average annual loss, which is the sum of climate-related expenses, decreased revenue, and/or 
business interruption over a fixed decadal period and expressed as an annual average within that decade. 
"Metro" is the public transportation network serving the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area operated by the Washington 
Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. 
"Metro-served" are locations, submarkets or assets that are within 0.5 miles of an existing or planned Metro station. 
"MGCL" means the Maryland General Corporation Law. 
"Nareit" means the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts. 
"NAV" refers to net asset value. 

5 
"NOI", "Same Store NOI" means net operating income, a non-GAAP financial measure management uses to assess an 
asset's performance.  
The most directly comparable GAAP measure is net income (loss) attributable to common shareholders. We use NOI 
internally as a performance measure and believe NOI and same store NOI provide useful information to investors regarding 
our financial condition and results of operations because it reflects only property related revenue (which includes base 
rent, tenant reimbursements and other operating revenue, net of free rent and payments associated with assumed lease 
liabilities) less operating expenses and ground rent for operating leases, if applicable. NOI and same store NOI exclude 
deferred rent, commercial lease termination revenue, related party management fees, interest expense, and certain other 
non-cash adjustments, including the accretion of acquired below-market leases and the amortization of acquired above-
market leases and below-market ground lease intangibles. Management uses NOI, which includes our proportionate share 
of revenue and expenses attributable to real estate ventures, as a supplemental performance measure and believes it 
provides useful information to investors because it reflects only those revenue and expense items that are incurred at the 
asset level, excluding non-cash items. In addition, NOI is considered by many in the real estate industry to be a useful 
starting point for determining the value of a real estate asset or group of assets. However, because NOI excludes 
depreciation and amortization expense and captures neither the changes in the value of our assets that result from use or 
market conditions, nor the level of capital expenditures and capitalized leasing commissions necessary to maintain the 
operating performance of our assets, all of which have real economic effect and could materially impact the financial 
performance of our assets, the utility of NOI as a measure of the operating performance of our assets is limited. NOI 
presented by us may not be comparable to NOI reported by other REITs that define these measures differently. We believe 
that to facilitate a clear understanding of our operating results, NOI should be examined in conjunction with net income 
(loss) attributable to common shareholders as presented in our consolidated financial statements. NOI should not be 
considered as an alternative to net income (loss) attributable to common shareholders as an indication of our performance 
or to cash flows as a measure of liquidity or our ability to make distributions. 
"NYSE" means the New York Stock Exchange. 
"Non-same store" refers to all operating assets excluded from the same store pool. 
"OP Units" refers to JBG SMITH LP common limited partnership units. 
"Percent leased" is based on leases signed as of December 31, 2024, and is calculated as total rentable square feet less 
rentable square feet available for lease divided by total rentable square feet expressed as a percentage. Out-of-service 
square feet are excluded from this calculation. 
"Percent occupied" is based on occupied rentable square feet/units as of December 31, 2024, and is calculated as: (i) for 
multifamily space, total units less unoccupied units divided by total units, expressed as a percentage, and (ii) for office and 
retail space, total rentable square feet less unoccupied square feet divided by total rentable square feet. Out-of-service 
square feet and units are excluded from this calculation. 
"QRS" means qualified real estate investment trust subsidiaries. 
"REC" means renewable energy credit. 
"Recently Delivered" refers to multifamily and commercial assets that are below 90% leased and have been delivered 
within the 12 months ended December 31, 2024. 
"REIT" means a real estate investment trust under Section 856 through 860 of the Code. 
"REMIC" means a real estate mortgage investment conduit. 
"SaaS" means software as a service. 

6 
"Same store" refers to the pool of assets that were in-service for the entirety of both periods being compared, except for 
assets for which significant redevelopment, renovation, or repositioning occurred during either of the periods being 
compared. 
"SEC" means the Securities and Exchange Commission. 
"Separation" refers to the spin-off transaction on July 17, 2017 through which we received substantially all the assets 
and liabilities of Vornado's Washington, D.C. segment. 
"Separation Agreement" refers to the Separation and Distribution Agreement. 
"Signed but not yet commenced leases" means leases that, as of December 31, 2024, have been executed but for which 
rent has not commenced. 
"SOC" means systems and organization controls. 
"SOFR" means the Secured Overnight Financing Rate. 
"Square feet" ("SF") refers to the area that can be rented to tenants, defined as: (i) for multifamily assets, management's 
estimate of approximate rentable square feet, (ii) for commercial assets, rentable square footage defined in the current 
lease and for vacant space the rentable square footage defined in the previous lease for that space, (iii) for under-
construction assets, management's estimate of approximate rentable square feet based on current design plans as of 
December 31, 2024, and (iv) for assets in the development pipeline, management's estimate of developable gross square 
feet based on current business plans with respect to real estate owned or controlled as of December 31, 2024. 
"STEM" means science, technology, engineering and mathematics. 
"TCFD" means Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures. 
"TIN" means taxpayer identification number. 
"TMP" means taxable mortgage pool. 
"Total annualized estimated rent" represents contractual monthly base rent before free rent, plus estimated tenant 
reimbursements for the month in which the lease is expected to commence, multiplied by 12. 
"Tranche A-1 Term Loan" refers to our $200.0 million term loan maturing in January 2026, as extended. 
"Tranche A-2 Term Loan" refers to our $400.0 million term loan maturing in January 2028. 
"Transaction and other costs" include costs related to completed, potential and pursued transactions, demolition costs, 
and severance and other costs. 
"TRS" refers to taxable REIT subsidiaries. 
"Under-construction" refers to assets that were under construction during the three months ended December 31, 2024. 
"Vornado" means Vornado Realty Trust, a Maryland real estate investment trust. 
"WHI" means the Washington Housing Initiative. 
"WHI Impact Pool" is an investment vehicle managed by JBG SMITH on behalf of third-party investors that invests in 
affordable workforce housing. 
 

7 
PART I 
ITEM 1. BUSINESS 
The Company 
JBG SMITH, a Maryland real estate investment trust, owns, operates and develops mixed-use properties concentrated in 
amenity-rich, Metro-served submarkets in and around Washington, D.C., most notably National Landing, that we believe 
have long-term growth potential and appeal to residential, office and retail tenants. Through an intense focus on 
placemaking, JBG SMITH cultivates vibrant, highly amenitized, walkable neighborhoods throughout the Washington, 
D.C. metropolitan area. Approximately 75.0% of our holdings are in the National Landing submarket in Northern Virginia, 
which is anchored by four key demand drivers: Amazon's headquarters; Virginia Tech's $1 billion Innovation Campus; 
proximity to the Pentagon; and our placemaking initiatives and public infrastructure improvements. In addition, our third-
party asset management and real estate services business provides fee-based real estate services. 
Substantially all our assets are held by, and our operations are conducted through, JBG SMITH LP. As of 
December 31, 2024, JBG SMITH, as its sole general partner, controlled JBG SMITH LP and owned 86.0% of its OP Units, 
after giving effect to the conversion of certain vested LTIP Units that are convertible into OP Units. JBG SMITH is referred 
to herein as "we," "us," "our" or other similar terms. 
As of December 31, 2024, our Operating Portfolio consisted of 38 operating assets comprising 16 multifamily assets 
totaling 6,781 units (6,781 units at our share), 20 commercial assets totaling 6.7 million square feet (6.3 million square 
feet at our share) and two wholly owned land assets for which we are the ground lessor. Additionally, we have one under-
construction multifamily asset with 775 units (775 units at our share) and 19 assets in our development pipeline totaling 
11.0 million square feet (8.9 million square feet at our share) of estimated potential development density. We present 
combined portfolio operating data that aggregate assets we consolidate in our consolidated financial statements and assets 
in which we own an interest, but do not consolidate in our financial results. For additional information regarding our assets, 
see Item 2 "Properties." 
Certain terms used throughout this Annual Report on Form 10-K are defined under "Definitions" starting on page 3.  
Our Strategy 
We own and operate urban mixed-use properties concentrated in amenity-rich, Metro-served submarkets in and around 
Washington, D.C., most notably National Landing, that we believe have long-term growth potential and appeal to 
residential, office and retail tenants. We have significant expertise with multifamily, office and retail assets. We believe 
that we are known for our creative deal-making and capital allocation skills and for our development and value creation 
expertise. Since the Formation Transaction, we have consistently focused our capital allocation strategy on maximizing 
long-term NAV per share growth, and will continue to do so. We intend to continue to opportunistically sell or recapitalize 
assets (which may be multifamily, commercial, and/or retail assets) as well as land sites where a ground lease or joint 
venture execution may represent the most attractive path to maximizing value. As long as we believe our share price does 
not reflect the underlying, intrinsic value of our business, as we do now, we expect to continue repurchasing shares through 
our share repurchase plan (which has a capacity of approximately $838 million as of February 14, 2025) and to fund such 
repurchases through such assets sales or recapitalizations. In a climate where office assets are near cyclical lows with 
limited liquidity, we intend in the near term to focus on sourcing liquidity from multifamily assets, specifically our 
multifamily assets in Washington, D.C. where our holdings are less concentrated. Recycling these assets will also further 
advance our strategy to concentrate our portfolio in National Landing. 
One of our approaches to value creation uses a series of complementary disciplines through a process we call 
"Placemaking." Placemaking involves strategically mixing high-quality multifamily and commercial buildings with 
anchor, specialty and neighborhood retail in a high density, thoughtfully planned and designed public space. Through this 
process, we create synergies, and thus value, across those varied uses leading to unique, amenity-rich, walkable 
neighborhoods that are desirable and enhance tenant and investor demand. We believe our Placemaking approach will 
increase occupancy and rental rates in our portfolio, in particular with respect to our concentrated and extensive land and 

8 
operating asset holdings in National Landing. National Landing, situated in Northern Virginia directly across the Potomac 
River from Washington, D.C., is the interconnected and walkable neighborhood that encompasses Crystal City, the eastern 
portion of Pentagon City and the northern portion of Potomac Yard. We believe National Landing is one of the region's 
best-located urban mixed-use communities due to its central location with proximity to the Pentagon, Amazon’s 
headquarters, Virginia Tech’s Innovation Campus and Reagan National Airport, and its large base of existing offices, 
apartments and hotels. 
We continue to implement our comprehensive plan to reposition our holdings in National Landing by executing a broad 
array of Placemaking strategies. Our Placemaking includes the delivery of new multifamily assets, the delivery of 
redeveloped and new office assets subject to demand therefor, amenity retail, and thoughtful improvements to the 
streetscape, sidewalks, parks and other outdoor gathering spaces. In keeping with our dedication to Placemaking, each 
new project is intended to contribute to an authentic and distinct neighborhood by creating a vibrant street environment 
with robust retail offerings and other amenities, including improved public spaces. To that end, we saw the delivery of two 
placemaking projects, Water Park and Surreal in 2023. In 2024, we delivered The Grace and Reva with 808 multifamily 
units and approximately 38,000 square feet of retail space, which were 68.6% leased as of December 31, 2024. We expect 
to deliver 2000/2001 South Bell Street, a 775-unit multifamily asset comprising two towers, Valen and The Zoe with 
ground floor retail, in 2025. Additionally, in 2024, we started construction on a new office amenity hub at 2011 Crystal 
Drive that, along with a repositioning of the asset itself, brings a large scale externally managed meeting and conference 
facility, two elevated food and beverage offerings, and an activated public lobby. 
We developed two new office buildings for Amazon on Metropolitan Park in National Landing, totaling 2.1 million square 
feet, inclusive of approximately 50,000 square feet of street-level retail with new shops and restaurants, and Amazon took 
occupancy of its new headquarters in 2023. We are the property manager and retail leasing agent for Amazon's 
headquarters at National Landing. As of December 31, 2024, we have leases with Amazon totaling approximately 357,000 
square feet in two office buildings in National Landing. 
In connection with Amazon's headquarters in National Landing, the Commonwealth of Virginia agreed to provide tax 
incentives to Amazon to create a minimum of 25,000 new full-time jobs and potentially 37,850 full-time jobs in National 
Landing with average annual wage targets for each calendar year, starting with $150,000 in 2019, and escalating 1.5% per 
year. As of April 2024, Amazon had created approximately 8,000 new full-time jobs in National Landing. We, alongside 
Amazon, Virginia Tech, and federal, state, and local governments plan to invest over $12.0 billion, including infrastructure 
investments, that will directly benefit National Landing. The infrastructure investments include: a Metro station (Potomac 
Yard) that opened in 2023, a new Metro entrance (Crystal Drive) currently under construction, a pedestrian bridge to 
Reagan National Airport; a new commuter rail station located between two of our Crystal Drive office assets; lowering of 
elevated sections of U.S. Route 1 that currently divide parts of National Landing to create better multimodal access and 
walkability; funding for the Virginia Tech Innovation Campus; and Long Bridge, the planned two-track rail connection 
between Washington, D.C. and National Landing. In addition to these publicly-funded efforts, we have also deployed 
digital infrastructure enhancements such as a densified, high-capacity fiber grid and 5G small cells as well as provisions 
for a small “edge” data center should there be demand for one in the future. 
We believe Virginia Tech's $1 billion Innovation Campus in National Landing is a powerful demand driver sitting adjacent 
to 1.3 million square feet of development density we own in National Landing and the Potomac Yard Metro station, all 
approximately one mile south of Amazon's headquarters. The campus is part of a 20-acre innovation district, of which the 
first phase encompasses approximately 1.6 million square feet of space, including four office towers and two residential 
buildings, with ground-level retail. In January 2025, the first building opened. At this campus, Virginia Tech intends to 
create an innovation ecosystem by co-locating academic and private sector uses to accelerate research and development 
spending, as well as the commercialization of technology. Virginia Tech plans to annually enroll approximately 750 master 
students and 200 PhD students in STEM fields at this campus. 
The following are key components of our strategy: 
Capitalize on Significant Demand Catalysts in National Landing. We believe that demand will continue to materialize 
at the critical intersection of defense and technology. The tailwinds created by Amazon, the Virginia Tech Innovation 
Campus, the Pentagon and our National Landing digital infrastructure platform will contribute to substantial growth from 

9 
our Operating Portfolio and our 6.8 million square foot development pipeline in National Landing. Approximately 75.0% 
of our portfolio is located in National Landing where Amazon is incentivized to create a minimum of 25,000 new full-
time jobs and potentially 37,850 full-time jobs, and Virginia Tech's $1 billion Innovation Campus is located. As of 
January 2025, Amazon required their corporate employees to work from the office five days per week which we believe 
will be a significant boon to National Landing demand and vibrancy.  
Given National Landing’s proximity to the Pentagon, recent historic increases in the U.S. defense budget and robust 
foreign defense spending, we believe National Landing is positioned to capture growing demand from defense-focused 
tenants. In 2024, 81.9% of leases executed by us in National Landing were with the Department of Defense and defense 
contractors, including technology companies. Defense and national security remain a priority for the current administration 
and we believe that there will be an increasing focus on technology’s role in those areas. 
Thoughtfully Allocate our Capital and Concentrate our Portfolio in National Landing. A fundamental component of 
our strategy to maximize long-term NAV per share is thoughtful capital allocation. We evaluate development, dispositions, 
share repurchases and other investment decisions based on how they may impact long-term NAV per share. We intend to 
continue to opportunistically sell or recapitalize assets as well as monetize land sites where a ground lease or joint venture 
execution may represent the most attractive path to maximizing value. Successful execution of our capital allocation 
strategy enables us to source capital at NAV from the disposition of assets generating low cash yields and repurchase our 
shares, since we believe our share price currently fails to reflect the underlying, intrinsic value of our business, and invest 
in development projects with significant yield spreads and profit potential. While recent market conditions have 
significantly slowed down the pace of asset sales, we believe market conditions may be improving and anticipate 
redeploying the proceeds from any sales to share repurchases and funding our planned growth in National Landing. In a 
climate where office assets are near cyclical lows with limited liquidity, we intend in the near term to focus on sourcing 
liquidity from multifamily assets, specifically our multifamily assets in Washington, D.C. where our holdings are less 
concentrated. In the meantime, we continue to advance the design and entitlement of our 11.0 million square feet 
(8.9 million square feet at our share) of estimated potential development density in our development pipeline and intend 
to look to source joint venture capital as a means of funding these developments as market conditions permit. 
While our Primary Focus is on Continuing to Grow our Investments in National Landing, we Continue to Operate 
Mixed-Use Assets in Other High-Growth, Metro-Served Submarkets in the Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Area. 
To the extent it does not conflict with our capital allocation strategy and to the extent we believe doing so will maximize 
our long-term NAV per share growth, we intend to continue owning and operating urban mixed-use properties 
concentrated in what we believe are the highest growth, Metro-served submarkets in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan 
area with high barriers to entry and vibrant urban amenities. In addition to National Landing, these submarkets currently 
include the Ballpark, U Street/Shaw and Union Market/NoMa in the District of Columbia. These submarkets generally 
feature strong economic and demographic attributes, as well as superior transportation infrastructure that caters to the 
preferences of multifamily, office and retail tenants. We believe these positive attributes will enable our assets located in 
these high-growth submarkets to outperform the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area as a whole.  
Drive Incremental Growth Through Lease-up and Stabilization of Our Operating Assets, and Deliver Our Under-
Construction Asset. Given our leasing capabilities and tenant demand for high-quality space in our submarkets, we 
believe that we are well positioned to achieve significant internal growth from the lease-up of vacant space in our in-
service Operating Portfolio. As of December 31, 2024, we had 16 multifamily assets totaling 6,781 units (6,781 units at 
our share), which were 92.9% leased at our share. As of December 31, 2024, we had 20 commercial assets totaling 
6.7 million square feet (6.3 million square feet at our share), which were 78.6% leased at our share, resulting in 1.4 million 
square feet available for lease. In addition to portfolio lease-up, we expect increases in NOI from: (i) the commencement 
of signed but not yet commenced office and retail leases ($5.6 million total annualized estimated rent as of 
December 31, 2024, of which $1.5 million is expected in 2025) and (ii) contractual rent escalators in our non-GSA office 
and retail leases, which are based on increases in the Consumer Price Index or a fixed percentage. 
As of December 31, 2024, we had 775 multifamily units under construction in National Landing at 2000/2001 South Bell 
Street (Valen and The Zoe) and started construction on a new amenity hub at 2011 Crystal Drive that, based on our current 
plans and estimates, require an additional $73.3 million to complete, which we anticipate will be primarily expended over 
the next year.  

10 
Monetize Our Substantial Development Pipeline. We expect our development pipeline will produce favorable risk-
adjusted returns on invested capital.  
As of December 31, 2024, our development pipeline consisted of 19 assets, and we estimate it can support 11.0 million 
square feet (8.9 million square feet at our share) of estimated potential development density: 87.1% of this potential 
development density comprises multifamily projects located in the high-growth submarkets of National Landing and 
Union Market/NoMa; and 100.0% of this potential development density is Metro-served. Subject to market conditions, 
we intend to invest in multifamily development and potentially new office development subject to preleasing. The 
estimated potential development densities and uses reflect our current business plans as of December 31, 2024 and are 
subject to change based on market conditions.  
In addition to developing select assets in this pipeline, we expect to unlock value through opportunistic asset sales, ground 
leases and recapitalizations. 
Third-Party Services Business 
Our third-party asset management and real estate services business provides fee-based real estate services to third parties, 
including the JBG Legacy Funds. Although a significant portion of the assets and interests in assets formerly owned by 
certain of the JBG Legacy Funds were contributed to us in the Combination, the JBG Legacy Funds retained certain assets 
that were not consistent with our long-term business strategy. With respect to the remaining investments of the JBG Legacy 
Funds, we provide asset management, property management, development, construction management, leasing and other 
services. We expect to continue to earn fees for the management of the JBG Legacy Funds until their investments are 
liquidated. Certain individual members of our management team own direct equity co-investment and promote interests 
in the JBG Legacy Funds and certain of the funds' investments that were not contributed to us. These economic interests 
will be eliminated as the JBG Legacy Funds are wound down over time. As of December 31, 2024, the JBG Legacy Funds 
had four remaining assets. Additionally, we often retain management of properties we sell as part of our capital allocation 
strategy. These assets, while no longer owned by us, continue to generate third-party service fees. 
 
We believe that the fees we earn in connection with providing these third-party services enhance our overall returns, 
provide additional scale and efficiency in our operating and development businesses and absorb a portion of the overhead 
and other administrative costs of our platform. This scale provides competitive advantages, including market knowledge, 
buying power and operating efficiencies across all product types. We also believe that our existing relationships arising 
out of our third-party asset management and real estate services business will continue to provide potential access to capital 
and new investment opportunities.  
Competition 
The commercial real estate markets in which we operate are highly competitive. We compete with numerous acquirers, 
developers, owners and operators of commercial real estate including other REITs, private equity investors, domestic and 
foreign financial institutions, life insurance companies, pension trusts, partnerships, and individual investors, many of 
which own or may seek to acquire or develop assets similar to ours in the same markets in which our assets are located. 
These competitors may have greater financial resources or access to capital than we do or be willing to acquire assets in 
transactions which are more highly leveraged or are less attractive from a financial viewpoint than we are willing to pursue, 
which may reduce the number of suitable investment opportunities available to us or increase pricing. Leasing is a major 
component of our business and is highly competitive. The principal means of competition in leasing are lease terms 
(including rent charged and tenant improvement allowances), location, services provided, and the nature and condition of 
the asset to be leased. If our competitors offer space at rental rates below current market rates, below the rental rates we 
currently charge our tenants, in better locations within our markets, in higher quality assets or offer better services, we 
may lose existing and potential tenants, and we may be pressured to reduce our rental rates below those we currently 
charge to retain tenants when our tenants' leases expire. 

11 
Segment Data 
We operate in the following business segments: multifamily, commercial and third-party asset management and real estate 
services. Financial information related to these business segments for each of the three years in the period ended 
December 31, 2024 is set forth in Note 20 to the consolidated financial statements. 
Tax Status 
We have elected to be taxed as a REIT under Sections 856-860 of the Code. Under those sections, a REIT which distributes 
at least 90% of its REIT taxable income as dividends to its shareholders each year and which meets certain other conditions 
will not be taxed on that portion of its taxable income which is distributed to its shareholders. We currently adhere and 
intend to continue to adhere to these requirements and to maintain our REIT status in future periods. 
Future distributions will be declared and paid at the discretion of our Board of Trustees and will depend upon cash 
generated by operating activities, our financial condition, capital requirements, annual dividend requirements under the 
REIT provisions of the Code and such other factors as our Board of Trustees deems relevant. 
We also participate in the activities conducted by our subsidiary entities that have elected to be treated as TRSs under the 
Code. As such, we are subject to federal, state, and local taxes on the income from these activities. For additional 
information regarding our REIT status, see Item 9B "Other Information." 
Significant Tenants 
Only commercial leases with the U.S. federal government accounted for 10% or more of our total revenue as follows: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
 
    
2024 
     
2023 
     
2022 
 
 
 
(Dollars in thousands) 
Rental revenue from the U.S. federal government 
 $  64,958  
$  64,439  
$  75,516  
Percentage of total revenue 
   
 11.9 %    
 10.7 %    
 12.5 %
 
For a further discussion of the risks related to the federal government as tenant, including the timing of potential lease 
renewals or terminations, see Item 1A “Risk Factors” - Risks Related to Our Business and Operations - We derive a 
significant portion of our revenue from U.S. federal government tenants, and we may face additional risks and costs 
associated with directly managing assets occupied by government tenants.  
 
Sustainability 
Our business values integrate environmental sustainability, social responsibility and strong governance practices 
throughout our organization. We believe that by understanding the social and environmental impacts of our business, we 
are better able to protect asset value, reduce risk, and advance initiatives that result in positive outcomes creating shared 
value. Our business model prioritizes maximizing long-term NAV per share. By investing in urban infill and transit-
oriented development and strategically mixing high-quality multifamily and commercial buildings with public areas, retail 
spaces, and walkable streets, we are working to define neighborhoods that deliver benefits to the environment and our 
community, as well as long-term value to our shareholders. 
We remain committed to transparent reporting of sustainability financial and non-financial indicators. We intend to 
continue publishing an annual sustainability report with key performance indicators that are aligned with the Global 
Reporting Initiative reporting framework, United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, Sustainability Accounting 
Standards Board Standards, and recommendations set forth by the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures. 
In 2024, we maintained a carbon neutral operating portfolio for Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions. Carbon neutrality was 
accomplished first through energy and water efficiency, then the purchase of verified carbon offsets for Scope 1 emissions 
produced by onsite natural gas consumption and fugitive refrigerant emissions, and the purchase of Green-e RECs for 
Scope 2 emissions produced by consuming onsite electricity procured by us. (We own three company vehicles with 

12 
emissions that are less than 0.01% of our carbon footprint and, therefore, are not included in our calculations of carbon 
neutrality.) Our detailed sustainability information, including our strategy, key performance targets and indicators, annual 
absolute comparisons, achievements and historical sustainability reports are available on our website 
at https://www.JBGSMITH.com/About/Sustainability. All energy, water, waste and greenhouse gas emissions data in our 
sustainability report are third-party, limited assurance verified following ISO 14064-3. Our website and the information 
contained therein or connected thereto are not intended to be incorporated into this Annual Report on Form 10-K.  
We focus on operating efficiency, responding to evolving environmental and societal trends, and delivering on the needs 
of our tenants and communities. We have demonstrated the results of this focus by: 
• 
Achieving a 5-star ranking in the GRESB Assessment for both diversified operating assets and future 
development, and being recognized as a 2024 Global and Regional Sector Leader – Existing Portfolio and 
Regional Sector Leader - Development - Residential Sector. 
• 
Being named 2024 Nareit Diversified Leader in the Light award winner for sustained sustainability excellence. 
• 
Being named a Nareit Sustainability At Scale award winner. 
• 
Maintaining a Sustainability Committee and oversight of environmental and social matters by the Board of 
Trustees' Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee. 
• 
Surpassing $114 million in investor commitments to the JBG SMITH-managed WHI Impact Pool, which raises 
funds from third parties and, through 2024, has closed $78.0 million in financing related to the purchase of 
residential communities containing 3,018 workforce housing units. We launched the WHI in 2018 in partnership 
with the Federal City Council to preserve or build between 2,000 and 3,000 units of workforce housing in the 
Washington, D.C. region.  
Our sustainability team works directly with our business units to integrate our sustainability principles throughout our 
operations and investment processes. Our sustainability team is responsible for leading annual reporting efforts, 
maintaining building certifications, energy, water and waste benchmarking, sustainability strategy development, and 
implementation and coordination with industry and community partners. 
To ensure that our sustainability principles are fully integrated into our business practices, our sustainability, human 
resources, legal, accounting and social impact investing teams, as well as members of our management team, provide top-
down support for the implementation of our initiatives. Our Sustainability Committee is responsible for improvement 
initiatives and provides our Board of Trustees' Corporate Governance & Nominating and Audit Committees with periodic 
updates on sustainability strategy. Accomplishments of this group in 2024 include an update to climate-related risks 
inclusive of physical and transition risks and the potential financial impacts of those risks, and the creation and adoption 
of a supply chain code of conduct and a social value statement. 
Energy and Water Efficiency and Management 
We believe that the efficient use of natural resources will result in sustainable long-term value and mitigate climate-related 
risks. By 2030, we have committed to reduce: energy consumption 25%, predicted energy consumption 25%, water 
consumption 20% and greenhouse gas emissions (Scope 1 and 2) 25%. Further, by 2030, we have committed to increase 
waste diversion to 60% and verify all assets using green building and health and well-being certifications across our 
Operating Portfolio and development pipeline. We achieve this improvement through real time energy use monitoring and 
capital investments in energy and water saving projects. We report progress on these commitments annually in our 
sustainability report. 
Our long-term strategy to reduce energy and water consumption includes operational and capital improvements that align 
with our business plan and contribute to attaining our performance targets. Asset teams review historical performance 
annually, conduct energy audits and regularly assess opportunities to achieve efficiency targets. Capital investment 
planning considers the useful life of equipment, energy and water efficiency, occupant health impacts and maintenance 
requirements. 

13 
Our development strategy focuses on reducing predicted energy and water consumption and embodied carbon, contributing 
to attaining our performance targets. Development teams use energy, water, and embodied carbon modeling to inform 
design decisions that best fit each individual building program, adapt to identified climate change conditions for our region, 
and promote healthy buildings. Since the establishment of performance targets for our development projects, we are 
tracking an aggregate 25% reduction in predicted energy consumption, 35% reduction in predicted water use and 20% 
reduction in embodied carbon as of December 31, 2024.  
We use green building and health and well-being certifications as a verification tool across our portfolio. These 
certifications demonstrate our commitment to green, smart, and healthy buildings and verify predicted operational 
performance. We seek to benchmark 100% of our assets to help inform capital improvement projects. As of 
December 31, 2024: 
• 
93% of all operating assets, based on square footage, have earned at least one green building or health and well-
being certification: 
o 
3.9 million square feet of LEED Certified Multifamily Space (70%) 
o 
2.2 million square feet of LEED Certified Commercial Space (35%) 
o 
2.8 million square feet of ENERGY STAR Certified Multifamily Space (50%) 
o 
3.7 million square feet of ENERGY STAR Certified Commercial Space (59%) 
o 
6.2 million square feet of BOMA 360 Certified Commercial Space (99%) 
o 
4.6 million square feet of Fitwel Full Building Certified Commercial and Multifamily Space (38%) 
o 
6.2 million square feet of Fitwel Viral Response Module Certified Commercial Space (99%) 
• 
99.6% of our operating assets' energy and water use are benchmarked 
Tenant Sustainability Impacts 
Customer service is an integral component of real estate management. Our mission includes creating a unique experience 
at all our properties where our tenants' needs are our highest priority. We believe in sustainability as a service — by 
integrating efficiency and conservation into standard operating practices, we engage on topics that are most impactful to 
our tenants and residents. We are committed to providing a healthy living and working environment for building occupants. 
We accomplish this goal through monitoring and improving indoor air quality, eliminating toxic chemicals, providing 
access to nature, daylight, fresh foods, fitness amenities, composting and waste reduction programs. 
We are a Green Lease Leader established by the Institute for Market Transformation and the U.S. Department of Energy's 
Better Buildings Alliance. Green Lease Leaders recognizes companies who use the leasing process to achieve better 
collaboration between landlords and tenants with the goal of reducing building energy consumption and operating costs. 
Our standard lease contains a cost recovery clause for resource efficiency-related capital improvements and requires 
tenants to provide data for measuring, managing, and reporting sustainability performance. This language is included in 
100% of our new office and retail leases and renewals. 
Nearly all our commercial tenants are metered at the whole building level for their grid electricity and water usage. Many 
of our retail tenants in multifamily buildings are billed directly for electricity and water. As such, the percentage of our 
directly sub-metered tenants is very low. In most cases, we receive a bill at the whole building level for grid electricity 
and water usage, and bill tenants based on the percentage of the building's square footage that they occupy. These tenants 
are not considered to be separately metered or sub-metered. 
Climate Change Resilience 
We take climate change and the associated risks seriously, and we are committed to managing and avoiding the impacts 
of climate change using science to inform action. We stand with our communities, tenants and shareholders in supporting 
meaningful solutions that address this global challenge. To develop a more informed view of future climate conditions and 
further our understanding of the direct climate-related risks to our properties, we have conducted a new climate-related 

14 
risk assessment (both acute and chronic risks across our operating assets and development pipeline) which addresses both 
physical and transition climate risk factors, and estimates the financial implications of those modeled risks at the asset 
level. 
Climate Change Risk Management Strategy  
 
We have aligned our climate-related disclosures with the recommendations of the TCFD. As defined by the TCFD 
framework, physical risks associated with climate change include acute risks (extreme weather-related events) and chronic 
risks (such as extreme heat and coastal flooding), and transition risks associated with climate change include policy and 
legal risks, market and reputation-related risks and decarbonization technology risks. 
  
Our 2024 assessment of climate change risk relied on S&P Global Inc.'s Climanomics modeling tool. The Climanomics 
methodology projects portfolio level risk exposure as well as individual asset risk exposure over four reference scenarios, 
or representative concentration pathways, established by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and across a 
range of time horizons through 2100. Climanomics’ primary output is a risk exposure metric called MAAL. This value is 
presented as both absolute MAAL ($ in millions) and relative MAAL (% of total asset or portfolio value). We intend to 
conduct periodic climate-related risk assessments as the composition of our portfolio changes.  
 
The assessment included all in-service assets, and our development pipeline and landholdings, and included climate events 
such as hurricane, wildfire, temperature extremes, water stress, drought, and pluvial, fluvial and coastal flooding. The 
assessment of our portfolio identified pluvial (urban flooding) and coastal flooding and temperature extremes (heat stress) 
as top hazards. We currently have no properties in a Federal Emergency Management Agency hazard designated area.  
 
Asset-Level Risk Management  
We are managing transition risks by benchmarking energy and water consumption, carbon emissions and waste 
performance at the asset level and review this information with asset management and operations teams quarterly. As a 
leader in green building, we will continue to make capital investments that enhance building performance and tenant 
comfort, energy and water efficiency, on-site renewable energy and other decarbonization strategies. We work with our 
insurance team to benchmark resilience features and develop adaptations for short-term horizons. We aim to develop risk 
mitigation and physical resilience plans for all assets taking into account the outputs from the Climanomics tool. 
 
Carbon-Neutral Operations Strategy  
Our strategy to maintain carbon-neutral operations includes the following steps:  
• 
First and foremost, plan for and deploy energy and water efficiency at all assets.  
• 
Plan for and deploy energy, water, and embodied carbon reductions in the design of our buildings. 
• 
Deploy on-site renewable energy where most impactful. 
• 
Develop and deploy off-site renewable procurement strategies. 
• 
To the extent necessary, offset any remaining emissions by purchasing verified renewable energy credits and 
carbon offsets.  
Social Responsibility 
We believe the economic strength of our region is central to sustaining the long-term value of our portfolio. We are 
committed to the economic development of the Washington D.C. metropolitan area through continued investment in our 
projects and local communities. We recognize, however, that new development can foster challenging growth dynamics. 
We strive to work alongside community members, leaders, and local and federal governments to appropriately respond to 
these challenges. In 2024, we combined our impact investing activities, including management of the WHI Impact Pool 
under the newly formed LEO Impact Capital, our impact investment management platform. 

15 
The WHI is a scalable, market-driven model funded by a unique relationship between philanthropy and private 
investment. As of December 31, 2024, we have invested $8.3 million of our $11.2 million commitment in the WHI Impact 
Pool. The WHI Impact Pool completed fundraising in 2020 with capital commitments totaling $114.4 million, and has 
closed $78.0 million in financing related to the purchase of residential communities containing 3,018 units through 
December 31, 2024.  
To 
learn 
more 
about 
our 
sustainability 
initiatives 
and 
performance, 
please 
visit 
https://www.JBGSMITH.com/About/Sustainability and download our Sustainability Report. Our website and the 
information contained therein or connected thereto are not intended to be incorporated into this Annual Report on 
Form 10-K. 
Equal Employment Opportunity 
We are committed to a merit-based human capital management strategy that is aimed at attracting, retaining and developing 
the best talent in the industry. See "Human Capital" below for further discussion. 
Governance  
We are engaged in addressing sustainability matters, including climate-related matters, at all levels of our organization. 
Management’s role in overseeing, assessing, and managing climate-related risks, opportunities and initiatives is integrated 
throughout our business units. We have a dedicated team of sustainability professionals focused on sustainability matters 
that coordinate and collaborate across business units and with our Board of Trustees and management, and which advises 
on environmental sustainability matters and develops and implements related initiatives. In 2022, management established 
a new Sustainability Committee to help inform strategy and more robustly advise the Board of Trustees on climate-related 
risks and opportunities. The Sustainability Committee is responsible for ensuring compliance with guidelines from the 
SEC and other regulatory bodies, and assists in establishing our general strategy as it relates to sustainability matters that 
may affect our business, operation, performance or reputation. The Sustainability Committee reports to the Chief Legal 
Officer, with oversight provided by the Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee. Co-chairs include our Deputy 
General Counsel and Senior Vice President of Sustainability, with representation by business leaders from various groups 
across the organization. 
Regulatory Matters 
Environmental Matters 
Under various federal, state and local laws, ordinances and regulations, a current or former owner or operator of real estate 
may be liable for conducting or paying for the costs of the investigation, removal or remediation of certain hazardous or 
toxic substances or petroleum products on, under or from that real estate. These laws often impose such liability without 
regard to whether the owner knew of, or was responsible for, the presence or release of hazardous or toxic substances or 
petroleum products, and the liability may be joint and several. The costs of investigation, remediation or removal of these 
substances may be substantial and could exceed the value of the property, and the presence of these substances, or the 
failure to promptly remediate these substances, may adversely affect the owner's ability to sell, operate, or develop the real 
estate or to borrow using the real estate as collateral. In connection with the ownership and operation of our current and 
former assets, we may be potentially liable for these costs. The operations of current and former tenants at our assets have 
involved, or may have involved, the presence or use of hazardous substances or petroleum products or the generation of 
hazardous wastes, and indemnities in our lease agreements may not fully protect us from liability, if, for example, a tenant 
responsible for environmental noncompliance or contamination becomes insolvent. The release of these hazardous 
substances and wastes and petroleum products could result in us incurring liabilities to investigate or remediate any 
resulting contamination. The presence of contamination or the failure to remediate contamination at our properties may 
(i) expose us to third-party liability (e.g., for cleanup costs, natural resource damages, bodily injury or property damage), 
(ii) subject our properties to liens in favor of the government for damages and costs the government incurs in connection 
with the contamination, (iii) impose restrictions on the manner in which a property may be used or businesses may be 
operated, or (iv) materially adversely affect our ability to sell, lease or develop the real estate or to borrow using the real 
estate as collateral. In addition, our assets are exposed to the risk of contamination originating from other sources. While 

16 
a property owner may not be responsible for remediating contamination that has migrated onsite from an identifiable and 
viable offsite source, the contaminant's presence can have adverse effects on operations and the redevelopment of our 
assets. To the extent we arrange for contaminated materials to be sent to other locations for treatment or disposal, we may 
be liable for the cleanup of those sites if they become contaminated, without regard to whether we complied with 
environmental laws in doing so. 
Most of our assets have been subject, at some point, to environmental assessments that are intended to evaluate the 
environmental condition of the subject and surrounding assets. These environmental assessments generally have included 
a historical review, a public records review, a visual inspection of the site and surrounding assets, visual or historical 
evidence of underground storage tanks and other features, and the preparation and issuance of a written report. Soil, soil 
vapor and/or groundwater subsurface testing is conducted at our assets, when necessary, to further investigate any 
conditions identified by the initial assessment that could reasonably be expected to pose a material concern to the property 
or result in us incurring material environmental liabilities as a result of redevelopment. The tests may not, however, have 
included extensive sampling or subsurface investigations. In each case where the environmental assessments have 
identified conditions requiring remedial actions required by law, we have initiated appropriate actions. The environmental 
assessments have not revealed any material environmental contamination that we believe would have a material adverse 
effect on our overall business, financial condition or results of operations, or that have not been anticipated and remediated 
during site redevelopment as required by law. Nevertheless, there can be no assurance that the identification of new areas 
of contamination, changes in the extent or known scope of contamination, the discovery of additional sites or changes in 
cleanup requirements would not result in significant cost to us. 
Our operations and assets, and the operations of our tenants, are subject to various federal, state and local laws and 
regulations concerning the protection of the environment including air and water quality, hazardous or toxic substances 
and health and safety. The cost to comply with such requirements may be significant and if we fail to comply with such 
requirements, we could be subject to significant fines. Moreover, environmental requirements have and may continue to 
become increasingly stringent, and our costs or operating restrictions may increase as a result. 
  
Affordable Housing and Tenant Protection Regulations 
Certain states and municipalities have adopted laws and regulations imposing restrictions on the timing or amount of rent 
increases and other tenant protections. As of December 31, 2024, approximately 6% of the multifamily units in our 
Operating Portfolio were designated as affordable housing. In addition, Washington, D.C. and Montgomery County, 
Maryland have laws that require, in certain circumstances, an owner of a multifamily rental property to allow tenant 
organizations the option to purchase the building at a market price if the owner attempts to sell the property. We expect to 
continue operating and acquiring assets in areas that either are subject to these types of laws or regulations or where such 
laws or regulations may be enacted in the future. Such laws and regulations limit our ability to charge market rents, increase 
rents, evict tenants or recover increases in our operating expenses and could make it more difficult for us to dispose of 
assets in certain circumstances. 
The Americans with Disabilities Act and other Federal, State and Local Regulations 
The ADA generally requires that public buildings, including our assets, meet certain federal requirements related to access 
and use by disabled persons. Noncompliance could result in the imposition of fines by the federal government or the award 
of damages to private litigants and/or legal fees to their counsel. If, under the ADA, we are required to make substantial 
alterations and capital expenditures in one or more of our assets, including the removal of access barriers, it could have a 
material adverse effect on us. 
Additionally, our assets are subject to various federal, state and local regulatory requirements, such as state and local fire 
and life safety requirements. If we fail to comply with these requirements, we could incur fines or private damage awards. 
We do not know whether existing requirements will change or whether compliance with future requirements will require 
significant unanticipated expenditures that will affect our cash flow and results of operations. 

17 
Regulation Related to Government Tenants 
As discussed above, the U.S. federal government is a significant tenant. Lease agreements with federal government 
agencies contain provisions required by federal law, which require, among other things, that the lessor of the property 
agree to comply with certain rules and regulations, including rules and regulations related to anti-kickback procedures, 
examination of records, audits and records, equal opportunity provisions, prohibition against segregated facilities, certain 
executive orders, subcontractor cost or pricing data, and certain provisions intending to assist small businesses. We directly 
manage assets with federal government agency tenants, which subjects us to additional risks associated with compliance 
with applicable federal rules and regulations. In addition, there are requirements relating to the potential application of 
equal opportunity provisions and related anti-discrimination requirements, including but not limited to, the Civil Rights 
Act of 1964, the Vietnam Era Veterans’ Readjustment Assistance Act, the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and the Randolph-
Sheppard Act. We are also prohibited from implementing any programs promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion that 
violate any applicable federal anti-discrimination laws. Compliance with these requirements is costly and any increase in 
regulation could increase our costs, which could have a material adverse effect on us. 
Human Capital 
Our headquarters is located at 4747 Bethesda Avenue, Suite 200, Bethesda, MD 20814. As of December 31, 2024, we had 
645 employees.  
We believe that our talent is our competitive advantage. To that end, we focus on talent development and succession 
planning and pay-for-performance. We utilize talent management practices in the broadest sense to create an engaging 
workplace experience for our employees, where they feel valued, respected and supported. We are keenly focused on the 
employee experience and want every person to feel respected for what makes them unique. At the same time, our core 
values provide a sound structure for finding common ground and working together as a team to deliver the best possible 
outcomes.  
We offer our employees an environment that enables them to be confident in their in-office experience and demonstrate 
the energy and excitement that comes from being together and collaborating with coworkers to achieve desirable outcomes. 
In addition, we are proud to have been recognized a "Top Workplace" several times in past years, and are focused on 
providing a positive employee experience to ensure that we remain an employer of choice.  
We continually invest in our employee population, ensuring our employee experience more broadly continues to help us 
attract and retain the best talent in the industry. The list below is a sampling of offerings that help create a compelling 
employee experience: 
• 
Streamlined annual performance reviews 
• 
Executive coaching available 
• 
Employee share purchase plan 
• 
Hybrid / flexible work schedules 
• 
Flexible paid time off 
• 
Regular town halls where senior management updates the entire team on recent progress and other important 
matters  
• 
Mentorship and coaching programs to develop and retain talent 
• 
Employee referral program 
• 
Generous company subsidy on health-related benefits 
• 
Lunches with Leaders 
• 
Volunteer opportunities 

18 
In addition to the above, we have a strong pay-for-performance culture. We want our employees to feel aligned with our 
company vision and enabled to grow in their careers. To that end, we have a strong track record of promoting from within. 
Consequently, the opportunities for growth and development also help to keep our population engaged and motivated. 
With an ongoing focus on our three strategic pillars – (i) employee development, (ii) engagement and (iii) recruiting – we 
have made additional progress and have continued to drive cultural and behavioral change. We encourage a wide variety 
of perspectives, views and ideas in our workforce. We pride ourselves on our strong, collaborative culture, and we strive 
to create a supportive and healthy work environment for our employees, which helps us continue to attract innovators to 
our organization. We have maintained our strategic partnerships with external organizations to ensure that we are building 
a strong pipeline of talent. 
Available Information 
Copies of our Annual Report on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, Current Reports on Form 8-K, and 
amendments to those reports are available free of charge through our website (https://www.JBGSMITH.com) as soon as 
reasonably practicable after they are electronically filed with, or furnished to, the SEC. Also available on our website are 
copies of our Audit Committee Charter, Compensation Committee Charter, Corporate Governance and Nominating 
Committee Charter, Code of Business Conduct and Ethics and Corporate Governance Guidelines. In the event of any 
changes to these charters or the code or guidelines, changed copies will also be made available on our website. Copies of 
these documents are also available directly from us free of charge. Our website also includes other financial information, 
including certain financial measures not in compliance with GAAP, none of which is a part of this Annual Report on 
Form 10-K. Copies of our filings under the Exchange Act are also available free of charge from us, upon request. 
 
ITEM 1A. RISK FACTORS 
You should carefully consider the following risks in evaluating our company and our common shares. If any of the 
following risks were to occur, our business, prospects, financial condition, results of operations, cash flow, and the ability 
to make distributions to our shareholders could be materially and adversely affected, which we refer to herein collectively 
as a "material adverse effect on us," the per share trading price of our common shares could decline significantly, and 
you could lose all or part of your investment. Some statements in this Form 10-K, including statements in the following 
risk factors, constitute forward-looking statements. Refer to the section entitled "Cautionary Statement Concerning 
Forward-Looking Statements" for additional information regarding these forward-looking statements. 
Risks Related to Our Business and Operations 
A material portion of our portfolio comprises office assets, which have generally experienced lower demand since early 
2020 and may experience a further decrease in demand that could have a material adverse effect on us.  
A material portion of our portfolio comprises office assets, which, due to the continued prevalence of work-from-home 
policies and practices, have generally experienced a decrease in demand and may experience a further decrease in demand 
as some tenants do not renew leases as they expire or renew space with a smaller footprint, which could have a material 
adverse effect on us. Additionally, in the current climate where office assets are near cyclical lows with limited liquidity, 
we intend to focus in the near term on sourcing liquidity through the sale of multifamily assets, which would result in our 
office assets comprising a larger portion of our portfolio. Demand for office space in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan 
area and nationwide, including in our portfolio, has remained relatively low and may continue to decline due to increased 
usage of teleworking arrangements and more flexible work-from-anywhere policies leading to reconsiderations regarding 
amount of square footage needed (e.g. certain tenants have reduced their leased square footage or advised us of their 
intention to do so), and cost cutting, which could lead to continued lower office occupancy (as of December 31, 2024, 
13.5% of our commercial and retail leases at our share, based on square footage, were scheduled to expire in 2025 or had 
month-to-month terms, and 4.4% were scheduled to expire in 2026), and new leasing has been slow to recover and may 
continue to lag due to delayed return-to-office plans and decision-making related to future office utilization.  

19 
Our portfolio of assets is geographically concentrated in Washington, D.C. metropolitan area submarkets, and 
particularly concentrated in National Landing, which makes us susceptible to adverse economic and other conditions 
such that an economic downturn affecting this area could have a material adverse effect on us. 
We are particularly susceptible to adverse economic or other conditions in the Washington D.C. metropolitan market (such 
as periods of economic slowdown or recession, business layoffs or downsizing, industry slowdowns, actual or anticipated 
federal government shutdowns, uncertainties related to federal elections, relocations of businesses or federal agencies and 
functions, increases in real estate and other taxes, actual or perceived increases in retail theft and other crime, imposed 
curfews or states of security, and the cost of complying with governmental regulations or increased regulation), as well as 
to natural disasters (including earthquakes, floods, storms and hurricanes), utility outages (including electricity and 
drinking water), potentially adverse effects of climate change and other disruptions that occur in this market (such as 
terrorist activity or threats of terrorist activity and other events), any of which may have a greater impact on the value of 
our assets or on our operating results than if we owned a more geographically diverse portfolio.  
Additionally, acts of violence, including terrorist attacks in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area could directly or 
indirectly damage our assets, both physically and financially, or cause losses that materially exceed our insurance coverage. 
Properties that are occupied by federal government tenants may be more likely to be the target of a future attack. Moreover, 
the same risks that apply to the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area as a whole also apply to the individual submarkets 
where our assets are located. National Landing makes up approximately 75% of our portfolio based on square footage at 
our share, and we expect that percentage to increase in the coming years. Any adverse economic or other conditions in the 
Washington, D.C. metropolitan area and our submarkets, especially National Landing, or any decrease in demand for 
multifamily, office or retail assets could have a material adverse effect on us.  
Our assets and the property development market in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area are dependent on an 
economy that is heavily reliant on federal government spending and use of office assets, and any actual or anticipated 
curtailment of such spending could have a material adverse effect on us. 
Any curtailment of federal government spending, whether due to a change of presidential administration or control of 
Congress, federal government sequestrations, furloughs or shutdowns, a slowdown of the U.S. and/or global economy, 
any change in federal government agencies work-from-home policies or uses of office space, relocation of federal agencies 
and functions, or other factors, could have an adverse impact on real estate values and property development in the 
Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, on demand and willingness to enter into long-term contracts for office space by the 
federal government and companies dependent upon the federal government, as well as on occupancy rates and annualized 
rents of multifamily and retail assets by occupants or patrons whose employment is by or related to the federal government. 
For instance, certain of our GSA tenants have reduced their leased square footage. Any such curtailments in federal 
spending or changes in federal leasing policy could occur in the future, which could have a material adverse effect on us. 
We have significant exposure to Amazon and the National Landing submarket. 
The impact of Amazon's headquarters in National Landing is difficult to forecast and quantify and may differ from what 
we, financial or industry analysts or investors anticipate and have anticipated since Amazon’s November 2018 
announcement that it had selected sites in National Landing as the location of its new headquarters. We have significant 
exposure to Amazon as a tenant and as a result of fees we expect to receive from them as developer, property manager, 
and retail leasing agent for the company’s headquarters at National Landing. As of December 31, 2024, we have leases 
with Amazon in two office buildings in National Landing totaling approximately 357,000 square feet with annualized rent 
totaling $16.6 million. If Amazon invests less than the announced amounts in National Landing or makes such investment 
over a longer period than anticipated, if its business prospects decline, if it reduces the size of its workforce in National 
Landing below initially anticipated levels or further delays hiring or if it leases, releases or develops less square footage 
than anticipated, our ability to achieve the benefits associated with Amazon's headquarters location in National Landing 
could be adversely affected. If we, Virginia Tech, Amazon, federal, state and local governments do not make all the 
anticipated investments, including infrastructure investments, that would directly benefit National Landing, we could be 
adversely affected. Furthermore, Amazon's headquarters may not have the anticipated collateral financial effect on the 
National Landing submarket. If we do not achieve the perceived benefits of such location as rapidly or to the extent 
anticipated by us, financial or industry analysts or investors, we and potentially the market price of our common shares 
could be adversely affected. Additionally, if the Virginia Tech Innovation Campus reduces its contemplated size or does 

20 
not have the anticipated collateral financial effect, or if any of our other key demand drivers in National Landing fail to 
materialize, it could have a material adverse effect on us.  
We derive a significant portion of our revenue from U.S. federal government tenants, and we may face additional risks 
and costs associated with directly managing assets occupied by government tenants. 
For the year ended December 31, 2024, 11.9% of our total revenue was generated by commercial rentals to federal 
government tenants, and federal government tenants historically have been a significant source of new leasing for us. For 
the year ended December 31, 2024, GSA was our largest single tenant, with 31 leases comprising 25.2% of total annualized 
rent at our share. The occurrence of events that have a negative impact on the demand for federal government office space, 
such as a decrease in federal government payrolls or a change in policy that prevents governmental tenants from renting 
our office space or relocation of federal agencies and functions away from the Washington, D.C. region, would have a 
much larger adverse effect on our revenue than a corresponding occurrence affecting other categories of tenants. 
Additionally, a federal government shutdown could delay or prevent us from collecting rent payments from our federal 
government tenants. If demand for federal government office space were to decline, it would be more difficult for us to 
lease our buildings and could reduce overall market demand and corresponding rental rates, all of which could have a 
material adverse effect on us. For example, we have been notified by a GSA tenant that they are vacating their space 
totaling approximately 88,000 square feet in 2025. Additionally, the recent change of presidential administration has 
placed increased focus on reduction of government spending, which could impact U.S. federal government leasing 
practices and upcoming renewals. During the next four years (2025 to 2029), we have 20 leases, totaling approximately 
542,000 square feet at our share, with U.S. federal government tenants that will expire. Lease agreements with these federal 
government agencies contain provisions required by federal law, which require, among other things, that the lessor of the 
property agree to comply with certain rules and regulations, including rules and regulations related to audits and records 
and subcontractor cost or pricing data. In addition, there are requirements relating to the potential application of equal 
opportunity provisions and related anti-discrimination requirements, including but not limited to, the Civil Rights Act of 
1964, the Vietnam Era Veterans’ Readjustment Assistance Act, the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and the Randolph-
Sheppard Act. We are also prohibited from implementing any programs promoting diversity, equity and inclusion that 
violate any applicable federal anti-discrimination laws. Compliance with these requirements is costly and any increase or 
significant change in regulation could increase our costs, which could have a material adverse effect on us. 
 
Rent control or rent stabilization legislation and other regulatory restrictions may limit our ability to increase rents and 
pass through new or increased operating costs to our residents. 
Certain jurisdictions in which we own property have adopted, or may in the future adopt, laws and regulations imposing 
restrictions on the timing or amount of rent increases or have imposed regulations relating to low- and moderate-income 
housing. Such laws and regulations limit our ability to charge market rents, increase rents or evict residents at our 
multifamily assets and could make it more difficult for us to dispose of properties in certain circumstances. In addition, 
some U.S. jurisdictions have adopted regulations regarding the use of algorithmic devices or systems when making 
decisions regarding rents or occupancy. While the Washington D.C. region does not currently have such regulation, it is 
possible that one or more of the jurisdictions within the Washington D.C. region where we own assets could adopt similar 
regulations in the future. Similarly, compliance procedures associated with rent control statutes and low- and moderate-
income housing regulations could have a negative impact on our operating costs, and any failure to comply with low- and 
moderate-income housing regulations could result in the loss of certain tax benefits and the forfeiture of rent payments. In 
addition, such low- and moderate-income housing regulations often require us to rent a certain number of units at below-
market rents, which has a negative impact on our ability to increase cash flows from our multifamily assets subject to such 
regulations. Furthermore, such regulations may negatively impact our ability to attract higher-paying residents to such 
properties. As of December 31, 2024, all of our multifamily assets located within the Washington, D.C. metro region were 
subject to such regulations. 

21 
We are exposed to risks associated with real estate development and redevelopment, such as unanticipated expenses, 
delays and other contingencies, any of which could have a material adverse effect on us. 
Real estate development and redevelopment activities are a critical element of our business strategy, and we expect to 
engage in such activities with respect to several of our properties and with properties that we may acquire in the future. To 
the extent that we do so, we will continue to be subject to risks, including, without limitation: 
• 
construction or redevelopment costs of a project may exceed original estimates, possibly making the project less 
profitable than originally estimated, or unprofitable; 
• 
inflation and domestic tariff policies could increase the costs of construction and development projects, which 
could decrease the yield on such projects, delaying their commencement or resulting in fewer such pursuits. In 
2023, these conditions made new development starts infeasible; 
• 
time required to complete the construction or redevelopment of a project or to lease-up the completed project 
may be greater than originally anticipated, thereby adversely affecting our cash flow and liquidity; 
• 
contractor, subcontractor and supplier disputes, strikes, labor disputes or shortages, weather conditions or supply 
disruptions (including those related to the supply chain); 
• 
failure to achieve expected occupancy and/or rent levels within the projected time frame, if at all; 
• 
delays with respect to obtaining, or the inability to obtain, necessary zoning, occupancy, land use and other 
governmental permits, and changes in zoning and land use laws; 
• 
occupancy rates and rents of a completed project may not be sufficient to make the project profitable; 
• 
incurrence of design, permitting and other development costs for opportunities that we ultimately abandon; 
• 
the ability of prospective real estate venture partners or buyers of our properties to obtain financing; and 
• 
the availability and pricing of financing to fund our development activities on favorable terms or at all. 
These risks could result in substantial unanticipated delays or expenses and, under certain circumstances, could prevent 
the initiation or the completion of development or redevelopment activities, any of which could have a material adverse 
effect on us. Partnership or real estate venture investments could be adversely affected by our lack of sole decision-making 
authority, our reliance on partners' or co-venturers' financial condition and disputes between us and our partners or co-
venturers, which could have a material adverse effect on us. 
As of December 31, 2024, 6.3% of our assets measured by total square feet at our share was held through real estate 
ventures, and we expect to co-invest in the future with other third parties through partnerships, real estate ventures or other 
entities, acquiring noncontrolling interests in or sharing responsibility for managing the affairs of a property, partnership, 
real estate venture or other entity. In particular, we may use real estate ventures as a significant source of equity capital to 
fund our development strategy. Consequently, with respect to any such third-party arrangement, we would not be in a 
position to exercise sole decision-making authority regarding the property, partnership, real estate venture or other entity, 
or structure of ownership and may, under certain circumstances, be exposed to risks not present were a third party not 
involved, including the possibility that partners or co-venturers might become bankrupt or fail to fund their share of 
required capital contributions, and we may be forced to make contributions to maintain the value of the property. Partners 
or co-venturers may have economic or other business interests or goals that are inconsistent or in direct conflict with our 
business interests or goals and may be in a position to take action or withhold consent contrary to our policies or objectives. 
These investments may also have the potential risk of impasses on decisions, such as a sale, because neither we nor the 
partner or co-venturer would have full control over the partnership or real estate venture. We and our respective partners 
or co-venturers may each have the right to trigger a buy-sell right or forced sale arrangement, which could cause us to sell 
our interest, or acquire our partners' or co-venturers' interest, or to sell the underlying asset, either on unfavorable terms or 
at a time when we otherwise would not have initiated such a transaction. In addition, a sale or transfer by us to a third party 
of our interests in the partnership or real estate venture may be subject to consent rights or rights of first refusal in favor 
of our partners or co-venturers, which would in each case restrict our ability to dispose of our interest in the partnership or 
real estate venture. Where we are a limited partner or non-managing member in any partnership or limited liability 
company, if the entity takes or expects to take actions that could jeopardize our status as a REIT or require us to pay tax, 
we may be forced to dispose of our interest in that entity, including by contributing our interest to a subsidiary of ours that 
is subject to corporate level income tax. Disputes between us and partners or co-venturers may result in litigation or 
arbitration that would increase our expenses and prevent our officers and/or trustees from focusing their time and effort 

22 
on our business. In addition, we may in certain circumstances be liable for the actions of our third-party partners or co-
venturers. Our real estate ventures may be subject to debt, and the refinancing of such debt may require equity capital 
calls. Furthermore, any cash distributions from real estate ventures will be subject to the operating agreements of the real 
estate ventures, which may limit distributions, the timing of distributions or specify certain preferential distributions among 
the respective parties. The occurrence of any of the risks described above could have a material adverse effect on us. 
We depend on major tenants in our commercial portfolio, and the bankruptcy, insolvency or inability to pay rent of any 
of these tenants could have a material adverse effect on us. 
As of December 31, 2024, the 20 largest office and retail tenants in our Operating Portfolio represented 58.7% of our share 
of total annualized office and retail rent. In many cases, through tenant improvement allowances and other concessions, 
we have made substantial upfront investments in leases with our major tenants that we may not recover if they fail to pay 
rent through the end of the lease term. The inability or failure of a major tenant to pay rent, or the bankruptcy or insolvency 
of a major tenant, may adversely affect the income produced by our Operating Portfolio. Additionally, we may experience 
delays in enforcing our rights as landlord due to federal, state and local laws and regulations and may incur substantial 
costs in protecting our investment. Any such event could have a material adverse effect on us. 
We derive a significant portion of our revenue from five of our assets. 
As of December 31, 2024, five of our assets in the aggregate generated 29.4% of our share of annualized rent. The 
occurrence of events that have a negative impact on one or more of these assets, such as a natural disaster that damages 
one or more of these assets, would have a much larger adverse effect on our revenue than a corresponding occurrence 
affecting a less significant property. A substantial decline in the revenue generated by one or more of these assets could 
have a material adverse effect on us. 
Our Placemaking depends in significant part on a retail component, which frequently involves retail assets embedded 
in or adjacent to our multifamily assets and/or commercial assets, making us subject to risks that affect the retail 
environment generally, such as competition from discount and online retailers, weakness in the economy, fluctuations 
in foot traffic, pandemics, a decline in consumer spending and the financial condition of major retail tenants, any of 
which could adversely affect market rents for retail space and the willingness or ability of retailers to lease space in our 
retail assets. 
If our retail assets lose tenants, whether to the proliferation of online businesses and discount retailers, a decline in general 
economic conditions and consumer spending or otherwise, it could have a material adverse effect on us. If we fail to 
reinvest in and redevelop our assets to maintain their attractiveness to retailers and shoppers, then retailers or shoppers 
may perceive that shopping at other venues or online is more convenient, cost-effective or otherwise more attractive, which 
could negatively affect our ability to rent retail space at our assets. In addition, some of our assets depend on anchor or 
major retail tenants and/or occupancy in surrounding offices to attract shoppers and could be adversely affected by the loss 
of, or a store closure by, one or more of these tenants or changes to in-office policies of surrounding businesses. Any of 
the foregoing factors could adversely affect the financial condition of our retail tenants, the willingness of retailers to lease 
space from us, and the success of our Placemaking, which could have a material adverse effect on us. 
The loss of one or more members of our senior management team could adversely affect our ability to manage our 
business and to implement our growth strategies or could create a negative perception in the capital markets. 
Our success and our ability to implement and manage anticipated future growth depend, in large part, upon the efforts of 
our senior management team. Members of our senior management team have national or regional industry reputations that 
attract business and investment opportunities and assist us in negotiations with lenders, existing and potential tenants and 
other industry participants. The loss of services of one or more members of our senior management team, or our inability 
to attract and retain similarly qualified personnel, could adversely affect our business, diminish our investment 
opportunities and weaken our relationships with lenders, business partners, existing and prospective tenants and industry 
participants, which could have a material adverse effect on us. 

23 
The actual density of our development pipeline and/or any development parcel may not be consistent with our estimated 
potential development density. 
As of December 31, 2024, we estimate that our 19 assets in our development pipeline will total 11.0 million square feet 
(8.9 million square feet at our share) of estimated potential development density. The potential development density 
estimates for our development pipeline and/or any particular development parcel are based solely on our estimates, using 
data available to us, and our business plans as of December 31, 2024. The actual density of our development pipeline 
and/or any development parcel may differ substantially from our estimates based on numerous factors, including our 
inability to obtain necessary zoning, land use and other required entitlements, legal challenges to our plans by activists and 
others, as well as building, occupancy and other required governmental permits and authorizations, and changes in the 
entitlement, permitting and authorization processes that restrict or delay our ability to develop, redevelop or use our 
development pipeline at anticipated density levels. We can provide no assurance that the actual density of our development 
pipeline and/or any development parcel will be consistent with our estimated potential development density. 
The occurrence of cyber incidents, or a deficiency in our cybersecurity, or the cybersecurity of our service providers, 
could negatively impact our business by causing a disruption to our operations, a compromise or corruption of our 
confidential information, regulatory enforcement and other legal proceedings, and/or damage to our business 
relationships, all of which could negatively impact our financial results. 
A cyber incident is any intentional or unintentional adverse event that threatens the confidentiality, integrity, or availability 
of our information resources and can include unauthorized persons gaining access to systems to disrupt operations, 
corrupting data or stealing confidential information. The risk of a cyber incident or disruption, including by computer 
hackers, foreign governments and cyber terrorists, has generally increased as the number, intensity and sophistication of 
attempted attacks have increased globally. As our reliance on technology increases, so do the risks posed to our systems – 
both internal and external. Our primary risks that could directly result from the occurrence of a cyber incident are theft of 
assets; operational interruption; reputational damage; stolen funds; regulatory enforcement, lawsuits and other legal 
proceedings; damage to our relationships with our tenants; and private data exposure. A significant and extended disruption 
could damage our business or reputation, cause a loss of revenue, have an adverse effect on tenant relations, cause an 
unintended or unauthorized public disclosure, or lead to the misappropriation of proprietary, personally identifying, and 
confidential information, any of which could result in us incurring significant expenses to resolve these kinds of issues. 
Although we have implemented processes, procedures and controls to help mitigate the risks associated with a cyber 
incident, there can be no assurance that these measures will be sufficient for all possible situations. Even security measures 
that are appropriate, reasonable and/or in accordance with applicable legal requirements may not be sufficient to protect 
the information we maintain. Unauthorized parties, whether within or outside our company, may disrupt or gain access to 
our systems, or those of third parties with whom we do business, through human error, misfeasance, fraud, trickery, or 
other forms of deceit, including break-ins, use of stolen credentials, social engineering, phishing, computer viruses or other 
malicious codes, and similar means of unauthorized and destructive tampering. We and our third-party providers have 
been the target of cybersecurity threats and we expect them to continue. As of December 31, 2024, cybersecurity threats, 
including as a result of any previous cybersecurity incidents, have not materially affected us, including our business 
strategy, results of operations or financial condition. A successful attack on one of our service providers could result in a 
compromise of our own network, theft of our data, legal obligations or liabilities, deployment of ransomware or a 
disruption in our supply chain or of services upon which we rely. Even the most well protected information, networks, 
systems and facilities remain potentially vulnerable because the techniques used in such attempted cyber incidents evolve 
and generally are not recognized until they have been launched against a number of targets. Accordingly, we may be 
unable to anticipate these techniques or to implement adequate security barriers or other preventative measures, making it 
impossible for us to entirely mitigate this risk. If any of the foregoing risks materialize, it could have a material adverse 
effect on us. 
 
Pandemics and other health concerns could have a negative effect on our business, results of operations, cash flows 
and financial condition. 
Pandemics as well as both future widespread and localized outbreaks of infectious diseases and other health concerns, and 
the measures taken to prevent the spread or lessen the impact, could cause a material disruption to multifamily and office 
industry or the economy as a whole. The impacts of such events could be severe and far-reaching, and may impact our 
operations in several ways. Additionally, pandemic outbreaks could lead governments and other authorities around the 

24 
world, including federal, state and local authorities in the United States, to impose new or heightened measures intended 
to mitigate its spread, including restrictions on freedom of movement and business operations such as issuing guidelines, 
travel bans, border closings, business closures, quarantine orders, and orders not allowing the collection of rents, rent 
increases, or eviction of non-paying tenants. In the event of a decline in business activity and demand for real estate 
transactions, our ability or desire to grow or diversify our portfolio could be affected. Additionally, local and national 
authorities could extend or re-implement certain measures imposing restrictions on our ability to enforce contractual rental 
obligations upon our residents and tenants. Unanticipated costs and operating expenses coupled with decreased anticipated 
and actual revenue as a result of compliance with regulations could negatively impact our business, results of operations, 
cash flow, and overall financial condition and/or our ability to satisfy certain REIT-related requirements. 
The full extent of the impact of a pandemic on our business is largely uncertain and dependent on a number of factors 
beyond our control, and we are not able to estimate with any degree of certainty the effect a pandemic, or measures intended 
to curb its spread, could have on our business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows. Moreover, many 
of the other risk factors described herein could be more likely to impact us as a result of a pandemic or measures intended 
to curb its spread. 
Increased focus on our sustainability business values may constrain our business operations, impose additional costs 
and expose us to new risks that could have a material adverse effect on us. 
Our business values integrate environmental sustainability, social responsibility and strong governance practices 
throughout our organization—these types of matters have become increasingly important to investors and other 
stakeholders. Some investors may use these factors to determine their investment strategies, while current and potential 
employees and business partners may consider these factors when considering relationships with us. Certain organizations 
that provide corporate risk and corporate governance advisory services to investors have developed scores and ratings to 
evaluate companies based upon these metrics, and investors may consider a company's score as a factor in making an 
investment decision. There can be no assurance that our focus on our sustainability business values will be well regarded 
by investors, particularly since the criteria by which companies are rated for their sustainability efforts may change. 
Additionally, focus and activism related to sustainability matters may constrain our business operations or increase 
expenses, and we may face reputational damage if our corporate responsibility initiatives do not meet the standards set by 
various constituencies, including those of third-party providers of corporate responsibility ratings and reports. A low 
sustainability score could result in a negative perception of us, exclusion of our securities from consideration by certain 
investors and/or cause investors to reallocate their capital away from us, each of which could have an adverse impact on 
the price of our securities. 
As we continue to integrate environmental sustainability, social responsibility and strong governance practices throughout 
our organization, we could also be criticized for the scope or nature of our initiatives or goals. We could also encounter 
reactions from governmental actors (such as anti-environmental, social and governance legislation or retaliatory legislative 
treatment), tenants and residents, that could have a material adverse effect on us. 
We face risks related to multifamily rental antitrust, regulatory scrutiny and related litigation.  
Lawsuits, government investigations and proposed legislation relating to antitrust matters in the multifamily rental market 
are ongoing and may impact us, whether or not we are found directly liable for an antitrust violation. For example, in 
November 2023, the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia 
against RealPage, Inc., a provider of revenue management systems, numerous multifamily rental companies, and 14 
owners and/or operators of multifamily housing in the District of Columbia, including JBG Associates, L.L.C., one of our 
subsidiaries, alleging that the defendants violated the District of Columbia Antitrust Act by unlawfully agreeing to 
use RealPage, Inc. revenue management systems and sharing sensitive data. While we intend to vigorously defend against 
this lawsuit, given the current stage of the District of Columbia’s lawsuit, we are unable to predict the outcome or estimate 
the amount of loss, if any, that may result from the lawsuit. We are also aware that governmental investigations regarding 
antitrust matters in the multifamily industry are ongoing. Individual classes, municipalities other than the District of 
Columbia or federal agencies may also bring suits against multifamily rental providers. Regardless of whether we remain 
named in the District of Columbia lawsuit or any other lawsuits or become the focus of any governmental investigation, 
we may incur substantial costs related to these lawsuits, whether as a defendant or as a third-party witness. Additionally, 

25 
settlements by RealPage, Inc. or other defendants in such cases could impact the multifamily industry in ways that have 
an adverse effect on us. Moreover, if state and/or federal legislation regulating the use of third-party algorithmic revenue 
management systems by multifamily apartment rental companies is passed, the impact to us is difficult to predict. Lawsuits, 
government investigations and new legislation related to antitrust matters may, among other things, be costly to comply 
with, result in negative publicity, require significant management time and attention and subject us to remedies or 
burdensome requirements that adversely affect our business. 
We face risks related to the real estate industry. 
We are subject to significant risks related to the real estate industry, any of which could have a material adverse effect on 
us. These include, among other things: 
• 
The value of real estate fluctuates depending on conditions in the general economy and the real estate business. 
Additionally, adverse changes in these conditions may result in a decline in rental revenue, sales proceeds and 
occupancy levels at our assets and adversely impact our revenue and cash flows. If rental revenue, sales proceeds 
and/or occupancy levels decline, we generally would expect to have less cash available to pay indebtedness and 
for distribution to shareholders. In addition, some of our major expenses, including mortgage loan payments, real 
estate taxes and maintenance costs generally do not decline when the related rents decline. 
• 
The cost and availability of credit may be adversely affected by illiquid credit markets and wider credit spreads, 
and our inability or the inability of our tenants to timely refinance maturing liabilities to meet liquidity needs may 
materially affect our financial condition and results of operations. Additionally, mortgage loan obligations expose 
us to risk of foreclosure and the loss of properties subject to such obligations. 
• 
It may be difficult to buy and sell real estate quickly, or we or potential buyers of our assets may experience 
difficulty in obtaining financing, which may limit our ability to vary our portfolio promptly in response to changes 
in economic or other conditions. Additionally, we may be unable to identify, negotiate, finance or consummate 
acquisitions of properties, or acquire properties on favorable terms, or at all. 
• 
The composition of our portfolio by asset type is likely to continue to change over time, which could expose us 
to different asset class risks than if our portfolio composition remained static or cause certain risks within an asset 
class to become more or less important as our composition changes, and we may be adversely affected by trends 
in the asset classes we currently own. 
• 
We may not be able to control the operating expenses associated with our properties, which include real estate 
taxes, insurance, loan payments, maintenance, and costs of compliance with governmental regulation, or our 
operating expenses may remain constant or increase, even if our revenue does not increase, which could have a 
material adverse effect on us.  
• 
Macroeconomic trends, including increases in inflation and interest rates, could have a material adverse effect on 
us, as well as our tenants, which may adversely impact our business, financial condition and results of operations. 
• 
We may be unable to renew leases, lease vacant space or re-let space as leases expire, or do so on favorable terms, 
which could have a material adverse effect on us. As of December 31, 2024, leases representing 13.5% of our 
share of the office and retail square footage in our Operating Portfolio were scheduled to expire in 2025 or 
have month-to-month terms, 4.4% were scheduled to expire in 2026, and 22.1% of our share of the office and 
retail square footage in our Operating Portfolio was unoccupied and not generating rent. We may find it necessary 
to make rent or other concessions and/or significant capital expenditures to improve our assets to retain and attract 
tenants. 
• 
We may be unable to maintain or increase our occupancy and revenue at certain multifamily, commercial and 
other assets due to an increase in supply, more favorable terms offered by competitors, and/or deterioration in our 
markets. 
• 
Increased affordability of residential homes and other competition for tenants of our multifamily properties could 
affect our ability to retain current residents of our multifamily properties, attract new ones or increase or maintain 
rents, which could adversely affect our results of operations and our financial condition. 
• 
We may from time to time be subject to litigation, which may significantly divert the attention of our officers 
and/or trustees and result in defense costs, settlements, fines or judgments against us, some of which are not, or 
cannot be, covered by insurance, any of which could have a material adverse effect on us.  

26 
• 
We own leasehold interests in certain land on which some of our assets are located. If we default under the terms 
of any of these ground leases, we may be liable for damages and could lose our leasehold interest in the property 
or our option to purchase the underlying fee interest in such asset. In addition, unless we purchase the underlying 
fee interests in the land on which a particular property is located, in the future, we will lose our right to operate 
the property or we will continue to operate it at much lower profitability, which would significantly adversely 
affect our results of operations. In addition, if we are perceived to have breached the terms of a ground lease, the 
fee owner may initiate proceedings to terminate the lease.  
• 
Our assets may be subject to impairment losses, which could have a material adverse effect on our results of 
operations. 
• 
Climate change, including rising sea levels, flooding, prolonged periods of extreme temperature or other extreme 
weather, and changes in precipitation and temperature, may result in physical damage to, or a total loss of, our 
assets located in areas affected by these conditions, including those in low-lying areas close to sea level, such as 
National Landing, and/or decreases in demand, rent from, or the value of those assets. In addition, we may incur 
material costs to protect these assets, including increases in our insurance premiums as a result of the threat of 
climate change, or the effects of climate change may not be covered by our insurance policies. Furthermore, 
changes in federal and state legislation and regulations on climate change could result in increased utility expenses 
and/or increased capital expenditures to improve the energy efficiency and reduce carbon emissions of our 
properties in order to comply with such regulations or result in fines for non-compliance. Any of the foregoing 
could have a material and adverse effect on us. 
We may incur significant costs to comply with environmental laws, and environmental contamination may impair our 
ability to lease, develop and/or sell real estate. 
Our operations and assets, and the operations of our tenants, are subject to various federal, state and local laws and 
regulations concerning the protection of the environment including air and water quality, hazardous or toxic substances 
and health and safety. The cost to comply with such requirements may be significant and if we fail to comply with such 
requirements, we could be subject to significant fines. Moreover, environmental requirements have and may continue to 
become increasingly stringent, and our costs or operating restrictions may increase as a result. Under some environmental 
laws, a current or previous owner or operator of real estate may be required to investigate, clean up, or remediate hazardous 
or toxic substances and petroleum products released at or from that property, or to pay for the costs of the same. The owner 
or operator may also be held liable to a governmental entity or to third parties for property damage, natural resources 
damages, or personal injuries and for investigation and clean-up costs incurred by those parties because of the 
contamination. These laws often impose liability without regard to whether the owner or operator knew of the release of 
the substances or caused such release, and the liability may be joint and several. The presence of contamination or the 
failure to remediate contamination may (i) expose us to third-party liability (e.g., for cleanup costs, natural resource 
damages, bodily injury or property damage), (ii) subject our properties to liens in favor of the government for damages 
and costs the government incurs in connection with the contamination, (iii) result in restrictions on the manner in which a 
property may be used or businesses may be operated, or (iv) impair our ability to sell or lease real estate or to borrow using 
the real estate as collateral. To the extent we arrange for contaminated materials to be sent to other locations for treatment 
or disposal, we may be liable for cleanup of those sites if they become contaminated, without regard to whether we 
complied with environmental laws in doing so. Other laws and regulations require proper management and maintenance 
of any known or presumed asbestos-containing materials, can require their abatement or removal in the event of damage, 
demolition, renovation or remodeling, and also govern emissions of and exposure to asbestos fibers in the air. In addition, 
the maintenance and removal of lead paint and certain electrical equipment containing polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) 
are also regulated by federal and state laws. We are also subject to risks associated with human exposure to chemical or 
biological contaminants such as molds, pollens, viruses and bacteria which, above certain levels, can be alleged to be 
connected to allergic or other health effects and symptoms in susceptible individuals. We may be subject to similar 
liabilities for activities of our predecessor companies conducted in the past. We could incur fines for environmental 
noncompliance and be held liable for the costs of remedial action with respect to the foregoing regulated substances or 
related claims arising out of environmental contamination or human exposure at or from our assets. Most of our assets 
have been subjected to varying degrees of environmental assessment at various times. To date, these environmental 
assessments have not revealed any environmental condition material to our business. However, we cannot give assurance 
that these environmental assessments have revealed all potential environmental liabilities, and identification of new 
compliance concerns or undiscovered areas of contamination, changes in the extent or known scope of contamination, 

27 
human exposure to contamination or changes in cleanup or compliance requirements could result in significant costs to us 
or operating restrictions on our properties. In addition, we may become subject to costs or taxes, or increases therein, 
associated with natural resource or energy usage (such as a "carbon tax"). These costs or taxes could increase our operating 
costs and decrease the cash available to pay our obligations or distribute to equity holders. 
Risks Related to the Capital Markets and Related Activities 
We face risks related to our common shares.  
These risks include, among other things, the risk that an economic downturn or a deterioration in the capital markets may 
materially affect the value of our equity securities; the absence of any guarantee or certainty regarding the timing, amount, 
or payment of future dividends on our common shares; the risk of dilution of ownership in our company due to certain 
actions taken by us; the risk that future offerings of debt or preferred equity securities, which would be senior to our 
common shares upon liquidation, and in the case of preferred equity securities may be senior to our common shares for 
purposes of dividend distributions or upon liquidation, may adversely affect the per share trading price of our common 
shares; the risk that our repurchase program may result in our shares being less liquid than they have been in the past; and 
the risk that the announcement of a material change may result in a rapid and significant decline in the price of our common 
shares. If any of the foregoing risks materialize, it could have a material adverse effect on us. 
We have a substantial amount of indebtedness, and our debt agreements include restrictive covenants and other 
requirements, which may limit our financial and operating activities, our future acquisition and development activities, 
or otherwise affect our financial condition. 
As of December 31, 2024, we had $2.6 billion aggregate principal amount of consolidated debt outstanding, and our 
unconsolidated real estate ventures had $235.0 million aggregate principal amount of debt outstanding ($68.0 million at 
our share), resulting in a total of $2.7 billion aggregate principal amount of debt outstanding at our share. A portion of our 
outstanding debt is guaranteed by JBG SMITH LP. Our cash flow from operations may be insufficient to meet our required 
debt service and payments of principal and interest on borrowings may leave us with insufficient cash resources to operate 
our assets or to pay the dividends currently contemplated. Additionally, our debt agreements include customary restrictive 
covenants, that, among other things, restrict our ability to incur additional indebtedness, to engage in material asset sales, 
mergers, consolidations and acquisitions, and to make capital expenditures, and some of our debt agreements also include 
requirements to maintain financial ratios. Our ability to borrow is subject to compliance with these and other covenants, 
and failure to comply with our covenants could cause a default under the applicable debt instrument, and we may then be 
required to repay such debt with capital from other sources or give possession of a property to the lender. Any of the 
foregoing could affect our ability to obtain additional funds as needed, or on favorable terms, which could, among other 
things, adversely affect our ability to meet operational needs or to finance our future acquisition and development activities. 
We may not be able to obtain capital to make investments and/or obtaining that capital could fundamentally change 
the composition of our portfolio. 
We are primarily dependent on external capital to fund the expected growth of our business. Our access to debt or equity 
capital depends on the willingness of third parties to lend or make equity investments and on conditions in the capital 
markets generally. There can be no assurance that new capital will be available or available on acceptable terms. 
Our future plans, including share repurchases and development, are capital intensive. We anticipate funding these plans 
through asset sales, real estate ventures with third parties, recapitalizations of assets, and public or private securities 
offerings, or a combination thereof. To the extent we dispose of assets to fund our development and investment plans, we 
may dispose of multifamily, commercial, and/or retail assets as well as land, but expect, in the current environment, to 
source liquidity from our multifamily assets in Washington, D.C. Depending on the type of assets we sell and extent of 
these sales, the composition of our portfolio could change significantly such that we may no longer be a mixed-asset real 
estate company, and depending on the resulting proportion of our office to multifamily assets, our portfolio may be viewed 
less favorably by investors and the capital markets, which could have an adverse effect on our ability to continue to raise 
capital to fund our business. Our development and investment plans may also require a significant amount of debt financing 
which subjects us to additional risks, such as rising interest rates. For information about our available sources of funds, 
see "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations-Liquidity and Capital 
Resources" and the notes to the consolidated financial statements included herein. 

28 
The liquidity of our common shares may decline as a result of our continued repurchase of our common shares.  
Since launching our share repurchase program in 2020 through December 31, 2024, we have repurchased and retired 
56.8 million common shares, which is 38% of the common shares and OP units outstanding as of December 31, 2019, for 
$1.1 billion, a weighted average purchase price per share of $19.87. In February 2025, our Board of Trustees increased 
our common share repurchase authorization from $1.5 billion to $2.0 billion. As a result of these repurchases, the ability 
of holders of common shares to buy and sell their common shares may have declined and may continue to decline as a 
result of future repurchases. 
We are subject to interest rate risk, which could increase our interest expense, increase the cost to refinance and 
increase the cost of issuing new debt.  
As of December 31, 2024, $672.3 million of our outstanding consolidated debt was subject to instruments that bear interest 
at variable rates, and we may continue to incur indebtedness that bears interest at variable interest rates. While some of 
this debt is protected against interest rate increases above specified rates via interest rate cap agreements, the remainder 
does not benefit from such arrangements. Further, we may borrow money at variable interest rates in the future without 
the benefit of associated hedges and caps. With respect to these unhedged amounts, increases in interest rates would 
increase our interest expense under these instruments, increase the cost of refinancing these instruments or issuing new 
debt, and adversely affect our cash flow and our ability to service our indebtedness and make distributions to our 
shareholders, which could, in turn, adversely affect the market price of our common shares. We may enter into hedging 
transactions to protect ourselves from the effects of interest rate fluctuations on floating rate debt. As of 
December 31, 2024, our hedging transactions included interest rate cap agreements, which covered $442.0 million of our 
outstanding consolidated debt, primarily with two counterparties, which also exposes us to counterparty risk. Interest rate 
hedging can be expensive, particularly during periods of rising and volatile interest rates, which could reduce the overall 
returns on our investments. Moreover, there can be no assurance that our hedging arrangements will qualify as highly 
effective hedges under applicable accounting standards. Furthermore, should we desire to terminate a hedging agreement, 
there could be significant costs and cash requirements. Additionally, we are required to maintain interest rate cap 
agreements under certain of our variable rate debt agreements. Renewing, extending or entering into new interest rate cap 
agreements in a rising and volatile interest rate environment may cause us to incur significant upfront costs. Finally, the 
REIT provisions of the Code impose certain restrictions on our ability to use hedges, swaps and other types of derivatives 
to hedge our liabilities. Any of the foregoing could increase our interest expense, increase the cost to refinance and increase 
the cost of issuing new debt. 
Risks and Conflicts of Interest Related to Our Organization and Structure 
Tax consequences to holders of OP Units upon a sale of certain of our assets may cause the interests of our senior 
management to differ from your own. 
Some holders of OP Units, including some members of our senior management, may suffer different and more adverse 
tax consequences than holders of our common shares upon the sale of certain of the assets owned by JBG SMITH LP, and 
therefore these holders may have different objectives regarding the material terms of any sale or refinancing of certain 
assets, or whether to sell such assets at all. 
Certain of our trustees and executive officers may have actual or potential conflicts of interest, including because of 
their previous or continuing equity interest in, or positions at JBG, including trustees and members of our senior 
management, who have an ownership interest in the JBG Legacy Funds and own carried interests in certain JBG 
Legacy Funds and in certain of our real estate ventures that entitle them to receive additional compensation if certain 
funds or real estate ventures achieve certain return thresholds. 
Some of our trustees and executive officers are persons who were employees of JBG, and they own equity interests in 
certain JBG Legacy Funds and related entities. Ownership of interests in the JBG Legacy Funds and current or past service 
as a managing member, at JBG, could create, or appear to create, potential conflicts of interest. Certain of the JBG Legacy 
Funds own the JBG Excluded Assets, which JBG Legacy Funds are owned in part by members of our senior management 
and certain trustees. In addition, although the asset management and property management fees associated with the JBG 
Excluded Assets were assigned to us upon completion of the Formation Transaction, the general partner and managing 
member interests in the JBG Legacy Funds held by former JBG executives (who became members of our management 
team) and certain trustees were not transferred to us and remain under the control of these individuals. Our management's 

29 
time and efforts may be diverted from the management of our assets to management of the JBG Legacy Funds, which 
could adversely affect the execution of our business plan and our results of operations and cash flow.  
Members of our senior management and certain trustees have an ownership interest in the JBG Legacy Funds and own 
carried interests in each fund and in certain of our real estate ventures that entitle them to receive additional compensation 
if the fund or real estate venture achieves certain return thresholds. Additionally, in the future, we may elect to assign to 
certain employees a percentage of third-party fees, carried interests or other equity interests in certain assets, joint ventures 
or other real estate ventures. As a result, such employees could be incentivized to spend time and effort maximizing the 
cash flow from the assets being retained by the JBG Legacy Funds or other relevant real estate ventures in which they 
have an ownership or other interest, including through sales of assets, which may, for example, accelerate payments of the 
carried interest but would reduce the asset management and other fees that would otherwise be payable to us with respect 
to the JBG Excluded Assets. These actions could adversely impact our results of operations and cash flow. Other potential 
conflicts of interest may arise with the JBG Legacy Funds or other relevant real estate ventures if we engage in direct 
transactions or compete for tenants. For example, we have entered, and in the future may enter into transactions with the 
JBG Legacy Funds, such as purchasing assets from them. Any such transaction creates a conflict of interest as a result of 
our management team's interests on both sides of the transaction because we manage the JBG Legacy Funds and because 
members of our management and Board of Trustees own interests in the general partner or other managing entities of the 
JBG Legacy Funds. Any of the above-described conflicts of interest could have a material adverse effect on us. 
We may acquire properties or portfolios of properties through tax deferred contribution transactions, which could result 
in shareholder dilution and limit our ability to sell or refinance such assets. 
In the future, we may acquire properties or portfolios of properties through tax deferred contribution transactions in 
exchange for partnership interests in JBG SMITH LP, which may result in shareholder dilution through the issuance of 
OP Units that may be exchanged for common shares. This acquisition structure may have the effect of, among other things, 
reducing the amount of tax depreciation we could deduct (as compared to a transaction where we do not inherit the 
contributor's tax basis but acquire tax basis equal to the value of the consideration exchanged for the property) until the 
OP Units issued in such transactions are redeemed for cash or converted into common shares. While no such protection 
arrangements existed as of December 31, 2024, in the future we may agree to protect the contributors' ability to defer 
recognition of taxable gain through restrictions on our ability to dispose of, or refinance the debt on, the acquired properties 
for specified periods of time. Similarly, we may be required to incur or maintain debt we would otherwise not incur or 
maintain so that we can allocate the debt to the contributors to maintain their tax bases. These restrictions could limit our 
ability to sell an asset at a time, or on terms that would be favorable absent such restrictions. 
Our declaration of trust and bylaws, the partnership agreement of JBG SMITH LP and MGCL, and the Code contain 
provisions that may delay, defer or prevent a change of control transaction that might involve a premium price for our 
common shares or that our shareholders otherwise believe to be in their best interest. 
Our declaration of trust contains ownership limits with respect to our shares. Generally, to maintain our qualification as a 
REIT under the Code, not more than 50% in value of our outstanding shares of beneficial interest may be owned, directly 
or indirectly, by five or fewer "individuals" (including some types of entities) at any time during the last half of our taxable 
year. To address this requirement and other tax considerations, our declaration of trust prohibits, among other things, the 
actual, beneficial or constructive ownership by any person of more than 7.5% in value or number of shares, whichever is 
more restrictive, of the outstanding shares of any class or series, including our common shares. For these purposes, our 
declaration of trust includes a "group" as that term is used for purposes of Section 13(d)(3) of the Exchange Act in the 
definition of "person." Our Board of Trustees may exempt a person, prospectively or retroactively, from these ownership 
limits if certain conditions are satisfied, but is not required to grant any exemption. Our Board of Trustees may determine 
not to grant an exemption even if no adverse tax or REIT qualification consequences would be caused by ownership in 
excess of the 7.5% ownership limit. 
This ownership limit and the other restrictions on ownership and transfer of our shares contained in our declaration of trust 
may: (i) discourage a tender offer or other transactions or a change in management or of control that might involve a 
premium price for our common shares or that our shareholders might otherwise believe to be in their best interest; or 
(ii) result in the transfer of shares acquired in excess of the restrictions to a trust for the benefit of a charitable beneficiary 
and, as a result, the forfeiture by the acquirer of the benefits of owning the additional shares. 

30 
Additionally, our declaration of trust authorizes the Board of Trustees, without shareholder approval, to establish a class 
or series of common or preferred shares whose terms could delay, deter or prevent a change in control or other transaction 
that might involve a premium price or otherwise be in the best interest of our shareholders. Our declaration of trust and 
bylaws contain other provisions that may delay, deter or prevent a change of control or other transaction that might involve 
a premium price or otherwise be in the best interest of our shareholders. 
Provisions of MGCL could inhibit changes in control, which may discourage third parties from conducting a tender offer 
or seeking other change of control transactions that might involve a premium price for our common shares or that our 
shareholders might otherwise believe to be in their best interest. Provisions of the MGCL may have the effect of inhibiting 
a third party from making a proposal to acquire us or of impeding a change of control under circumstances that otherwise 
could provide the holders of common shares with the opportunity to realize a premium over the then-prevailing market 
price of such shares, including: 
• 
provisions that prohibit business combinations between us and an "interested shareholder," defined generally as 
any holder or affiliate of any holder who beneficially owns 10% or more of the voting power of our shares, for 
five years after the most recent date on which the shareholder becomes an interested shareholder, and thereafter 
impose fair price and/or supermajority shareholder voting requirements on these combinations; and 
• 
provisions that provide that a shareholder's "control shares" acquired in a "control share acquisition," as defined 
in the MGCL, have no voting rights, except to the extent approved by our shareholders by the affirmative vote of 
at least two-thirds of all the votes entitled to be cast on the matter, excluding all interested shares. 
As permitted by the MGCL, we have elected to opt out of the business combination and control share provisions of the 
MGCL. However, we cannot assure you that our Board of Trustees will not opt to be subject to such provisions of the 
MGCL in the future, including opting to be subject to such provisions retroactively. 
The limited partnership agreement of JBG SMITH LP requires the approval of the limited partners with respect to 
certain extraordinary transactions involving JBG SMITH, which may reduce the likelihood of such transactions being 
consummated, even if they are in the best interests of, and have been approved by, our shareholders. 
The limited partnership agreement of JBG SMITH LP provides that we may not engage in a merger, consolidation or other 
combination with or into another person, a sale of all or substantially all of our assets, or a reclassification, recapitalization 
or a change in outstanding shares (except for changes in par value, or from par value to no par value, or as a result of a 
subdivision or combination of our common shares), which we refer to collectively as an extraordinary transaction, unless 
specified criteria are met. In particular, with respect to any extraordinary transaction, if partners will receive consideration 
for their limited partnership units and if we seek the approval of our shareholders for the transaction (or if we would have 
been required to obtain shareholder approval of any such extraordinary transaction but for the fact that a tender offer shall 
have been accepted with respect to a sufficient number of our common shares to permit consummation of such 
extraordinary transaction without shareholder approval), then the limited partnership agreement prohibits us from engaging 
in the extraordinary transaction unless we also obtain "partnership approval." To obtain "partnership approval," we must 
obtain the consent of our limited partners (including us and any limited partners majority owned, directly or indirectly, by 
us) representing a percentage interest in JBG SMITH LP that is equal to or greater than the percentage of our outstanding 
common shares required (or that would have been required in the absence of a tender offer) to approve the extraordinary 
transaction, provided that we and any limited partners majority owned, directly or indirectly, by us will be deemed to have 
provided consent for our partnership units solely in proportion to the percentage of our common shares approving the 
extraordinary transaction (or, if there is no shareholder vote with respect to such extraordinary transaction because a tender 
offer shall have been accepted with respect to a sufficient number of our common shares to permit consummation of the 
extraordinary transaction without shareholder approval, the percentage of our common shares with respect to which such 
tender offer shall have been accepted). The limited partners of JBG SMITH LP may have interests in an extraordinary 
transaction that differ from those of common shareholders, and there can be no assurance that, if we are required to seek 
"partnership approval" for such a transaction, we will be able to obtain it. As a result, if a sufficient number of limited 
partners oppose such an extraordinary transaction, the limited partnership agreement may prohibit us from consummating 
it, even if it is in the best interests of, and has been approved by, our shareholders. 

31 
Substantially all our assets are owned by subsidiaries. We depend on dividends and distributions from these 
subsidiaries. The creditors of these subsidiaries are entitled to amounts payable to them by the subsidiaries before the 
subsidiaries may pay any dividends or other distributions to us. 
Substantially all of our assets are held through JBG SMITH LP, which holds substantially all of its assets through wholly 
owned subsidiaries. JBG SMITH LP's cash flow is dependent on cash distributions to it by its subsidiaries, and in turn, 
substantially all of our cash flow is dependent on cash distributions to us by JBG SMITH LP. The creditors of each of our 
subsidiaries are entitled to payment of that subsidiary's obligations to them when due and payable before distributions may 
be made by that subsidiary to its equity holders. In addition, the operating agreements governing some of our subsidiaries 
which are parties to real estate joint ventures may have restrictions on distributions which could limit the ability of those 
subsidiaries to make distributions to JBG SMITH LP. Thus, JBG SMITH LP's ability to make distributions to holders of 
its units, including us, depends on its subsidiaries' ability first to satisfy their obligations to their creditors, and then to 
make distributions to holders of its units. Likewise, our ability to pay dividends depends on JBG SMITH LP's ability first 
to satisfy its obligations, if any, to its creditors and make distributions payable to holders of preferred units (if any), and 
then to make distributions to us. In addition, our participation in any distribution of the assets of any of our subsidiaries 
upon the liquidation, reorganization or insolvency of the subsidiary, occurs only after the claims of the creditors, including 
trade creditors, and preferred security holders, if any, of the applicable direct or indirect subsidiaries are satisfied. 
Our rights and the rights of our shareholders to take action against our trustees and officers are limited. 
As permitted by MGCL, under our declaration of trust, trustees and officers shall not be liable to us and our shareholders 
for money damages, except for liability resulting from actual receipt of an improper benefit or profit in money, property 
or services; or a final judgment based upon a finding of active and deliberate dishonesty by the trustee or officer that was 
material to the cause of action adjudicated. In addition, our declaration of trust and indemnification agreements require us 
to indemnify our trustees and officers (in some cases, without requiring a preliminary determination of the trustee's or 
officer's ultimate entitlement to indemnification) for actions taken by them in those and certain other capacities to the 
maximum extent permitted by MGCL. The Maryland REIT law permits a real estate investment trust to indemnify and 
advance expenses to its trustees, officers, employees and agents to the same extent as permitted by the MGCL for directors 
and officers of a Maryland corporation. Generally, MGCL permits a Maryland corporation to indemnify its present and 
former directors and officers except in instances where the person seeking indemnification acted in bad faith or with active 
and deliberate dishonesty, actually received an improper personal benefit in money, property or services or, in the case of 
a criminal proceeding, had reasonable cause to believe that his or her actions were unlawful. Under MGCL, a Maryland 
corporation also may not indemnify a director or officer in a suit by or in the right of the corporation in which the director 
or officer was adjudged liable to the corporation or for a judgment of liability on the basis that a personal benefit was 
improperly received. A court may order indemnification if it determines that the director or officer is fairly and reasonably 
entitled to indemnification, even though the director or officer did not meet the prescribed standard of conduct; however, 
indemnification for an adverse judgment in a suit by us or in our right, or for a judgment of liability on the basis that 
personal benefit was improperly received, is limited to expenses. As a result, we and our shareholders may have more 
limited rights against our trustees and officers than might otherwise exist. Accordingly, if actions taken in good faith by 
any of our trustees or officers impede the performance of our company, our shareholder’s ability to recover damages from 
such trustee or officer will be limited. 
Risks Related to Our Status as a REIT 
We may fail to qualify or remain qualified as a REIT and may be required to pay income taxes at corporate rates. 
Although we believe that we are organized and intend to operate to qualify as a REIT for federal income tax purposes, we 
may fail to remain so qualified. Qualification and taxation as a REIT are governed by highly technical and complex 
provisions of the Code for which there are only limited judicial or administrative interpretations and depend on various 
facts and circumstances that are not entirely within our control. If, with respect to any taxable year, we fail to maintain our 
qualification as a REIT and do not qualify under the relevant statutory relief provisions, we would have to pay federal 
income tax on our taxable income at regular corporate rates, could not deduct our distributions in determining our taxable 
income subject to tax, and would possibly also be subject to certain taxes enacted by the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 
that are applicable to non-REIT corporations, including the nondeductible 1% excise tax on certain stock repurchases. If 
we had to pay federal income tax, the amount of money available to distribute to shareholders and pay our indebtedness 
would be reduced for the year or years involved, and we would not be required to make distributions to shareholders in 

32 
that taxable year and in future years until we again were able to qualify as a REIT. In addition, we would also be 
disqualified from treatment as a REIT for the four taxable years following the year during which qualification was lost, 
unless we were entitled to relief under the relevant statutory provisions. Our REIT status is also dependent upon the REIT 
qualification of any REIT subsidiary in which we invest. 
REIT distribution requirements could adversely affect our liquidity and our ability to execute our business plan or 
require us to make distributions of our shares or other securities. 
For us to qualify to be taxed as a REIT, we generally must distribute to our shareholders each year at least 90% of our 
REIT taxable income, determined without regard to the dividends paid deduction and excluding any net capital gains. We 
intend to distribute 100% of our REIT taxable income to our shareholders out of assets legally available therefor. From 
time to time, we may generate taxable income greater than our cash flow. If we do not have other funds available, we 
could be required to borrow funds on unfavorable terms, sell assets at disadvantageous prices, distribute amounts that 
would otherwise be invested in future acquisitions, capital expenditures or repayment of debt, or make taxable distributions 
of our shares to make distributions sufficient to enable us to pay out enough of our taxable income to satisfy the REIT 
distribution requirement and avoid corporate income tax and a 4% excise tax in a particular year. These alternatives could 
increase our costs or reduce our equity. Because amounts distributed will not be available to fund investment activities, 
compliance with the REIT requirements may hinder our ability to grow, which could adversely affect the value of our 
shares. Restrictions on our ability to incur additional indebtedness or make certain distributions could preclude us from 
meeting the 90% distribution requirement. Consequently, there can be no assurance that we will be able to make 
distributions at the anticipated distribution rate or any other rate. 
The tax imposed on REITs engaging in "prohibited transactions" may limit our ability to engage in transactions that 
would be treated as sales for U.S. federal income tax purposes. 
A REIT's net income from prohibited transactions is subject to a 100% penalty tax. In general, prohibited transactions are 
sales or other dispositions of property, other than foreclosure property, held primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary 
course of business. Although we and our subsidiary REITs believe that we have held, and intend to continue to hold, our 
properties for investment and do not intend to hold directly (rather than through taxable corporate subsidiaries) any 
properties that could be characterized as held for sale to customers in the ordinary course of our business, such 
characterization is a factual determination and no guarantee can be given that the IRS would agree with our characterization 
of our properties or that we will always be able to make use of the available statutory safe harbor. In the case of some of 
our properties held through partnerships with third parties, our ability to control the disposition of such properties in a 
manner that avoids the imposition of the prohibited transactions tax depends in part on the action of third parties over 
which we have no control or only limited influence. 
To comply with the restrictions imposed on REITs, we may have to conduct certain activities and own certain assets 
through a TRS, which will be subject to normal corporate income tax, and we could be subject to a 100% penalty tax if 
our transactions with our TRSs are not conducted on arm's length terms. 
A TRS is an entity taxed as a corporation in which a REIT directly or indirectly holds stock and which has elected with 
the REIT to be treated as a TRS of the REIT and which is taxable as a regular corporation, at regular corporate income tax 
rates. As a REIT, we cannot own certain assets or conduct certain activities directly, without risking failing the income or 
asset tests that apply to REITs. We can, however, hold these assets or undertake these activities through a TRS. For 
example, we generally cannot provide certain non-customary services to our tenants, and we cannot derive income from a 
third party that provides such services. If we forego providing such services to our tenants, we may be at a disadvantage 
to competitors who are not subject to the same restrictions. Accordingly, we provide such non-customary services to our 
tenants and share in the revenue from such services through our TRSs. As noted, the income earned through our TRSs will 
be subject to corporate income taxes. In addition, a 100% excise tax will be imposed on certain transactions between us 
and our TRSs that are not conducted on an arm's length basis. 
Changes in tax laws could negatively impact us. 
U.S. federal income tax laws governing REITs and the administrative interpretations of those laws may be amended at any 
time, potentially with retroactive effect. Changes to the U.S. federal income tax laws, including the possibility of major 
tax legislation, could have a material and adverse effect on us or our shareholders. We cannot predict whether, when, to 

33 
what extent or with what effective dates new U.S. federal tax laws, regulations, interpretations or rulings will be issued. 
Prospective investors are urged to consult their tax advisors regarding the effect of potential changes to the U.S. federal 
tax laws on an investment in our shares. 
CAUTIONARY STATEMENT CONCERNING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS 
Certain statements contained herein constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities 
laws. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance. They represent our intentions, plans, 
expectations and beliefs and are subject to numerous assumptions, risks and uncertainties. Our future results, financial 
condition and business may differ materially from those expressed in these forward-looking statements. You can find 
many of these statements by looking for words such as "approximates," "believes," "expects," "anticipates," "estimates," 
"intends," "plans," "would," "may" or other similar expressions in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. 
In particular, information included under "Business," "Risk Factors," and "Management's Discussion and Analysis of 
Financial Condition and Results of Operations" contains forward-looking statements. Many of the factors that will 
determine the outcome of these and our other forward-looking statements are beyond our ability to control or predict. Such 
factors include: 
• 
the economic health and public safety climate of the greater Washington Metro region and our geographic 
concentration therein, particularly our concentration in National Landing;  
• 
decreases in demand for office space in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, particularly with respect to our 
two largest tenants, Amazon and the federal government; 
• 
the amount and timing of Amazon’s investments in National Landing and revenue we receive from them currently 
and may receive in the future;  
• 
whether any or all of the other three demand drivers discussed above will fail to materialize; 
• 
reductions in or actual or threatened changes to the timing of federal government spending; 
• 
changes in general political, regulatory, economic, public safety and competitive conditions and specific market 
conditions; 
• 
the risks associated with real estate development and redevelopment, including unanticipated expenses, delays 
and other contingencies; 
• 
the risks associated with the acquisition, disposition and ownership of real estate in general and our real estate 
assets in particular; 
• 
the ability to control our operating expenses; 
• 
the risks related to co-investments in real estate ventures and partnerships, including the ability to source joint 
venture capital for our development pipeline; 
• 
the ability to renew leases, lease vacant space, re-let space as leases expire, or strategically take buildings out of 
service, and to do so on favorable terms; 
• 
the economic health of our tenants; 
• 
fluctuations in interest rates; 
• 
the liquidity of our common shares; 
• 
the supply of competing properties and competition in the real estate industry generally; 
• 
the availability and terms of financing and capital and the general volatility of securities markets; 
• 
the risks associated with mortgage loans and other indebtedness; 
• 
compliance with applicable laws, including those concerning the environment and access by persons with 
disabilities; 
• 
the ability to meet certain environmental targets; 
• 
increased investor and government focus and activism (both positive and negative) related to sustainability and 
social responsibility matters; 

34 
• 
terrorist attacks, acts of violence and the occurrence of cyber incidents or system failures; 
• 
the ability to maintain key personnel; 
• 
failure to qualify and maintain our qualification as a REIT and the risks of changes in laws affecting REITs; and 
• 
other factors discussed under the caption "Risk Factors." 
For a further discussion of factors that could materially affect the outcome of our forward-looking statements, see "Risk 
Factors" in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. 
For these forward-looking statements, we claim the protection of the safe harbor for forward-looking statements contained 
in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on our forward-
looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K or the date of any document 
incorporated by reference. All subsequent written and oral forward-looking statements attributable to us or any person 
acting on our behalf are expressly qualified in their entirety by the cautionary statements contained or referred to in this 
section. We do not undertake any obligation to release publicly any revisions to our forward-looking statements to reflect 
events or circumstances occurring after the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K. 
 
ITEM 1B. UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS 
There are no unresolved comments from the staff of the SEC as of the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K. 
 
ITEM 1C. CYBERSECURITY 
Strategy and Risk Management 
To mitigate cybersecurity risks we have adopted a process of continuous improvement and adaptation to the ever-changing 
threat landscape. As part of this process, we engage with industry-leading managed security service providers to 
supplement our efforts in preventing, identifying and responding to cybersecurity threats. Our information technology 
operations, information security processes and CIRP are generally aligned with the National Institute of Standards and 
Technology’s framework. 
We have adopted a cloud-first strategy which is a foundational element to our overall cybersecurity posture. For essential 
systems, we utilize SaaS-based software partners who annually conduct Statement on Standards for Attestation 
Engagements SOC 1 or SOC 2 assessments, as appropriate, based on functional use within our company. Based on the 
nature of services provided by our technology partners, our third-party risk management process may include: 
• 
Reviewing cybersecurity practices of such provider; 
• 
Contractually obligating the provider to share detailed results of cybersecurity assessments on an annual basis; 
• 
Contractually obligating the provider to make us aware of significant cybersecurity related incidents; and 
• 
Coordinating independent security assessments with the provider utilizing our own resources.  
Cybersecurity Risk Management 
We have adopted a cybersecurity risk management process that is designed to identify and mitigate potential cybersecurity 
risks. On an annual basis, we work with credible, third-party cybersecurity experts to assess our ability to prevent, identify, 
and respond to cybersecurity threats through internal and external penetration tests and monthly vulnerability scans. We 
also test our organizational cybersecurity capabilities through facilitated tabletop exercises which simulate real life 
scenarios. Together with the findings of the SOC 1 and 2 assessments, and our threat intelligence and monitoring activities, 
these exercises, tests and scans help us identify potential cybersecurity risks. 
We seek to mitigate cybersecurity risks we identify through a variety of methods, including: 
• 
When practical and necessary, we patch vulnerabilities that are identified. 

35 
• 
We deploy endpoint detection and monitoring technologies to identify potential cybersecurity incidents, which 
have capabilities to automatically isolate and terminate vulnerabilities. 
• 
We utilize industry leading tools and controls for user management, authentication, and privileged access 
management. 
• 
We back up our systems and data to mitigate the impact of a cybersecurity event that would impact our ability to 
operate or result in the loss of data. 
• 
We partner with strategic managed cybersecurity service providers to supplement the capabilities of our internal 
team. 
• 
We periodically test, evaluate and refine our CIRP in response to identified risks.  
• 
To manage the third-party cybersecurity risk introduced by our cloud-first strategy, we have implemented a due 
diligence process for new software partners as well as an annual review process for essential SaaS system partners.  
• 
We conduct cybersecurity awareness training annually and simulated phishing campaigns no less than quarterly 
to test and educate our employees.  
Notwithstanding the steps we take to address cybersecurity, we may not be successful in preventing or mitigating all 
cybersecurity incidents or threats.  
Governance 
Our Chief Information & Technology Officer along with our Vice President of Cybersecurity & Cloud Infrastructure 
provide principal oversight and guidance of our cybersecurity risk management strategy, programs and processes. The 
Chief Information & Technology Officer has over 20 years of experience in information technology in the real estate 
sector, leading organizations through strategic technology and process improvement initiatives. The Vice President of 
Cybersecurity & Cloud Infrastructure has over 15 years of extensive experience in cybersecurity and information 
technology. They are supported in their efforts by a team of technical experts who have had formal training and possess 
relevant industry related experience in addition to managed cybersecurity service providers who specialize in preventing, 
identifying, and responding to cybersecurity threats. 
The Audit Committee of our Board of Trustees provides board-level governance and oversight regarding cybersecurity 
matters. Management meets with the Audit Committee periodically to discuss cybersecurity strategy, risk, trends, and 
internal personnel and qualifications. As part of our annual enterprise risk assessment, technology and cyber risks are 
standing risk factors which are ranked and reviewed by management. 
In the event of a cyberattack, we engage our CIRP, which provides a framework of processes and procedures related to 
identifying, categorizing, responding, containing, analyzing, and eradicating cybersecurity threats to mitigate downtime 
and promptly restore systems and services. Management has responsibility for reporting cybersecurity incidents to the 
Audit Committee as they occur, if consistent with our CIRP. The CIRP also addresses management's responsibility, with 
Audit Committee oversight, with respect to any reporting or disclosure determinations related to a given cybersecurity 
incident and provides for Audit Committee and Board of Trustee briefings as appropriate. 
Risks, Threats and Material Incidents 
As of December 31, 2024, cybersecurity threats, including as a result of any previous cybersecurity incidents, have not 
materially affected us, including our business strategy, results of operations or financial condition. However, we and our 
third-party providers have been the target of cybersecurity threats and expect them to continue. Notwithstanding the 
extensive approach we take to address cybersecurity, there can be no assurance that our cybersecurity efforts and measures 
will be effective or that attempted cybersecurity incidents or disruptions would not be successful or damaging. 
See Item 1A “Risk Factors” - Risks Related to Our Business and Operations - The occurrence of cyber incidents, or a 
deficiency in our cybersecurity, or the cybersecurity of our service providers, could negatively impact our business by 
causing a disruption to our operations, a compromise or corruption of our confidential information, regulatory 
enforcement and other legal proceedings, and/or damage to our business relationships, all of which could negatively 
impact our financial results. 

36 
ITEM 2. PROPERTIES 
Note on presentation of "at share" information. We present certain financial information and metrics "at JBG SMITH 
Share," which is calculated on an entity-by-entity basis, but exclude our 10.0% subordinated interest in one commercial 
building and our 33.5% subordinated interest in four commercial buildings, as well as the associated non-recourse 
mortgage loans, held through unconsolidated real estate ventures; these interests and debt are excluded because our 
investment in each real estate venture is zero, we do not anticipate receiving any near-term cash flow distributions from 
the real estate ventures, and we have not guaranteed their obligations or otherwise committed to providing financial 
support. "At JBG SMITH Share" information, which we also refer to as being "at share," "our pro rata share" or "our 
share," is not, and is not intended to be, a presentation in accordance with GAAP. Because as of December 31, 2024, 6.3% 
of our assets, as measured by total square feet, was held through real estate ventures in which we own less than 100% of 
the ownership interest, we believe this form of presentation, which includes our economic interests in the unconsolidated 
real estate ventures, provides investors important information regarding a significant component of our portfolio, its 
composition, performance and capitalization. We classify our portfolio as "operating," "under-construction," or 
"development pipeline."  
The following tables provide information about our multifamily, commercial and development pipeline portfolios as of 
December 31, 2024. Many of our assets in the development pipeline are adjacent to or an integrated component of 
operating multifamily or commercial assets in our portfolio. A number of our assets included in the following tables are 
held through real estate ventures with third parties or are subject to ground leases. In addition to other information, the 
following tables indicate our percentage ownership, whether the asset is consolidated or unconsolidated, and whether the 
asset is subject to a ground lease. 

37 
Multifamily Assets 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
     
 
    
 
    
 
    Number    
Total 
    
 
 Multifamily 
 
 
 
 
%  
 
 
 Same Store (2):  
of 
 
Square  
%  
% 
 Retail %  
Multifamily Assets 
 Ownership 
C/U (1)  YTD 2023-2024 
Units  
Feet 
 Leased Occupied  Occupied 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
National Landing 
  
    
   
  
   
  
    
    
   
   
   
RiverHouse Apartments 
  
 100.0 % 
C 
  
Y 
  
 1,676    1,326,219   96.9%  
95.9%  100.0%  
The Bartlett 
  
 100.0 % 
C 
  
Y 
  
 699   
 619,372   96.8%  
94.7%  100.0%  
220 20th Street 
  
 100.0 % 
C 
  
Y 
  
 265   
 271,476   97.0%  
95.8%  100.0%  
2221 S. Clark Street - Residential 
  
 100.0 % 
C 
  
Y 
  
 216   
 96,948   61.1%  
53.6%  
—  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
D.C. 
  
    
    
    
    
    
   
   
   
West Half 
 
 100.0 % 
C 
  
Y 
  
 465   
 385,372   94.4%  
92.3%  
90.7%  
The Wren 
 
 100.0 % 
C 
 
Y 
 
 433  
 332,682  
95.4%  
93.5%  100.0%  
The Batley 
 
 100.0 % 
C 
 
Y 
 
 432  
 300,388  
97.0%  
96.1%  
—  
WestEnd25 
  
 100.0 % 
C 
  
Y 
  
 283   
 273,264   97.2%  
95.8%  
—  
F1RST Residences 
 
 100.0 % 
C 
 
Y 
 
 325  
 270,928  
94.9%  
93.5%  100.0%  
Atlantic Plumbing 
  
 100.0 % 
C 
  
Y 
  
 310   
 245,228   96.8%  
94.5%  
97.3%  
1221 Van Street 
  
 100.0 % 
C 
  
Y 
  
 291   
 225,592   96.3%  
93.8%  100.0%  
901 W Street 
 
 100.0 % 
C 
 
Y 
 
 161  
 154,379  
94.7%  
95.0%  
74.5%  
900 W Street 
 
 100.0 % 
C 
 
Y 
 
 95  
 71,050  
82.1%  
33.7%  
—  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
MD 
  
    
   
  
   
  
    
    
   
   
   
8001 Woodmont (4) 
  
 100.0 % 
C 
  
Y 
  
 322   
 363,947   94.1%  
93.2%  100.0%  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
Total / Weighted Average (3) 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 5,973    4,936,845   96.2%  
94.8%  96.0%  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
Recently Delivered 
  
    
   
  
   
  
    
    
   
   
   
National Landing 
  
    
   
  
   
  
    
    
   
   
   
Reva 
 
 100.0 % 
C 
 
N 
 
 471  
 324,188  
65.5%  
62.6%  
27.9%  
The Grace 
 
 100.0 % 
C  
N 
 
 337  
 311,903  
71.8%  
66.2%  
66.8%  
Total / Weighted Average 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 808   
 636,091   68.6%  
64.1%  52.9%  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Operating - Total / Weighted Average (3) 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 6,781    5,572,936   92.9%  
91.0%  90.0%  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
Under-Construction 
  
    
   
  
    
    
    
   
   
   
National Landing 
  
    
   
   
 
    
    
   
   
   
2000/2001 South Bell Street 
 
 100.0 % 
C 
  
 
 775  
 580,966  
 
 
 
Total 
   
  
   
 
 7,556    6,153,902   
   
   
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
Totals at JBG SMITH Share (3) 
  
    
    
    
    
    
   
   
   
National Landing 
   
  
  
 
 2,856    2,314,015   96.9% 
95.6% 100.0%  
D.C. 
  
  
  
 
 2,795   2,258,883  
95.8% 
94.2% 
94.5%  
MD 
   
  
  
 
 322   
 363,947   94.1% 
93.2% 100.0%  
In-service assets 
   
  
  
 
 5,973    4,936,845   96.2% 
94.8% 
96.0%  
Recently delivered assets 
   
  
  
 
 808   
 636,091   68.6% 
64.1% 
52.9%  
Operating - Total / Weighted Average 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 6,781   5,572,936  92.9%  
91.0%  90.0%  
Under-construction assets 
  
  
  
 
 775  
 580,966  
 
 
   
 
Note:   At 100% share, unless otherwise noted.  
(1) 
"C" denotes a consolidated interest and "U" denotes an unconsolidated interest. 
(2) 
"Y" denotes an asset as same store and "N" denotes an asset as non-same store. 
(3) 
2221 S. Clark Street - Residential and 900 W Street are excluded from percent leased and percent occupied metrics as they are operated as short-
term rental properties.  
(4) 
Classified as held for sale in our consolidated balance sheet as of December 31, 2024. 
 
 

38 
Commercial Assets 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
 
     
 
    
 
    
Total 
     
 
    
 
    
 
 
 
 
% 
 
 
 
Same Store (2):  
Square  
% 
 
Office % 
Retail %  
Commercial Assets 
 Ownership 
C/U (1) YTD 2023-2024 
Feet 
 
Leased  Occupied Occupied 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
National Landing 
  
    
   
  
   
  
    
    
    
   
1550 Crystal Drive (3) 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 554,888   
89.2%  
86.7%  
99.7%  
2121 Crystal Drive 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 509,869   
68.6%  
68.3%  
100.0%  
2345 Crystal Drive 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 499,635   
47.3%  
46.7%  
74.3%  
2231 Crystal Drive 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 468,371   
75.2%  
72.5%  
97.4%  
2011 Crystal Drive 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 441,057   
68.0%  
57.0%  
-   
2451 Crystal Drive 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 402,375   
84.0%  
83.8%  
92.6%  
241 18th Street S. (3) 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 334,091   
89.9%  
89.9%  
-   
201 12th Street S. 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 329,687   
97.0%  
96.8%  
100.0%  
251 18th Street S. (3) 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 300,319   
99.0%  
90.9%  
53.2%  
1901 South Bell Street 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 274,912   
32.2%  
32.2%  
-   
1770 Crystal Drive 
 
 100.0 %  
C  
Y 
 
 273,787  
98.3%  
100.0%  
67.8%  
200 12th Street S. 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 202,761   
52.8%  
52.8%  
-   
Crystal Drive Retail (3) 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 42,938   
90.1%  
-  
90.1%  
1235 S. Clark Street 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 384,674   
73.4%  
69.9%  
97.8%  
1215 S. Clark Street 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 336,159   
99.6%  
100.0%  
44.5%  
1225 S. Clark Street 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 276,223   
98.4%  
99.2%  
80.9%  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Other 
  
    
   
  
   
  
    
    
    
   
800 North Glebe Road 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 305,006   
83.0%  
82.1%  
92.4%  
One Democracy Plaza (4) (5) 
  
 100.0 %  
C   
Y 
  
 213,171   
87.0%  
86.9%  
100.0%  
4747 Bethesda Avenue (6) 
 
 20.0 %  
U  
Y 
 
 300,535   100.0%  
100.0%  
100.0%  
1101 17th Street 
  
 55.0 %  
U   
Y 
  
 210,134   
80.8%  
80.0%  
82.8%  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Operating - Total / Weighted Average 
   
 
 
 
 
  6,660,592   
79.4%  
77.4%  
91.5%  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Operating - Total / Weighted Average at JBG SMITH Share 
  6,325,604  
78.6%  
76.5%  
91.4%  
 
Note:    At 100% share, unless otherwise noted.  
(1) 
"C" denotes a consolidated interest and "U" denotes an unconsolidated interest. 
(2) 
"Y" denotes an asset as same store and "N" denotes an asset as non-same store. 
(3) 
The following assets contain space that is held for development or not otherwise available for lease. This out-of-service square footage is excluded 
from square feet, leased and occupancy metrics in the above table. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Not Available
Commercial Asset 
     In-Service     for Lease 
1550 Crystal Drive 
  
 554,888 
 
 4,281 
241 18th Street S. 
 
 334,091 
 
 28,308 
251 18th Street S. 
 
 300,319 
 
 39,211 
Crystal Drive Retail * 
 
 42,938 
 
 86,242 
2221 S. Clark Street - Office 
 
 — 
 
 35,182 
*  Includes 72,215 SF of not available to lease space from the asset formerly known as Crystal City Shops at 2100. 
 
(4) 
Asset is subject to a ground lease through 2084, where we are the lessee. 
(5) 
Not Metro-served. 
(6) 
Includes our corporate office lease for approximately 84,400 square feet. 

39 
Development Pipeline 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Estimated 
 
 
%  
 
Estimated Potential Development Density (SF) 
 
Number of 
Asset 
  
Ownership  
Total 
  
Multifamily   
Office 
  
Retail 
 
Units 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
National Landing 
   
 
  
  
  
  
 
1415 S. Eads Street 
 
100.0%  
 538,000  
 533,800  
 —  
 4,200  
 570 
3330 Exchange Avenue 
 
50.0%  
 239,800  
 216,400  
 —  
 23,400  
 240 
3331 Exchange Avenue 
 
50.0%  
 180,600  
 164,300  
 —  
 16,300  
 170 
RiverHouse Land 
 
100.0%  
 2,046,900  
 2,020,500  
 —  
 26,400  
 1,515 
Potomac Yard Landbay F/G/H 
 50.0% / 100.0%  
 1,846,000  
 944,000  
 844,000  
 58,000  
 765 
2250 Crystal Drive 
 
100.0%  
 696,200  
 681,300  
 —  
 14,900  
 825 
2100/2200 Crystal Drive Land 
 
100.0%  
 565,000  
 565,000  
 —  
 —  
 530 
223 23rd Street 
 
100.0%  
 492,100  
 484,100  
 —  
 8,000  
 610 
2525 Crystal Drive 
 
100.0%  
 373,000  
 370,000  
 —  
 3,000  
 370 
1901 South Bell Street Land (1) 
 
100.0%  
 265,000  
 265,000  
 —  
 —  
 170 
101 12th Street S. 
 
100.0%  
 239,600  
 —  
 234,400  
 5,200  
 — 
1800 South Bell Street 
 
100.0%  
 311,000  
 —  
 307,000  
 4,000  
 — 
D.C. 
  
 
    
  
  
    
Gallaudet Parcel 2-3 (2) 
  
100.0%  
 819,100  
 758,200  
 —  
 60,900  
 820 
Gallaudet Parcel 4 (2) 
 
100.0%  
 644,200  
 605,200  
 —  
 39,000  
 645 
Capitol Point - North 
 
100.0%  
 451,400  
 434,100  
 —  
 17,300  
 470 
Other Development Parcels (3) 
 
 
 1,248,100  
 142,200  
 1,105,900  
 —  
 — 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Total 
   
 
 10,956,000   
 8,184,100   
 2,491,300   
 280,600   
 7,700 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Totals at JBG SMITH Share 
  
 
 
 
 
 
National Landing 
  
 
 6,807,100  
 5,729,100  
 963,400  
 114,600  
 5,235 
D.C. 
  
 
 2,107,000  
 1,840,200  
 149,600  
 117,200  
 1,935 
 
  
 
 8,914,100  
 7,569,300  
 1,113,000  
 231,800  
 7,170 
 
Note:   At 100% share, unless otherwise noted.  
(1) 
Currently encumbered by an operating commercial asset. 
(2) 
Controlled through an option to acquire a leasehold interest. 
(3) 
Comprises four assets in which we have a minority interest.  
Major Tenants 
The following table sets forth information for our 10 largest tenants by annualized rent for the year ended 
December 31, 2024: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
At JBG SMITH Share 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Annualized 
 % of Total  
 
    Number of    Square      % of Total      
Rent 
    Annualized  
Tenant 
 
Leases 
 
Feet 
 Square Feet  (In thousands)  
Rent 
  
GSA 
  
 31    1,479,379   
 28.8 %   $ 
 57,696   
 25.2 % 
Amazon 
  
 3   
 357,339   
 7.0 %     
 16,622   
 7.2 % 
Lockheed Martin Corporation 
  
 2   
 207,095   
 4.0 %     
 10,276   
 4.5 % 
Accenture Federal Services LLC 
  
 2   
 123,706   
 2.4 %     
 5,635   
 2.5 % 
Public Broadcasting Service 
  
 1   
 120,328   
 2.3 %     
 5,099   
 2.2 % 
Whole Foods Market Group Inc 
  
 3   
 98,625   
 1.9 %     
 3,857   
 1.7 % 
American Diabetes Association 
  
 1   
 80,998   
 1.6 %     
 3,818   
 1.7 % 
Booz Allen Hamilton Inc 
  
 2   
 69,328   
 1.3 %     
 3,427   
 1.5 % 
National Consumer Cooperative 
  
 1   
 65,736   
 1.3 %     
 3,310   
 1.4 % 
SAIC 
  
 3   
 62,963   
 1.2 %     
 3,147   
 1.4 % 
Total 
  
 49    2,665,497   
 51.8 %  $ 
 112,887   
 49.3 %
 
 
Note: Includes all leases as of December 31, 2024 for which a tenant has taken occupancy for office and retail space within our Operating Portfolio. 

40 
Lease Expirations 
The following table sets forth as of December 31, 2024 the scheduled expirations of tenant leases in our Operating 
Portfolio for each year from 2025 through 2033 and thereafter: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
At JBG SMITH Share 
 
    
 
    
 
     
 
      
 
    
 
      
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
% of 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
% of 
 
Annualized 
 
 Total 
 
Annualized 
 
 Number of  
Square 
 
 Total 
 
Rent (1) 
 Annualized  
Rent Per 
Year of Lease Expiration 
 
Leases 
 
Feet 
 Square Feet  (In thousands)  
Rent 
 Square Foot (1)
Month-to-Month 
  
 16   
 209,018   
 4.1 %   $ 
 8,556   
 3.7 %   $ 
 40.93 
2025 
  
 61   
 482,812   
 9.4 %     
 21,807   
 9.5 %     
 45.17 
2026 
  
 46   
 227,098   
 4.4 %     
 11,385   
 5.0 %     
 50.13 
2027 
  
 38   
 534,998   
 10.4 %     
 25,776   
 11.2 %     
 48.18 
2028 
  
 30   
 386,841   
 7.5 %     
 18,004   
 7.8 %     
 46.54 
2029 
  
 27   
 242,552   
 4.7 %     
 11,370   
 5.0 %     
 46.87 
2030 
  
 28   
 603,032   
 11.7 %     
 29,194   
 12.7 %     
 48.41 
2031 
  
 26   
 561,912   
 10.9 %     
 21,661   
 9.4 %     
 38.55 
2032 
  
 18   
 651,033   
 12.7 %     
 26,138   
 11.4 %     
 40.15 
2033 
  
 26   
 344,046   
 6.7 %     
 14,964   
 6.5 %     
 49.07 
Thereafter 
  
 48   
 896,786   
 17.5 %     
 40,533   
 17.8 %     
 45.20 
Total / Weighted Average 
  
 364    5,140,128   
 100.0 %  $ 
 229,388   
 100.0 %  $ 
 44.97 
 
Note:  Includes all leases as of December 31, 2024 for which a tenant has taken occupancy for office and retail space within our Operating Portfolio and 
assuming no exercise of renewal options or early termination rights. The weighted average remaining lease term for the entire portfolio is 5.8 years. 
(1) 
Annualized rent and annualized rent per square foot exclude percentage rent and the square footage of tenants that only pay percentage rent. 
 
ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS 
In November 2023, the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia 
against RealPage, Inc., a provider of revenue management systems, numerous multifamily rental companies, and 14 
owners and/or operators of multifamily housing in the District of Columbia, including JBG Associates, L.L.C., one of our 
subsidiaries, alleging that the defendants violated the District of Columbia Antitrust Act by unlawfully agreeing to 
use RealPage, Inc. revenue management systems and sharing sensitive data. While we intend to vigorously defend against 
this lawsuit, given the current stage of the District of Columbia’s lawsuit, we are unable to predict the outcome or estimate 
the amount of loss, if any, that may result from the lawsuit. While we do not believe that these proceedings will have a 
material adverse effect on our financial condition, we cannot give assurance that the proceedings will not have a material 
effect on our results of operations or cash flows in the event of a negative outcome. 
 
There are various other legal actions arising in the ordinary course of business. In our opinion, the outcome of such matters 
is not expected to have a material adverse effect on our financial position, results of operations or cash flows. 
 
ITEM 4. MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES 
Not applicable. 
 
 

41 
 
PART II 
ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY, RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS AND 
ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES 
Market Information and Dividends 
Our common shares trade under the symbol "JBGS." On February 14, 2025, there were 763 holders of record of our 
common shares. This number does not reflect individuals or other entities who hold their shares in "street name." 
Dividends declared for the year ended December 31, 2024, totaled $0.875 per common share (five distributions of 
$0.175 per common share). Dividends declared for the year ended December 31, 2023, totaled $0.675 per common share 
(quarterly dividends of $0.225 per common share for the first three quarters of 2023). Dividends declared for the year 
ended December 31, 2022, totaled $0.90 per common share (quarterly dividends of $0.225 per common share). Future 
dividends will be declared at the discretion of our Board of Trustees and will depend upon cash generated by our operating 
activities, our financial condition, capital requirements, annual distribution requirements under the REIT provisions of the 
Code and such other factors as our Board of Trustees deems relevant. To qualify for the beneficial tax treatment accorded 
to REITs under the Code, we are currently required to make distributions to holders of our shares in an amount equal to at 
least 90% of our REIT taxable income as defined in Section 857 of the Code. 
The annual distribution amounts are different from dividends as calculated for federal income tax purposes. Distributions 
to the extent of our current and accumulated earnings and profits for federal income tax purposes generally will be taxable 
to a shareholder as ordinary dividend income. Distributions in excess of current and accumulated earnings and profits will 
be treated as a nontaxable reduction of the shareholder's basis in the shareholder's shares, to the extent thereof, and 
thereafter as taxable capital gain. Distributions that are treated as a reduction of the shareholder's basis in its shares will 
have the effect of increasing the amount of gain, or reducing the amount of loss, recognized upon the sale of the 
shareholder's shares. No assurances can be given regarding what portion, if any, of distributions in 2025 or 
subsequent years will constitute a return of capital for federal income tax purposes. During a year in which a REIT earns 
a net long-term capital gain, the REIT can elect under Section 857(b)(3) of the Code to designate a portion of dividends 
paid to shareholders as capital gain dividends. If this election is made, the capital gain dividends are generally taxable to 
the shareholder as long-term capital gains. 
Performance Graph 
This performance graph shall not be deemed "soliciting material" or to be "filed" with the SEC for purposes of Section 18 
of the Exchange Act, or otherwise subject to the liabilities under that Section, and shall not be deemed to be incorporated 
by reference into any of our filings under the Securities Act or the Exchange Act. 
The graph below compares the cumulative total return of our common shares, the S&P MidCap 400 Index and the FTSE 
Nareit Equity Office Index, from December 31, 2019, through December 31, 2024. The comparison assumes $100 was 
invested on December 31, 2019 in our common shares and in each of the foregoing indexes and assumes reinvestment of 
dividends, as applicable. We have included the FTSE Nareit Equity Office Index because we believe that it is representative 
of the industry in which we compete and is relevant to an assessment of our performance. There can be no assurance that 
the performance of our shares will continue in line with the same or similar trends depicted in the graph below. 
 
 

42 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     12/31/2019  12/31/2020   12/31/2021  12/31/2022   12/31/2023   12/31/2024 
JBG SMITH Properties 
  
 100.00  
 80.78 
 
 76.41 
 52.69 
 49.46 
 47.23 
S&P MidCap 400 Index 
  
 100.00  
 113.66 
 
 141.80 
 123.28 
 143.54 
 163.54 
FTSE Nareit Equity Office Index 
  
 100.00  
 81.56 
 
 99.51 
 62.07 
 63.34 
 76.95 
 
Sales of Unregistered Shares 
During the year ended December 31, 2024, we did not sell any unregistered securities. 

43 
Repurchases of Equity Securities 
The following is a summary of common shares repurchased: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Period 
 
Total 
Number Of 
Common 
Shares 
Purchased  
Average 
Price Paid 
Per 
Common 
Share 
 
 Total Number 
Of Common 
Shares 
Purchased As 
Part Of Publicly 
Announced 
Plans Or 
Programs 
 
Approximate 
Dollar Value Of 
Common Shares 
That May Yet Be 
Purchased Under 
the Plan Or 
Programs 
October 1, 2024 - October 31, 2024 
 
 -  $ 
 - 
 
 -  $  372,862,091 
November 1, 2024 - November 30, 2024 
 
 153,843   
 15.58  
 153,843   
 370,462,409 
December 1, 2024 - December 31, 2024 
 
 -   
 - 
 
 -   
 370,462,409 
Total for the three months ended December 31, 2024 
 153,843   
 15.58  
 153,843    
Total for the year ended December 31, 2024 
  10,927,343   
 15.60  
 10,927,343    
Program total since inception in March 2020 (1) 
  56,801,346   
 19.87  
 56,801,346    
 
(1) 
During the first quarter of 2025, through February 14, 2025, we repurchased and retired 2.1 million common shares for $32.3 
million, a weighted average purchase price per share of $15.15, pursuant to a repurchase plan under Rule 10b5-1 of the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. 
In June 2022, our Board of Trustees authorized the repurchase of up to $1.0 billion of our outstanding common shares, 
and in May 2023, increased the authorized repurchase amount to $1.5 billion. In February 2025, our Board of Trustees 
increased our common share repurchase authorization to $2.0 billion. Purchases under the program are made either in the 
open market or in privately negotiated transactions from time to time as permitted by federal securities laws and other 
legal requirements. The timing, manner, price and amount of any repurchases will be determined by us at our discretion 
and will be subject to economic and market conditions, share price, applicable legal requirements and other factors. The 
program may be suspended or discontinued at our discretion without prior notice. 
Equity Compensation Plan Information 
Information regarding equity compensation plans is presented in Part III, Item 12 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K and 
incorporated herein by reference. 
ITEM 6. [RESERVED] 
ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS 
OF OPERATIONS 
The following discussion is intended to provide material information relevant to our financial condition and results of 
operations, including cash flows, and should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and notes 
thereto appearing in Item 8 - Financial Statements and Supplementary Data of this Annual Report on Form 10-K. 
Organization and Basis of Presentation 
JBG SMITH, a Maryland real estate investment trust, owns, operates and develops mixed-use properties concentrated in 
amenity-rich, Metro-served submarkets in and around Washington, D.C., most notably National Landing, that we believe 
have long-term growth potential and appeal to residential, office and retail tenants. Through an intense focus on 
placemaking, JBG SMITH cultivates vibrant, highly amenitized, walkable neighborhoods throughout the Washington, 
D.C. metropolitan area. Approximately 75.0% of our holdings are in the National Landing submarket in Northern Virginia, 
which is anchored by four key demand drivers: Amazon's headquarters; Virginia Tech's $1 billion Innovation Campus; 
proximity to the Pentagon; and our placemaking initiatives and public infrastructure improvements. In addition, our third-

44 
party real estate services business provides fee-based real estate services. Substantially all our assets are held by, and our 
operations are conducted through, JBG SMITH LP.  
We were organized for the purpose of receiving, via the spin-off on July 17, 2017, substantially all the assets and liabilities 
of Vornado's Washington, D.C. segment. On July 18, 2017, we acquired the management business and certain assets and 
liabilities of JBG. 
We have elected to be taxed as a REIT under sections 856-860 of the Code. Under those sections, a REIT which distributes 
at least 90% of its REIT taxable income as dividends to its shareholders each year and which meets certain other conditions 
will not be taxed on that portion of its taxable income which is distributed to its shareholders. We currently adhere and 
intend to continue to adhere to these requirements and to maintain our REIT status in future periods.  
As a REIT, we can reduce our taxable income by distributing all or a portion of such taxable income to shareholders. Future 
distributions will be declared and paid at the discretion of the Board of Trustees and will depend upon cash generated by 
operating activities, our financial condition, capital requirements, annual dividend requirements under the REIT provisions 
of the Code, and such other factors as our Board of Trustees deems relevant. 
We also participate in the activities conducted by our subsidiary entities that have elected to be treated as TRSs under the 
Code. As such, we are subject to federal, state, and local taxes on the income from these activities. Income taxes attributable 
to our TRSs are accounted for under the asset and liability method. Under the asset and liability method, deferred income 
taxes arise from temporary differences between the tax basis of assets and liabilities and their reported amounts in the 
consolidated financial statements, which will result in taxable or deductible amounts in the future. 
Our three operating and reportable segments are multifamily, commercial and third-party real estate services. 
We compete with many property owners and developers. Our success depends upon, among other factors, trends affecting 
national and local economies, the financial condition and operating results of current and prospective tenants, the 
availability and cost of capital, interest rates, construction and renovation costs, taxes, governmental regulations and 
legislation, population trends, zoning laws, and our ability to lease, sublease or sell our assets at profitable levels. Our 
success is also subject to our ability to refinance existing debt on acceptable terms as it comes due. 
Overview 
As of December 31, 2024, our Operating Portfolio consisted of 38 operating assets comprising 16 multifamily assets 
totaling 6,781 units (6,781 units at our share), 20 commercial assets totaling 6.7 million square feet (6.3 million square 
feet at our share) and two wholly owned land assets for which we are the ground lessor. Additionally, we have one under-
construction multifamily asset with 775 units (775 units at our share) and 19 assets in our development pipeline totaling 
11.0 million square feet (8.9 million square feet at our share) of estimated potential development density. 
We continue to implement our comprehensive plan to reposition our holdings in National Landing by executing a broad 
array of Placemaking strategies. Our Placemaking includes the delivery of new multifamily assets, the delivery of 
redeveloped and new office assets subject to demand therefor, amenity retail, and thoughtful improvements to the 
streetscape, sidewalks, parks and other outdoor gathering spaces. In keeping with our dedication to Placemaking, each 
new project is intended to contribute to an authentic and distinct neighborhood by creating a vibrant street environment 
with robust retail offerings and other amenities, including improved public spaces. To that end, we saw the delivery of two 
placemaking projects, Water Park and Surreal in 2023. In 2024, we delivered The Grace and Reva with 808 multifamily 
units and approximately 38,000 square feet of retail space. We expect to deliver 2000/2001 South Bell Street, a 775-unit 
multifamily asset comprising two towers, Valen and The Zoe with ground floor retail, in 2025. Additionally, in 2024, we 
started construction on a new office amenity hub at 2011 Crystal Drive that, along with a repositioning of the asset itself, 
brings a large scale externally managed meeting and conference facility, two elevated food and beverage offerings, and an 
activated public lobby. 

45 
Outlook 
A fundamental component of our strategy to maximize long-term NAV per share is thoughtful capital allocation. We 
evaluate development, disposition, share repurchases and other investment decisions based on how they may impact long-
term NAV per share. We intend to continue to opportunistically sell or recapitalize assets (which may be multifamily, 
commercial and/or retail assets) as well as land sites where a ground lease or joint venture execution may represent the 
most attractive path to maximizing value. As long as we believe our share price does not reflect the underlying, intrinsic 
value of our business, as we do now, we expect to continue repurchasing shares through our share repurchase plan (which 
has a capacity of approximately $838 million as of February 14, 2025) and to fund such repurchases through such asset 
sales or recapitalizations. In a climate where office assets are near cyclical lows with limited liquidity, we intend in the 
near term to focus on sourcing liquidity from multifamily assets, specifically our multifamily assets in Washington, D.C. 
where our holdings are less concentrated. Recycling these assets will also further advance our strategy to concentrate our 
portfolio in National Landing. 
Our in-service multifamily portfolio, which refers to operating assets that are at or above 90% leased or have been operating 
and collecting rent for more than 12 months as of December 31, 2024, was 94.8% occupied as of December 31, 2024, an 
increase of 10 basis points as compared to December 31, 2023. During the fourth quarter of 2024, we increased effective 
rents, which represent the average change in rental rates versus expiring rental rates net of concessions, by 0.8% for new 
leases and 4.6% upon renewal while achieving a 60.0% renewal rate across our portfolio. Our recently delivered assets, 
The Grace and Reva, began leasing in January 2024 with move-ins commencing in February 2024 and delivery of all 
remaining units in the second quarter of 2024, were 68.6% leased as of December 31, 2024. We expect that interest expense 
will increase as we deliver 2000/2001 South Bell Street and cease capitalizing the related interest. 
Our office portfolio occupancy as of December 31, 2024 of 76.5% decreased by 840 basis points as compared to 
December 31, 2023. Although the office market continues to experience headwinds, we have seen some favorable trends 
in leasing activity with businesses and the federal government asking employees to return to the office. We anticipate 
approximately 259,000 square feet (approximately $11.0 million of annualized rent) will be vacated in National Landing 
in the first half of 2025. Our efforts to re-lease certain spaces will be targeted toward buildings with long-term viability 
where we can concentrate occupancy. We have taken approximately 618,000 office square feet out of service this year at 
1800 South Bell Street, 2100 Crystal Drive and 2200 Crystal Drive. Additionally, we plan to take 1901 South Bell Street, 
a commercial asset with 274,912 square feet, out of service. With the objective of ultimately reducing our competitive 
office inventory in National Landing, we expect to help foster a healthier long-term office market while repurposing older, 
underutilized buildings for redevelopment or conversion to multifamily housing, hospitality or other complimentary uses 
that will support a vibrant mixed-use environment. 
We continue to advance the design and entitlement of our 11.0 million square feet (8.9 million square feet at our share) of 
estimated potential development density in our development pipeline and intend to look to source joint venture capital as 
a means of funding these developments as market conditions permit.  
Operating Results 
Highlights of operating results for the year ended December 31, 2024 included: 
• 
net loss attributable to common shareholders of $143.5 million, or $1.65 per diluted common share, compared to 
$80.0 million, or $0.78 per diluted common share, for 2023; 
• 
third-party real estate services revenue, including reimbursements, of $69.5 million compared to $92.1 million 
for 2023; 
• 
in-service operating multifamily portfolio leased and occupied percentages (1) at our share of 96.2% and 94.8% 
compared to 96.0% and 94.7% as of December 31, 2023; 
• 
operating commercial portfolio leased and occupied percentages at our share of 78.6% and 76.5% compared to 
86.3% and 84.9% as of December 31, 2023; 
• 
the leasing of 614,000 square feet at our share, at an initial rent (2) of $46.79 per square foot and a GAAP-basis 
weighted average rent per square foot (3) of $47.53; and 

46 
• 
an increase in same store (4) NOI of 1.3% to $267.7 million compared to $264.2 million for 2023. 
 
(1) 
2221 S. Clark Street - Residential and 900 W Street are excluded from leased and occupied percentages as they are operated as 
short-term rental properties. 
(2) 
Represents the cash basis weighted average starting rent per square foot, which excludes free rent, fixed escalations and percentage 
rent. 
(3) 
Represents the weighted average rent per square foot recognized over the term of the respective leases, including the effect of free 
rent and fixed escalations, but excluding the effect of percentage rent. 
(4) 
Includes the results of the properties that are owned, operated and in-service for the entirety of both periods being compared except 
for properties for which significant redevelopment, renovation or repositioning occurred during either of the periods being 
compared. 
Additionally, investing and financing activity during the year ended December 31, 2024 included: 
• 
the sale of North End Retail, Fort Totten Square and 2101 L Street. See Note 3 to the consolidated financial 
statements for additional information; 
• 
the sale of Central Place Tower by one of our unconsolidated real estate ventures. See Note 5 to the consolidated 
financial statements for additional information;  
• 
net borrowings of $23.0 million under our revolving credit facility;  
• 
the refinancing of the mortgage loan collateralized by The Grace and Reva. See Note 10 to the consolidated 
financial statements for additional information; 
• 
the repayment of mortgage loans totaling $204.2 million. See Note 10 to the consolidated financial statements 
for additional information;  
• 
the one-year extension of the maturity date of the Tranche A-1 Term Loan to January 2026;  
• 
the payment of dividends totaling $62.0 million and distributions to our noncontrolling interests of $11.6 million; 
• 
the purchase of the ground lessees’ interests in 1900 Crystal Drive and 2000/2001 South Bell Street for 
$49.4 million; 
• 
the repurchase and retirement of 10.9 million of our common shares for $170.7 million, a weighted average 
purchase price per share of $15.60; and 
• 
the investment of $218.0 million in development costs, construction in progress and real estate additions. 
Activity subsequent to December 31, 2024 included: 
• 
the increase by our Board of Trustees of our common share repurchase authorization to $2.0 billion; and 
• 
the repurchase and retirement of 2.1 million common shares for $32.3 million, a weighted average purchase price 
per share of $15.15, pursuant to a repurchase plan under Rule 10b5-1 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as 
amended. 
Critical Accounting Estimates 
The preparation of consolidated financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make estimates 
and assumptions that in certain circumstances may significantly impact our financial results. These estimates are prepared 
using management's best judgment, after considering past and current events and economic conditions. In addition, certain 
information relied upon by management in preparing such estimates includes internally generated financial and operating 
information, external market information, when available, and when necessary, information obtained from consultations 
with third-party experts. Actual results could differ from these estimates. We consider an accounting estimate to be critical 
if changes in the estimate could have a material impact on our consolidated results of operations or financial condition. 

47 
Our significant accounting policies are fully described in Note 2 to the consolidated financial statements; however, the 
most critical accounting estimates, which involve the use of judgments as to future uncertainties and, therefore, may result 
in actual amounts that differ from estimates, are as follows: 
Asset Acquisitions 
Description: We account for asset acquisitions, which includes the consolidation of previously unconsolidated real estate 
ventures, at cost, including transaction costs, plus the fair value of any assumed debt. We estimate the fair values of 
acquired assets and liabilities assumed based on our evaluation of information and estimates available at the date of 
acquisition. Based on these estimates, we allocate the purchase price, including all transaction costs related to the 
acquisition and any contingent consideration, to the identified assets acquired and liabilities assumed based on their relative 
fair value. 
Judgments and Uncertainties: Asset acquisitions primarily consist of buildings and land. The fair values of buildings are 
determined using the "as-if vacant" approach whereby we use discounted cash flow models with inputs and assumptions 
that we believe are consistent with current market conditions for similar assets. The most significant assumptions in 
determining the allocation of the purchase price to buildings are the exit capitalization rate, discount rate, estimated market 
rents and hypothetical expected lease-up periods, when applicable. We assess the fair value of land based on market 
comparisons and development projects using an income approach of cost plus a margin. 
Sensitivity of Estimate to Change: While our methodology did not change in 2024, to the extent the estimates and 
assumptions in our discounted cash flow models used to value our buildings or our projections of land value change due 
to market conditions or other factors, our estimated fair values may be different and such differences could be material to 
our consolidated financial statements.  
Real Estate 
Description: Real estate is carried at cost, net of accumulated depreciation and amortization. As real estate is undergoing 
redevelopment activities, all property operating expenses directly associated with and attributable to the redevelopment, 
including interest expense, are capitalized to the extent that we believe such costs are recoverable through the value of the 
property.  
Judgments and Uncertainties: Our real estate and related intangible assets are reviewed for impairment whenever there 
are changes in circumstances or indicators that the carrying amount of the assets may not be recoverable. These indicators 
may include declining operating performance, below average occupancy, shortened anticipated holding periods, costs in 
excess of budgets for under-construction assets and other adverse changes. An impairment exists when the carrying amount 
of an asset exceeds the sum of the undiscounted cash flows expected to result from the use and eventual disposition of the 
asset. Estimates of future cash flows are based on our current plans, anticipated holding periods and available market 
information at the time the analyses are prepared. An impairment loss is recognized if the carrying amount of the asset is 
not recoverable and is measured based on the excess of the property's carrying amount over its estimated fair value. 
Estimated fair values are calculated based on the following information in order of preference, dependent upon availability: 
(i) pending or executed agreements, (ii) market prices for comparable properties or (iii) the sum of discounted cash flows. 
Sensitivity of Estimate to Change: While our methodology did not change in 2024, if our estimates of future cash flows, 
anticipated holding periods, asset strategy or fair values change, based on market conditions, anticipated selling prices or 
other factors, our evaluation of impairment losses may be different and such differences could be material to our 
consolidated financial statements. Estimates of future cash flows are subjective and are based, in part, on assumptions 
regarding future occupancy, rental rates, capitalization and discount rates, and capital requirements that could differ 
materially from actual results. Longer anticipated holding periods for real estate assets directly reduce the likelihood of 
recording an impairment loss. If there is a change in the strategy for an asset or if market conditions dictate a shorter 
holding period, an impairment loss may be recognized, and such loss could be material. 

48 
Investments in Real Estate Ventures 
Description: We use the equity method of accounting for investments in unconsolidated real estate ventures when we have 
significant influence, but do not have a controlling financial interest.  
Judgments and Uncertainties: On a periodic basis, we evaluate our investments in unconsolidated real estate ventures for 
impairment. An investment in a real estate venture is considered impaired if we determine that its fair value is less than 
the net carrying value of the investment in that real estate venture on an other-than-temporary basis. Cash flow projections 
for the investments consider property level factors such as expected future operating income, trends and prospects, 
anticipated holding periods, as well as the effects of demand, competition and other factors. We consider various 
qualitative factors to determine if a decrease in the value of our investment is other-than-temporary. These factors include 
the age of the venture, our intent and ability to retain our investment in the real estate venture, financial condition and 
long-term prospects of the real estate venture and relationships with our partners and banks. If we believe that the decline 
in the fair value of the investment is temporary, no impairment loss is recorded. If our analysis indicates that there is an 
other-than temporary impairment related to the investment in a particular real estate venture, the carrying value of the 
venture will be adjusted to an amount that reflects the estimated fair value of the investment. In the event our investment 
in a real estate venture is reduced to zero, and we are not obligated to provide for additional losses, have not guaranteed 
its obligations or otherwise committed to providing financial support, we will discontinue the equity method of accounting 
until such point that our share of net income equals the share of net losses not recognized during the period the equity 
method was suspended. 
Sensitivity of Estimate to Change: While our methodology did not change in 2024, if our cash flow projections or our 
evaluation of qualitative factors change, based on market conditions or other factors, our evaluation of impairment losses 
may be different and such differences could be material to our consolidated financial statements. Cash flow projections 
are subjective and are based, in part, on assumptions regarding expected future operating income, trends and prospects, 
anticipated holding periods, as well as the effects of demand, competition and other factors that could differ materially 
from actual results. If our assessment that an impairment is other-than-temporary changes, it could result in an impairment 
loss that could be material to our consolidated financial statements.  
Revenue Recognition 
Description: We have leases with various tenants across our portfolio of properties, which generate rental income and 
operating cash flows for our benefit. Property rental revenue includes base rent each tenant pays in accordance with the 
terms of its respective lease and is reported on a straight-line basis over the non-cancellable term of the lease, which 
includes the effects of periodic step-ups in rent and rent abatements under the lease.  
Judgments and Uncertainties: We periodically evaluate the collectability of amounts due from tenants and recognize an 
adjustment to property rental revenue for accounts receivable and deferred rent receivable if we conclude it is not probable, 
we will collect the remaining lease payments under the lease agreements. We exercise judgment in assessing the 
probability of collection and consider payment history, current credit status and economic outlook in making this 
determination. 
Sensitivity of Estimate to Change: If the probability of collection changes, due to tenant creditworthiness, changes to tenant 
payment patterns or economic trends, our evaluation of collectability may be different and such differences could be 
material to our consolidated financial statements.  
Recent Accounting Pronouncements 
See Note 2 to the consolidated financial statements for a description of recent accounting pronouncements. 

49 
Results of Operations 
The following section discusses certain line items from our consolidated statements of operations and the year-to-year 
comparisons between 2024 and 2023. Discussions of the year-to-year comparisons between 2023 and 2022 can be found 
in "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" in Part II, Item 7 of Annual 
Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023, filed with the SEC on February 20, 2024. 
In 2024, we sold North End Retail, Fort Totten Square and 2101 L Street. In 2023, we sold an 80.0% interest in 4747 
Bethesda Avenue to an unconsolidated real estate venture, and we sold Falkland Chase, 5 M Street Southwest, Crystal 
City Marriott and Capital Point-North-75 New York Avenue. We collectively refer to these assets as the "Disposed 
Properties" in the discussion below. Additionally, during 2024, we began leasing The Grace and Reva, and we took 1800 
South Bell Street, 2100 Crystal Drive and 2200 Crystal Drive out of service. 
Comparison of the Year Ended December 31, 2024 to 2023 
The following summarizes certain line items from our consolidated statements of operations that we believe are important 
in understanding our operations and/or those items which significantly changed in the year ended December 31, 2024 
compared to the same period in 2023: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
     % Change   
 
(Dollars in thousands) 
  
Property rental revenue 
 $ 
 456,950  
$ 
 483,159   
 (5.4)%
Third-party real estate services revenue, including reimbursements 
   
 69,465  
  
 92,051   
 (24.5)%
Depreciation and amortization expense 
   
 208,180  
  
 210,195   
 (1.0)%
Property operating expense 
 
  
 146,609  
  
 144,049   
 1.8 %
Real estate taxes expense 
 
  
 52,606  
  
 57,668   
 (8.8)%
General and administrative expense: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Corporate and other 
 
  
 58,790  
  
 54,838   
 7.2 %
Third-party real estate services 
 
  
 74,264  
  
 88,948   
 (16.5)%
Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, net 
 
  
 7,122  
  
 26,999   
 (73.6)%
Interest and other income, net 
 
  
 11,598  
  
 15,781   
 (26.5)%
Interest expense 
 
  
 134,068  
  
 108,660   
 23.4 %
Gain (loss) on the sale of real estate, net 
 
  
 (2,753) 
  
 79,335   
 (103.5)%
Gain (loss) on extinguishment of debt 
 
 
 9,235  
 
 (450) 
*  
Impairment loss 
 
 
 55,427  
 
 90,226  
 (38.6)%
 
* 
Not meaningful. 
Property rental revenue decreased by $26.2 million, or 5.4%, to $457.0 million in 2024 from $483.2 million in 2023. The 
decrease was primarily due to a $35.7 million decrease in revenue from our commercial assets, partially offset by a 
$10.2 million increase in revenue from our multifamily assets. The decrease in revenue from our commercial assets was 
primarily due to a $17.9 million decrease related to assets taken out of service during 2024, an $8.1 million decrease related 
to the Disposed Properties and lower occupancy across the portfolio. The increase in revenue from our multifamily assets 
was primarily due to a $9.9 million increase related to The Grace and Reva, and higher rents and lower concessions across 
the portfolio, partially offset by an $11.7 million decrease related to the Disposed Properties. 
Third-party real estate services revenue, including reimbursements, decreased by $22.6 million, or 24.5%, to $69.5 million 
in 2024 from $92.1 million in 2023. The decrease was primarily due to (i) an $8.7 million decrease in reimbursement 
revenue, (ii) a $7.7 million decrease in development fees related to the timing of development projects, (iii) a $3.3 million 
decrease in property management fees and (iv) a $1.8 million decrease in leasing fees. 
Depreciation and amortization expense decreased by $2.0 million, or 1.0%, to $208.2 million in 2024 from $210.2 million 
in 2023. The decrease was primarily due to (i) an $8.7 million decrease related to 1800 South Bell Street, which was taken 
out of service during 2024, (ii) an $8.2 million decrease related to the Disposed Properties, (iii) a $3.5 million decrease 
related to 2451 Crystal Drive, 241 18th Street S. and 800 North Glebe Road due to the disposal of assets as a result of 
tenant terminations in 2023 and (iv) a $3.3 million decrease related to 8001 Woodmont due to the amortization of acquired 

50 
in-place lease intangibles in 2023. The decrease in depreciation and amortization expense was partially offset by (v) a 
$15.8 million increase related to The Grace and Reva, (vi) a $3.2 million increase related to various National Landing 
assets primarily due to placing Water Park and Surreal into service, (vii) a $1.6 million increase related to write-offs of 
certain digital infrastructure assets and (viii) a $1.2 million increase related to 2200 Crystal Drive due to the acceleration 
of depreciation of certain assets as the building was taken out of service in 2024. 
Property operating expense increased by $2.6 million, or 1.8%, to $146.6 million in 2024 from $144.0 million in 2023. 
The increase was primarily due to a $4.0 million increase in property operating expense from our multifamily assets and 
a $1.7 million increase in other property operating expense, partially offset by a $3.1 million decrease in property operating 
expense from our commercial assets. The increase in property operating expense from our multifamily assets was primarily 
due to a $5.4 million increase related to The Grace and Reva, and higher operating expenses due to higher repairs and 
maintenance expenses across the portfolio, partially offset by a $3.5 million decrease related to the Disposed Properties 
and a $2.7 million decrease related to 8001 Woodmont primarily due to legal expenses incurred in 2023. The increase in 
other property operating expense was primarily due to an increase in insurance claims covered by our captive insurance 
subsidiary. The decrease in property operating expense from our commercial assets was primarily due to a $3.1 million 
decrease related to assets taken out of service during 2024, a $1.4 million decrease related to the Disposed Properties, and 
lower operating expenses primarily due to lower marketing expenses across the portfolio, partially offset by a $2.5 million 
increase in expenses related to 1550 Crystal Drive due to the phasing in of Water Park. 
Real estate taxes expense decreased by $5.1 million, or 8.8%, to $52.6 million in 2024 from $57.7 million in 2023. The 
decrease was primarily due to a $5.3 million decrease related to the Disposed Properties and lower assessments across the 
portfolio, partially offset by a $2.7 million increase related to The Grace and Reva. 
General and administrative expense: corporate and other increased by $4.0 million, or 7.2%, to $58.8 million in 2024 from 
$54.8 million in 2023. The increase was primarily due to higher compensation expenses and a decrease in capitalized 
payroll. 
General and administrative expense: third-party real estate services decreased by $14.7 million, or 16.5%, to $74.3 million 
in 2024 from $88.9 million in 2023. The decrease was primarily due to lower compensation expenses and lower third-
party reimbursable expenses. 
Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures decreased by $19.9 million, or 73.6%, to $7.1 million for 2024 from 
$27.0 million in 2023. The decrease was primarily due to a $21.9 million decrease in impairment losses. 
Interest and other income decreased by approximately $4.2 million, or 26.5%, to $11.6 million in 2024 from $15.8 million 
in 2023. The decrease was primarily due to a $6.0 million gain from the settlement of litigation in 2023 and a $1.3 million 
increase in realized losses from investments, partially offset by a $3.6 million increase in unrealized gains from 
investments. 
Interest expense increased by $25.4 million, or 23.4%, to $134.1 million in 2024 from $108.7 million in 2023. The increase 
in interest expense was primarily due to (i) a $23.2 million net increase due to higher outstanding debt, (ii) an $11.4 million 
decrease in capitalized interest as we placed The Grace and Reva into service and (iii) a $6.4 million increase related to 
higher interest rates on variable rate mortgage loans. The increase in interest expense was partially offset by (iv) a 
$7.7 million decrease related to the mark-to-market associated with our non-designated derivatives primarily due to their 
maturity, (v) a $6.5 million decrease related to mortgage loans collateralized by 800 North Glebe Road, 2121 Crystal 
Drive, Falkland Chase, 201 12th Street S., 200 12th Street S. and 251 18th Street S., which were repaid during 2023 and 
2024, and (vi) a $2.4 million decrease related to the Disposed Properties, excluding Falkland Chase. 
Loss on the sale of real estate of $2.8 million in 2024 was primarily due to the sale of North End Retail and Fort Totten 
Square, partially offset by the recognition of previously recorded contingent liabilities relieved in connection with the sale 
of Central Place Tower by one of our unconsolidated joint ventures. Gain on the sale of real estate of $79.3 million in 2023 
was primarily due to the sale of 4747 Bethesda Avenue and Crystal City Marriott. 

51 
Gain on extinguishment of debt of $9.2 million in 2024 was primarily due to the extinguishment of the 2101 L Street 
mortgage loan repaid in connection with the sale of the asset. 
Impairment loss of $55.4 million in 2024 was related to 1901 South Bell Street, 2101 L Street, 8001 Woodmont and two 
development parcels, which were written down to their estimated fair value. Impairment loss of $90.2 million in 2023 was 
related to 2101 L Street, 2100 Crystal Drive, 2200 Crystal Drive and a development parcel, which were written down to 
their estimated fair value. 
FFO 
FFO is a non-GAAP financial measure computed in accordance with the definition established by Nareit in the Nareit FFO 
White Paper - 2018 Restatement. Nareit defines FFO as net income (loss) (computed in accordance with GAAP), excluding 
depreciation and amortization expense related to real estate, gains (losses) from the sale of certain real estate assets, gains 
(losses) from change in control and impairment write-downs of certain real estate assets and investments in entities when 
the impairment is directly attributable to decreases in the value of depreciable real estate held by the entity, including our 
share of such adjustments for unconsolidated real estate ventures. 
We believe FFO is a meaningful non-GAAP financial measure useful in comparing our levered operating performance 
from period-to-period and compared to similar real estate companies because FFO excludes real estate depreciation and 
amortization expense, which implicitly assumes that the value of real estate diminishes predictably over time rather than 
fluctuating based on market conditions, and other non-comparable income and expenses. FFO does not represent cash 
generated from operating activities and is not necessarily indicative of cash available to fund cash requirements and should 
not be considered as an alternative to net income (loss) (computed in accordance with GAAP), as a performance measure 
or cash flow as a liquidity measure. FFO may not be comparable to similarly titled measures used by other companies. 
The following is the reconciliation of net income (loss) attributable to common shareholders, the most directly comparable 
GAAP measure, to FFO: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
2024 
     
2023 
 
2022 
 
(In thousands) 
Net income (loss) attributable to common shareholders 
$ 
 (143,526) 
$ 
 (79,978) 
$ 
 85,371 
Net income (loss) attributable to redeemable noncontrolling interests 
  
 (22,202) 
  
 (10,596) 
  
 13,244 
Net income (loss) attributable to noncontrolling interests 
  
 (12,025) 
  
 (1,135) 
  
 371 
Net income (loss) 
  
 (177,753) 
  
 (91,709) 
  
 98,986 
(Gain) loss on the sale of real estate, net of tax 
  
 1,541  
  
 (79,335) 
  
 (158,769)
Gain on the sale of unconsolidated real estate assets 
  
 (480) 
  
 (411) 
  
 (6,797)
Real estate depreciation and amortization 
  
 201,510  
  
 203,269  
  
 204,752 
Real estate impairment loss 
 
 37,191  
 
 90,226  
 
 — 
Impairment related to unconsolidated real estate ventures (1) 
  
 —  
  
 28,598  
 
 19,286 
Pro rata share of real estate depreciation and amortization from unconsolidated 
real estate ventures 
  
 3,978  
  
 11,545  
  
 21,169 
FFO attributable to noncontrolling interests 
  
 —  
  
 1,024  
  
 (735)
FFO attributable to OP Units 
  
 65,987  
  
 163,207  
  
 177,892 
FFO attributable to redeemable noncontrolling interests 
  
 (10,361) 
  
 (22,820) 
  
 (21,846)
FFO attributable to common shareholders 
$ 
 55,626  
$ 
 140,387  
$ 
 156,046 
 
(1) 
Related to decreases in the value of the underlying real estate assets. 
NOI and Same Store NOI 
NOI and same store NOI are non-GAAP financial measures management uses to assess an asset's performance. The most 
directly comparable GAAP measure is net income (loss) attributable to common shareholders. We use NOI internally as 
a performance measure and believe NOI and same store NOI provide useful information to investors regarding our 
financial condition and results of operations because it reflects only property related revenue (which includes base rent, 
tenant reimbursements and other operating revenue, net of free rent and payments associated with assumed lease liabilities) 

52 
less operating expenses and ground rent for operating leases, if applicable. NOI and same store NOI exclude deferred rent, 
commercial lease termination revenue, related party management fees, interest expense, and certain other non-cash 
adjustments, including the accretion of acquired below-market leases and the amortization of acquired above-market leases 
and below-market ground lease intangibles. Management uses NOI, which includes our proportionate share of revenue 
and expenses attributable to real estate ventures, as a supplemental performance measure and believes it provides useful 
information to investors because it reflects only those revenue and expense items that are incurred at the asset level, 
excluding non-cash items. In addition, NOI is considered by many in the real estate industry to be a useful starting point 
for determining the value of a real estate asset or group of assets. However, because NOI excludes depreciation and 
amortization expense and captures neither the changes in the value of our assets that result from use or market conditions, 
nor the level of capital expenditures and capitalized leasing commissions necessary to maintain the operating performance 
of our assets, all of which have real economic effect and could materially impact the financial performance of our assets, 
the utility of NOI as a measure of the operating performance of our assets is limited. NOI presented by us may not be 
comparable to NOI reported by other REITs that define these measures differently. We believe to facilitate a clear 
understanding of our operating results, NOI should be examined in conjunction with net income (loss) attributable to 
common shareholders as presented in our consolidated financial statements. NOI should not be considered as an alternative 
to net income (loss) attributable to common shareholders as an indication of our performance or to cash flows as a measure 
of liquidity or our ability to make distributions.  
Information provided on a same store basis includes the results of properties that are owned, operated and in-service for 
the entirety of both periods being compared, which excludes disposed properties or properties for which significant 
redevelopment, renovation or repositioning occurred during either of the periods being compared. During the year ended 
December 31, 2024, our same store pool decreased to 36 properties from 42 properties due to (i) the sale of North End 
Retail, Fort Totten Square, 2101 L Street and Central Place Tower, (ii) the exclusion of 1800 South Bell Street, 2100 
Crystal Drive, 2200 Crystal Drive and Crystal City Shops at 2100, which were taken out of service, and (iii) the inclusion 
of 8001 Woodmont and 1831/1861 Wiehle Avenue as they were in service for the entirety of the comparable periods. 
While there is judgment surrounding changes in designations, a property is removed from the same store pool when the 
property is considered to be under-construction because it is undergoing significant redevelopment or renovation pursuant 
to a formal plan or is being repositioned in the market and such renovation or repositioning is expected to have a significant 
impact on property NOI. A development property or under-construction property is moved to the same store pool once a 
substantial portion of the growth expected from the development or redevelopment is reflected in both the current and 
comparable prior year period. Acquisitions are moved into the same store pool once we have owned the property for the 
entirety of the comparable periods and the property is not under significant development or redevelopment. 
Same store NOI increased by $3.5 million, or 1.3%, to $267.7 million for the year ended December 31, 2024 from 
$264.2 million for the year ended December 31, 2023. The increase was substantially attributable to (i) higher rents and 
lower concessions, partially offset by higher repairs and maintenance expenses in our multifamily portfolio; and (ii) lower 
occupancy and tenant reimbursement revenue in our commercial portfolio, partially offset by lower real estate taxes. 

53 
The following is the reconciliation of net loss attributable to common shareholders to NOI at our share and same store 
NOI at our share. To conform to the current period presentation, we have included certain other property revenue in the 
calculation of NOI to align with our internal reporting. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
 
 
(Dollars in thousands) 
Net loss attributable to common shareholders 
 
$ 
 (143,526) 
$ 
 (79,978)
Net loss attributable to redeemable noncontrolling interests 
 
  
 (22,202) 
  
 (10,596)
Net loss attributable to noncontrolling interests 
 
 
 (12,025) 
 
 (1,135)
Net loss 
 
 
 (177,753) 
 
 (91,709)
Add: 
 
 
   
 
  
Depreciation and amortization expense 
 
  
 208,180  
  
 210,195 
General and administrative expense: 
 
 
   
 
  
Corporate and other 
 
  
 58,790  
  
 54,838 
Third-party real estate services 
 
  
 74,264  
  
 88,948 
Share-based compensation related to Formation Transaction and special equity awards   
 
  
 —  
  
 549 
Transaction and other costs 
 
  
 5,317  
  
 8,737 
Interest expense 
 
  
 134,068  
  
 108,660 
(Gain) loss on the extinguishment of debt 
 
  
 (9,235) 
  
 450 
Impairment loss 
 
 
 55,427  
 
 90,226 
Income tax expense (benefit) 
 
  
 762  
  
 (296)
Less: 
 
  
 
  
Third-party real estate services, including reimbursements revenue 
 
  
 69,465  
  
 92,051 
Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, net 
 
  
 (7,122) 
  
 (26,999)
Interest and other income, net 
 
  
 11,598  
  
 15,781 
Gain (loss) on the sale of real estate, net 
 
  
 (2,753) 
  
 79,335 
Adjustments: 
 
  
 
  
NOI attributable to unconsolidated real estate ventures at our share 
 
  
 6,808  
  
 19,452 
Non-cash rent adjustments (1) 
 
  
 (9,482) 
  
 (23,482)
Other adjustments (2) 
 
  
 1,321  
  
 12,092 
Total adjustments 
 
  
 (1,353) 
  
 8,062 
NOI at our share 
 
  
 277,279  
  
 318,492 
Less: out-of-service NOI loss (3) (4) 
 
  
 (9,922) 
  
 (3,512)
Operating Portfolio NOI (4) 
 
  
 287,201  
  
 322,004 
Non-same store NOI (4) (5) 
 
  
 19,537  
  
 57,799 
Same store NOI (4) (6) 
 
$ 
 267,664  
$ 
 264,205 
 
 
 
 
 
Change in same store NOI 
 
  
1.3%  
 
Number of properties in same store pool 
 
  
 36  
 
 
(1) 
Adjustment to exclude deferred rent, above/below market lease amortization and lease incentive amortization. 
(2) 
Adjustment to exclude commercial lease termination revenue, related party management fees, corporate entity activity and inter-
segment activity. 
(3) 
Includes the results of our under-construction asset and assets in the development pipeline. 
(4) 
Represents amounts at our share. 
(5) 
Includes the results of properties that were not in-service for the entirety of both periods being compared, including disposed 
properties, and properties for which significant redevelopment, renovation or repositioning occurred during either of the periods 
being compared.  
(6) 
Includes the results of the properties that are owned, operated and in-service for the entirety of both periods being compared. 
Reportable Segments 
Our three operating and reportable segments are multifamily, commercial, and third-party real estate services. We measure 
and evaluate the performance of our operating segments, with the exception of the third-party real estate services business, 
based on NOI at our share, which includes our proportionate share of revenue and expenses attributable to real estate 
ventures.  

54 
The following is a summary of NOI at our share for our multifamily and commercial segments: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31, 2024  
Year Ended December 31, 2023 
 
     Multifamily      Commercial      Multifamily      Commercial 
 
  
(In thousands, at our share) 
Property rental revenue 
 
$ 
 214,431  
$ 
 230,039  
$ 
 205,061  
$ 
 285,652 
Other property revenue 
 
 
 3,677  
 
 17,517  
 
 8,068  
 
 19,106 
Total property revenue 
 
  
 218,108  
  
 247,556  
  
 213,129  
  
 304,758 
Property expense: 
 
  
 
  
   
  
   
  
  
  Real estate taxes 
 
  
 22,197  
  
 27,103  
  
 21,924  
  
 37,698 
  Payroll 
 
 
 16,347  
 
 13,293  
 
 19,060  
 
 15,245 
  Utilities 
 
 
 15,337  
 
 14,311  
 
 14,905  
 
 16,949 
  Repairs and maintenance 
 
 
 22,396  
 
 22,088  
 
 15,978  
 
 24,043 
  Other property operating 
 
 
 11,612  
 
 17,733  
 
 11,862  
 
 20,616 
Total property expense 
 
  
 87,889  
  
 94,528  
  
 83,729  
  
 114,551 
NOI from reportable segments 
 
$ 
 130,219  
$ 
 153,028  
$ 
 129,400  
$ 
 190,207 
 
Comparison of the Year Ended December 31, 2024 to 2023 
Multifamily: Property revenue at our share increased by $5.0 million, or 2.3%, to $218.1 million in 2024 from 
$213.1 million in 2023. NOI at our share increased by $0.8 million, or 0.6%, to $130.2 million in 2024 from $129.4 million 
in 2023. The increases in property revenue at our share and NOI at our share were primarily due to The Grace and Reva, 
which we began leasing during the first quarter of 2024, and higher rents and lower concessions across the portfolio, 
partially offset by a decrease related to the Disposed Properties. 
Commercial: Property revenue at our share decreased by $57.2 million, or 18.8%, to $247.6 million in 2024 from 
$304.8 million in 2023. NOI at our share decreased by $37.2 million, or 19.5%, to $153.0 million in 2024 from 
$190.2 million in 2023. The decreases in property revenue at our share and NOI at our share were primarily due to the 
Disposed Properties, 1800 South Bell Street, 2100 Crystal Drive and 2200 Crystal Drive, which were taken out of service 
during 2024, and lower occupancy across the portfolio. 
With respect to the third-party real estate services business, we review revenue streams generated by this segment, 
excluding reimbursement revenue, as well as the expenses attributable to this segment at our proportionate share, 
calculated by excluding real estate services revenue from our interests in such real estate ventures. The following is a 
summary of our third-party real estate services business at our share: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
 
2024 
     
2023 
 
 
(In thousands, at our share) 
Property management fees 
 
$ 
 16,138  $ 
 18,983 
Asset management fees 
 
  
 4,088    
 4,925 
Development fees 
 
  
 2,573    
 10,253 
Leasing fees 
 
  
 3,757    
 5,538 
Construction management fees 
 
  
 1,210    
 1,383 
Other service revenue 
 
  
 5,038    
 4,840 
Third-party real estate services revenue, excluding reimbursements 
 
  
 32,804    
 45,922 
Third-party real estate services expenses, excluding reimbursements 
 
  
 36,836    
 42,403 
Net third-party real estate services, excluding reimbursements 
 
$ 
 (4,032) $ 
 3,519 
Third-party real estate services revenue, excluding reimbursements, decreased by $13.1 million, or 28.6%, to $32.8 million 
in 2024 from $45.9 million in 2023. The decrease was primarily due to a $7.7 million decrease in development fees related 
to the timing of development projects, a $2.8 million decrease in property management fees and a $1.8 million decrease 
in leasing fees. Third-party real estate services expenses, excluding reimbursements, decreased by $5.6 million, or 13.1%, 
to $36.8 million in 2024 from $42.4 million in 2023. The decrease was primarily due to lower compensation expenses. 

55 
Liquidity and Capital Resources 
Property rental revenue is our primary source of operating cash flow and depends on many factors including occupancy 
levels and rental rates, as well as our tenants' ability to pay rent. In addition, our third-party real estate services business 
provides fee-based real estate services. Our assets provide cash flow that enables us to pay operating expenses, debt service, 
recurring capital expenditures, dividends to shareholders and distributions to holders of OP Units and LTIP Units. Other 
sources of liquidity to fund cash requirements include proceeds from financings, recapitalizations, asset sales, and the 
issuance and sale of securities. We anticipate that cash flows from continuing operations and proceeds from financings, 
asset sales and recapitalizations, together with existing cash balances, will be adequate to fund our business operations, 
debt amortization, capital expenditures, any dividends to shareholders, and distributions to holders of OP Units and LTIP 
Units. 
Mortgage Loans 
The following is a summary of mortgage loans: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Weighted Average 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Effective 
    
December 31,  
 
   Interest Rate (1)     
2024 
     
2023 
 
  
 
(In thousands) 
Variable rate (2) 
  
5.58% 
 $ 
 587,254  
$ 
 608,582 
Fixed rate (3) 
  
4.79% 
   
 1,196,479  
  
 1,189,643 
Mortgage loans 
   
   
 1,783,733  
  
 1,798,225 
Unamortized deferred financing costs and premium/discount, net 
   
   
 (16,560) 
  
 (15,211)
Mortgage loans, net 
  
 $ 
 1,767,173  
$ 
 1,783,014 
 
(1) 
Weighted average effective interest rate as of December 31, 2024. 
(2) 
Includes variable rate mortgage loans with interest rate cap agreements. For mortgage loans with interest rate caps, the weighted 
average interest rate cap strike was 3.36%, and the weighted average maturity date of the interest rate caps is the first quarter of 
2026. The interest rate cap strike is exclusive of the credit spreads associated with the mortgage loans. As of December 31, 2024, 
one-month term SOFR was 4.33% and the 30-day average SOFR was 4.53%. 
(3) 
Includes variable rate mortgage loans with interest rates fixed by interest rate swap agreements. 
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, the net carrying value of real estate collateralizing our mortgage loans totaled 
$2.1 billion and $2.2 billion. Our mortgage loans contain covenants that limit our ability to incur additional indebtedness 
on these properties and, in certain circumstances, require lender approval of tenant leases and/or yield maintenance upon 
repayment prior to maturity. 
In November 2024, the mortgage loan collateralized by The Grace and Reva was refinanced with a five-year interest-only 
$273.6 million mortgage loan with a fixed interest rate of 5.19%.  
In January 2023, we entered into a $187.6 million loan facility, collateralized by The Wren and F1RST Residences. The 
loan has a seven-year term and a fixed interest rate of 5.13%. Proceeds from the loan were used, in part, to repay the 
$131.5 million mortgage loan collateralized by 2121 Crystal Drive, which had a fixed interest rate of 5.51%. 
In December 2024, in connection with the sale of 2101 L Street, the lender of the related $120.9 million mortgage loan 
accepted the proceeds from the sale and $6.7 million of cash as repayment of the mortgage loan. In September 2024, we 
repaid the $83.3 million mortgage loan collateralized by 201 12th Street S., 200 12th Street S., and 251 18th Street S. In 
June 2023, we repaid $142.4 million in mortgage loans collateralized by Falkland Chase-South & West and 800 North 
Glebe Road. 
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, we had various interest rate swap and cap agreements on certain of our mortgage 
loans with an aggregate notional value of $1.4 billion and $1.7 billion. See Note 19 to the consolidated financial statements 
for additional information. 

56 
Revolving Credit Facility and Term Loans 
As of December 31, 2024, our unsecured revolving credit facility and term loans totaling $1.5 billion consisted of a 
$750.0 million revolving credit facility maturing in June 2027, a $200.0 million Tranche A-1 Term Loan maturing in 
January 2026, as extended in September 2024, a $400.0 million Tranche A-2 Term Loan maturing in January 2028 and a 
$120.0 million 2023 Term Loan maturing in June 2028. We have the option to increase the $750.0 million revolving credit 
facility or add term loans up to $500.0 million. The revolving credit facility has two six-month extension options, and the 
Tranche A-1 Term Loan has one remaining one-year extension option. 
Based on the terms as of December 31, 2024, the interest rate for the credit facility varies based on a ratio of our total 
outstanding indebtedness to a valuation of certain real property and assets, and ranges (i) in the case of the revolving credit 
facility, from daily SOFR plus 1.40% to daily SOFR plus 1.85%, (ii) in the case of the Tranche A-1 Term Loan, from one-
month term SOFR plus 1.15% to one-month term SOFR plus 1.75%, (iii) in the case of the Tranche A-2 Term Loan, from 
one-month term SOFR plus 1.25% to one-month term SOFR plus 1.80% and (iv) in the case of the 2023 Term Loan, from 
one-month term SOFR plus 1.25% to one-month term SOFR plus 1.80%. 
The following is a summary of amounts outstanding under the revolving credit facility and term loans: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Effective 
 
December 31,  
 
     Interest Rate (1)      
2024 
     
2023 
 
  
 
(In thousands) 
Revolving credit facility (2) (3) 
  
5.98% 
 
$ 
 85,000  
$ 
 62,000 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tranche A-1 Term Loan (4) 
  
5.34% 
 
$ 
 200,000  
$ 
 200,000 
Tranche A-2 Term Loan (5) 
  
4.20% 
 
  
 400,000  
  
 400,000 
2023 Term Loan (6) 
 
5.41% 
 
 
 120,000  
 
 120,000 
Term loans 
   
 
  
 720,000  
  
 720,000 
Unamortized deferred financing costs, net 
   
 
  
 (2,147) 
  
 (2,828)
Term loans, net 
 
 
 
$ 
 717,853  
$ 
 717,172 
 
(1) 
Effective interest rate as of December 31, 2024. The interest rate for the revolving credit facility excludes a 0.20% and 0.15% 
facility fee as of December 31, 2024 and 2023. 
(2) 
As of December 31, 2024, daily SOFR was 4.49%. As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, letters of credit with an aggregate face 
amount of $15.2 million and $467,000 were outstanding under our revolving credit facility.  
(3) 
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, excludes $7.3 million and $10.2 million of net deferred financing costs related to our revolving 
credit facility that were included in "Other assets, net" in our consolidated balance sheets. 
(4) 
As of December 31, 2024, the interest rate swaps fixed SOFR at a weighted average interest rate of 4.00% through the extended 
maturity date of January 2027. 
(5) 
As of December 31, 2024, the interest rate swaps fixed SOFR at a weighted average interest rate of 2.81% through the maturity 
date. 
(6) 
As of December 31, 2024, the interest rate swap fixed SOFR at an interest rate of 4.01% through the maturity date. 
Common Shares Repurchased 
Our Board of Trustees previously authorized the repurchase of up to $1.5 billion of our outstanding common shares. In 
February 2025, our Board of Trustees increased our common share repurchase authorization to $2.0 billion. During the 
year ended December 31, 2024, we repurchased and retired 10.9 million common shares for $170.7 million, a weighted 
average purchase price per share of $15.60. During the year ended December 31, 2023, we repurchased and retired 
22.6 million common shares for $335.3 million, a weighted average purchase price per share of $14.83. During the year 
ended December 31, 2022, we repurchased and retired 14.2 million common shares for $361.0 million, a weighted average 
purchase price per share of $25.49. Since we began the share repurchase program through December 31, 2024, we have 
repurchased and retired 56.8 million common shares for $1.1 billion, a weighted average purchase price per share of 
$19.87. 

57 
During the first quarter of 2025, through February 14, 2025, we repurchased and retired 2.1 million common shares for 
$32.3 million, a weighted average purchase price per share of $15.15, pursuant to a repurchase plan under Rule 10b5-1 of 
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. 
Purchases under the program are made either in the open market or in privately negotiated transactions from time to time 
as permitted by federal securities laws and other legal requirements. The timing, manner, price and amount of any 
repurchases will be determined by us at our discretion and will be subject to economic and market conditions, share price, 
applicable legal requirements and other factors. The program may be suspended or discontinued at our discretion without 
prior notice.  
Material Cash Requirements 
Our material cash requirements for the next 12 months and beyond are to fund: 
• 
normal recurring expenses; 
• 
debt service and principal repayment obligations, including balloon payments on maturing mortgage debt — As 
of December 31, 2024, we had maturities totaling $340.7 million ($307.7 million related to our consolidated 
entities and $33.0 million related to an unconsolidated real estate venture at our share) scheduled to mature in 
2025;  
• 
capital expenditures, including major renovations, tenant improvements and leasing costs — As of 
December 31, 2024, we had committed tenant-related obligations totaling $43.8 million ($43.5 million related to 
our consolidated entities and $309,000 related to our unconsolidated real estate ventures at our share); 
• 
development expenditures — As of December 31, 2024, we had one asset under construction and started 
construction on a new amenity hub at 2011 Crystal Drive that, based on our current plans and estimates, require 
an additional $73.3 million to complete, which we anticipate will be primarily expended over the next year; 
• 
dividends to shareholders and distributions to holders of OP Units and LTIP Units — On December 16, 2024, 
our Board of Trustees declared a quarterly dividend of $0.175 per common share that was paid on January 14, 
2025; 
• 
possible common share repurchases — During the first quarter of 2025, through February 14, 2025, we 
repurchased and retired 2.1 million common shares for $32.3 million; and 
• 
possible acquisitions of properties, either directly or indirectly through the acquisition of equity interests. 
We expect to satisfy these requirements using one or more of the following: 
• 
cash and cash equivalents — As of December 31, 2024, we had cash and cash equivalents of $145.8 million; 
• 
cash flows from operations; 
• 
distributions from real estate ventures;  
• 
borrowing capacity under our current revolving credit facility — As of December 31, 2024, we had 
$649.8 million of availability under our revolving credit facility; 
• 
proceeds from financings, joint venture capital, asset sales and recapitalizations; and  
• 
proceeds from the issuance of securities. 
The following is a summary of our material cash requirements as of December 31, 2024: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    
Total 
    
2025 
    
2026 
    
2027 
    
2028 
    
2029 
    Thereafter
 
  
(In thousands) 
Material cash requirements (principal and interest): 
  
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
Debt obligations (1) (2) 
 $ 3,052,391  $ 435,695  $ 426,791  $ 515,649  $ 671,814  $ 429,783  $  572,659 
Operating leases (3) 
   
 67,112    
 6,617    
 5,487    
 5,662    
 4,405    
 4,515     40,426 
Other 
   
 3,046    
 858   
 854    
 834    
 500    
 —    
 — 
Total material cash requirements (4)  $ 3,122,549  $ 443,170  $ 433,132  $ 522,145  $ 676,719  $ 434,298  $  613,085 

58 
 
(1) 
Interest was computed giving effect to interest rate hedges. One-month term SOFR of 4.33% and daily SOFR of 4.49% was applied 
to loans, as applicable, which are variable (no hedge) or variable with an interest rate cap. Additionally, we assumed no additional 
borrowings on construction loans. 
(2) 
Excludes our proportionate share of unconsolidated real estate venture indebtedness. See additional information in Unconsolidated 
Real Estate Ventures section below. 
(3) 
We have operating lease right-of-use assets and lease liabilities associated with our corporate office lease and a ground lease for 
which we are the lessee in our consolidated balance sheet. See Note 21 to the consolidated financial statements for additional 
information. 
(4) 
Excludes obligations related to construction or development contracts totaling $73.3 million since payments are only due upon 
satisfactory performance under the contracts. Also excludes committed tenant-related obligations totaling $43.8 million 
($43.5 million related to our consolidated entities and $309,000 related to our unconsolidated real estate ventures at our share) as 
timing and amounts of payments are uncertain and may only be due upon satisfactory performance of certain conditions. See 
Commitments and Contingencies section below for additional information. 
Summary of Cash Flows 
The following summary discussion of our cash flows is based on our consolidated statements of cash flows and is not 
meant to be an all-inclusive discussion of the changes in our cash flows: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
 
 
(In thousands) 
Net cash provided by operating activities 
 
$ 
 129,393  
$ 
 183,372 
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities 
 
  
 144,155  
  
 (98,179)
Net cash used in financing activities 
 
  
 (290,797) 
  
 (158,825)
 
Cash Flows for the Year Ended December 31, 2024 
Cash and cash equivalents, and restricted cash decreased $17.2 million to $183.2 million as of December 31, 2024, 
compared to $200.4 million as of December 31, 2023. This decrease resulted from $290.8 million of net cash used in 
financing activities, partially offset by $144.2 million of net cash provided by investing activities and $129.4 million of 
net cash provided by operating activities. Our outstanding debt was $2.6 billion as of December 31, 2024 and 2023. 
Net cash provided by operating activities of $129.4 million primarily comprised: (i) $118.1 million of net income (before 
$293.1 million of non-cash items and $2.8 million of loss on the sale of real estate), (ii) $1.9 million of return on capital 
from unconsolidated real estate ventures and (iii) $9.4 million of net change in operating assets and liabilities. Non-cash 
income adjustments of $293.1 million primarily include depreciation and amortization expense, impairment loss, share-
based compensation expense, deferred rent and gain on extinguishment of debt. 
Net cash provided by investing activities of $144.2 million primarily comprised: (i) $202.0 million of proceeds from the 
sale of real estate and (ii) $164.6 million of distributions of capital from unconsolidated real estate ventures and other 
investments primarily related to the sale of Central Place Tower by one of our unconsolidated real estate ventures, partially 
offset by (iii) $218.0 million of development costs, construction in progress and real estate additions. 
Net cash used in financing activities of $290.8 million primarily comprised: (i) $295.0 million of repayments of the 
revolving credit facility, (ii) $198.0 million of repayments of mortgage loans, (iii) $170.8 million of common shares 
repurchased, (iv) $62.0 million of dividends paid to common shareholders, (v) $49.4 million paid for the acquisition of 
noncontrolling interests and (vi) $11.6 million of distributions to redeemable noncontrolling interests, partially offset by 
(vii) $318.0 million of proceeds from borrowings under the revolving credit facility and (viii) $187.9 million of borrowings 
under mortgage loans. 
Unconsolidated Real Estate Ventures 
We consolidate entities in which we have a controlling interest or are the primary beneficiary in a variable interest entity. 
From time to time, we may have off-balance-sheet unconsolidated real estate ventures and other unconsolidated 
arrangements with varying structures. 

59 
As of December 31, 2024, we have investments in unconsolidated real estate ventures totaling $93.7 million. For these 
investments, we exercise significant influence over but do not control these entities and, therefore, account for these 
investments using the equity method of accounting. For a more complete description of our real estate ventures, see Note 5 
to the consolidated financial statements. 
From time to time, we (or ventures in which we have an ownership interest) have agreed, and may in the future agree with 
respect to unconsolidated real estate ventures, to (i) guarantee portions of the principal, interest and other amounts in 
connection with borrowings, (ii) provide customary environmental indemnifications and nonrecourse carve-outs (e.g., 
guarantees against fraud, misrepresentation and bankruptcy) in connection with borrowings or (iii) provide guarantees to 
lenders and other third parties for the completion and stabilization of development projects. We customarily have 
agreements with our outside venture partners whereby the partners agree to reimburse the real estate venture or us for their 
share of any payments made under certain of these guarantees. At times, we also have agreements with certain of our 
outside venture partners whereby we agree to either indemnify the partners and/or the associated ventures with respect to 
certain contingent liabilities associated with operating assets or to reimburse our partner for its share of any payments 
made by them under certain guarantees. Guarantees (excluding environmental) customarily terminate either upon the 
satisfaction of specified circumstances or repayment of the underlying debt. Amounts that we may be required to pay in 
future periods in relation to guarantees associated with budget overruns or operating losses are not estimable. As of 
December 31, 2024, we had no principal payment guarantees related to our unconsolidated real estate ventures. 
As of December 31, 2024, we had additional capital commitments totaling $9.6 million related to our investments in real 
estate-focused technology companies.  
Commitments and Contingencies 
Insurance 
We maintain general liability insurance with limits of $150.0 million per occurrence and in the aggregate, and property 
and rental value insurance coverage with limits of $1.0 billion per occurrence, with sub-limits for certain perils such as 
floods and earthquakes on each of our properties. We also maintain coverage, through our wholly owned captive insurance 
subsidiary, for a portion of the first loss on the above limits and for both conventional terrorist acts and for nuclear, 
biological, chemical or radiological terrorism events with limits of $2.0 billion per occurrence. These policies are partially 
reinsured by third-party insurance providers. 
We will continue to monitor the state of the insurance market, and the scope and costs of coverage for acts of terrorism. 
We cannot anticipate what coverage will be available on commercially reasonable terms in the future. We are responsible 
for deductibles and losses in excess of the insurance coverage, which could be material. 
Our debt, consisting of mortgage loans secured by our properties, a revolving credit facility and term loans, contains 
customary covenants requiring adequate insurance coverage. Although we believe that we currently have adequate 
insurance coverage, we may not be able to obtain an equivalent amount of coverage at a reasonable cost in the future. If 
lenders insist on greater coverage than we are able to obtain, it could adversely affect our ability to finance or refinance 
our properties. 
Construction Commitments 
As of December 31, 2024, we had one asset under construction and started construction on a new amenity hub at 2011 
Crystal Drive that, based on our current plans and estimates, require an additional $73.3 million to complete, which we 
anticipate will be primarily expended over the next year. These capital expenditures are generally due as the work is 
performed, and we expect to finance them primarily with debt proceeds. 
Legal Proceedings  
In November 2023, the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia 
against RealPage, Inc., a provider of revenue management systems, numerous multifamily rental companies, and 14 
owners and/or operators of multifamily housing in the District of Columbia, including JBG Associates, L.L.C., one of our 

60 
subsidiaries, alleging that the defendants violated the District of Columbia Antitrust Act by unlawfully agreeing to 
use RealPage, Inc. revenue management systems and sharing sensitive data. While we intend to vigorously defend against 
this lawsuit, given the current stage of the District of Columbia’s lawsuit, we are unable to predict the outcome or estimate 
the amount of loss, if any, that may result from the lawsuit. While we do not believe that these proceedings will have a 
material adverse effect on our financial condition, we cannot give assurance that the proceedings will not have a material 
effect on our results of operations or cash flows in the event of a negative outcome. 
There are various other legal actions arising in the ordinary course of business. In our opinion, the outcome of such matters 
is not expected to have a material adverse effect on our financial position, results of operations or cash flows. 
 
Other 
As of December 31, 2024, we had committed tenant-related obligations totaling $43.8 million ($43.5 million related to 
our consolidated entities and $309,000 related to our unconsolidated real estate ventures at our share). The timing and 
amounts of payments for tenant-related obligations are uncertain and may only be due upon satisfactory performance of 
certain conditions. 
With respect to borrowings of our consolidated entities, we may agree to (i) guarantee portions of the principal, interest 
and other amounts, (ii) provide customary environmental indemnifications and nonrecourse carve-outs (e.g., guarantees 
against fraud, misrepresentation and bankruptcy) or (iii) provide guarantees to lenders, tenants and other third parties for 
the completion and stabilization of development projects. As of December 31, 2024, we had no debt principal payment 
guarantees related to our consolidated real estate assets. 
Environmental Matters 
Under various federal, state and local laws, ordinances and regulations, a current or former owner or operator of real estate 
may be liable for conducting or paying for the costs of the investigation, removal or remediation of certain hazardous or 
toxic substances or petroleum products on, under or from that real estate. These laws often impose such liability without 
regard to whether the owner knew of, or was responsible for, the presence or release of hazardous or toxic substances or 
petroleum products, and the liability may be joint and several. The costs of investigation, remediation or removal of these 
substances may be substantial and could exceed the value of the property, and the presence of these substances, or the 
failure to promptly remediate these substances, may adversely affect the owner's ability to sell, operate, or develop the real 
estate or to borrow using the real estate as collateral. In connection with the ownership and operation of our current and 
former assets, we may be potentially liable for these costs. The operations of current and former tenants at our assets have 
involved, or may have involved, the presence or use of hazardous substances or petroleum products or the generation of 
hazardous wastes, and indemnities in our lease agreements may not fully protect us from liability, if, for example, a tenant 
responsible for environmental noncompliance or contamination becomes insolvent. The release of these hazardous 
substances and wastes and petroleum products could result in us incurring liabilities to investigate or remediate any 
resulting contamination. The presence of contamination or the failure to remediate contamination at our properties may 
(i) expose us to third-party liability (e.g., for cleanup costs, natural resource damages, bodily injury or property damage), 
(ii) subject our properties to liens in favor of the government for damages and costs the government incurs in connection 
with the contamination, (iii) impose restrictions on the manner in which a property may be used or businesses may be 
operated, or (iv) materially adversely affect our ability to sell, lease or develop the real estate or to borrow using the real 
estate as collateral. In addition, our assets are exposed to the risk of contamination originating from other sources. While 
a property owner may not be responsible for remediating contamination that has migrated onsite from an identifiable and 
viable offsite source, the contaminant's presence can have adverse effects on operations and the redevelopment of our 
assets. To the extent we arrange for contaminated materials to be sent to other locations for treatment or disposal, we may 
be liable for the cleanup of those sites if they become contaminated, without regard to whether we complied with 
environmental laws in doing so. 
Most of our assets have been subject, at some point, to environmental assessments that are intended to evaluate the 
environmental condition of the subject and surrounding assets. These environmental assessments generally have included 
a historical review, a public records review, a visual inspection of the site and surrounding assets, visual or historical 
evidence of underground storage tanks and other features, and the preparation and issuance of a written report. Soil, soil 
vapor and/or groundwater subsurface testing is conducted at our assets, when necessary, to further investigate any 

61 
conditions identified by the initial assessment that could reasonably be expected to pose a material concern to the property 
or result in us incurring material environmental liabilities as a result of redevelopment. The tests may not, however, have 
included extensive sampling or subsurface investigations. In each case where the environmental assessments have 
identified conditions requiring remedial actions required by law, we have initiated appropriate actions. The environmental 
assessments have not revealed any material environmental contamination that we believe would have a material adverse 
effect on our overall business, financial condition or results of operations, or that have not been anticipated and remediated 
during site redevelopment as required by law. Nevertheless, there can be no assurance that the identification of new areas 
of contamination, changes in the extent or known scope of contamination, the discovery of additional sites or changes in 
cleanup requirements would not result in significant cost to us. As disclosed in Note 21 to the consolidated financial 
statements, environmental liabilities totaled $17.5 million and $17.6 million as of December 31, 2024 and 2023, and are 
included in "Other liabilities, net" in our consolidated balance sheets. 
Our operations and assets, and the operations of our tenants, are subject to various federal, state and local laws and 
regulations concerning the protection of the environment including air and water quality, hazardous or toxic substances 
and health and safety. The cost to comply with such requirements may be significant and if we fail to comply with such 
requirements, we could be subject to significant fines. Moreover, environmental requirements have and may continue to 
become increasingly stringent, and our costs or operating restrictions may increase as a result. 
ITEM 7A. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK 
Interest Rate Risk 
We have exposure to fluctuations in interest rates, which are sensitive to many factors that are beyond our control. The 
following is a summary of our exposure to a change in interest rates: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
December 31, 2024 
 
December 31, 2023 
 
 
      
 
     Weighted        
 
     
 
     Weighted   
 
  
 
 
Average 
  
Annual 
  
 
 Average    
 
  
 
  Effective    Effect of 1%    
 
 Effective    
 
  
 
 
Interest  
  Change in  
  
 
 Interest    
 
 
Balance 
 
Rate 
  Base Rates 
 
Balance 
 
Rate 
 
 
 
(Dollars in thousands) 
 
Debt (contractual balances): 
  
 
  
 
   
 
  
 
 
 
 
Mortgage loans: 
  
     
      
     
    
   
Variable rate (1) 
 $
 587,254    
5.58%   $ 
 3,749  $
 608,582   
6.25%  
Fixed rate (2) 
    1,196,479    
4.79%     
 —     1,189,643   
4.78%  
 
 $  1,783,733    
  $ 
 3,749  $  1,798,225  
 
Revolving credit facility and term loans: 
  
  
   
  
 
 
Revolving credit facility (3) 
 $
 85,000    
5.98%   $ 
 862  $
 62,000   
6.83%  
Tranche A-1 Term Loan (4) 
   
 200,000    
5.34%     
 —    
 200,000   
2.70%  
Tranche A-2 Term Loan (4) 
   
 400,000    
4.20%     
 —    
 400,000   
3.58%  
2023 Term Loan (4) 
  
 120,000   
5.41%    
 —   
 120,000  
5.31%  
 
 $
 805,000    
  $ 
 862  $
 782,000  
 
Pro rata share of debt of unconsolidated real estate 
ventures (contractual balances): 
  
  
   
  
 
 
Variable rate (1) 
 $
 35,000    
5.68%   $ 
 355  $
 35,000   
5.00%  
Fixed rate (2) 
   
 33,000    
4.13%     
 —    
 33,000   
4.13%  
 
 $
 68,000    
  $ 
 355  $
 68,000  
 
 
(1) 
Includes variable rate mortgage loans with interest rate cap agreements. For mortgage loans with interest rate caps, the weighted 
average interest rate cap strike was 3.36%, and the weighted average maturity date of the interest rate caps is the first quarter of 
2026. The interest rate cap strike is exclusive of the credit spreads associated with the mortgage loans. As of December 31, 2024, 
one-month term SOFR was 4.33% and the 30-day average SOFR was 4.53%. The impact of these interest rate caps is reflected in 
our calculation of the annual effect of a 1% change in base rates, as applicable. 
(2) 
Includes variable rate mortgage loans with interest rates fixed by interest rate swap agreements.  

62 
(3) 
As of December 31, 2024, daily SOFR was 4.49%. The interest rate for the revolving credit facility excludes a 0.20% and 0.15% 
facility fee as of December 31, 2024 and 2023.  
(4) 
As of December 31, 2024, the outstanding balance was fixed by interest rate swap agreements. As of December 31, 2024, the 
interest rate swaps fix SOFR at a weighted average interest rate of 4.00% for the Tranche A-1 Term Loan, 2.81% for the Tranche 
A-2 Term Loan and 4.01% for the 2023 Term Loan. See Note 10 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information. 
The fair value of our mortgage loans is estimated by discounting the future contractual cash flows of these instruments 
using current risk-adjusted rates available to borrowers with similar credit profiles based on market sources. The fair value 
of our revolving credit facility and term loans is calculated based on the net present value of payments over the term of 
the facilities using estimated market rates for similar notes and remaining terms. As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, the 
estimated fair value of our consolidated debt was $2.6 billion and $2.5 billion. These estimates of fair value, which are 
made at the end of the reporting period, may be different from the amounts that may ultimately be realized upon the 
disposition of our financial instruments. 
Hedging Activities 
To manage, or hedge, our exposure to interest rate risk, we follow established risk management policies and procedures, 
including the use of a variety of derivative financial instruments.  
Derivative Financial Instruments Designated as Effective Hedges 
Certain derivative financial instruments, consisting of interest rate swap and cap agreements, are cash flow hedges that are 
designated as effective hedges, and are carried at their estimated fair value on a recurring basis. We assess the effectiveness 
of our hedges both at inception and on an ongoing basis. If the hedges are deemed to be effective, the fair value is recorded 
in "Accumulated other comprehensive income" in our consolidated balance sheets and is subsequently reclassified into 
"Interest expense" in our consolidated statements of operations in the period that the hedged forecasted transactions affect 
earnings. Our hedges become less than perfectly effective if the critical terms of the hedging instrument and the forecasted 
transactions do not perfectly match such as notional amounts, settlement dates, reset dates, calculation period and interest 
rates. In addition, we evaluate the default risk of the counterparty by monitoring the creditworthiness of the counterparty. 
While management believes its judgments are reasonable, a change in a derivative's effectiveness as a hedge could 
materially affect expenses, net income (loss) and equity. 
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, we had interest rate swap and cap agreements with an aggregate notional value of 
$2.0 billion and $2.2 billion, which were designated as effective hedges. The fair value of our interest rate swaps and caps 
designated as effective hedges consisted of assets totaling $23.4 million and $35.6 million as of December 31, 2024 and 
2023 included in "Other assets, net" in our consolidated balance sheets, and liabilities totaling $90,000 and $7.9 million 
as of December 31, 2024 and 2023 included in "Other liabilities, net" in our consolidated balance sheets. 
Non-Designated Derivatives 
Certain derivative financial instruments, consisting of interest rate cap agreements, do not meet the accounting 
requirements to be classified as hedging instruments. These derivatives are carried at their estimated fair value on a 
recurring basis with realized and unrealized gains (losses) recorded in "Interest expense" in our consolidated statements 
of operations. As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, we had various interest rate cap agreements with an aggregate notional 
value of $167.5 million and $642.7 million, which were non-designated derivatives. The fair value of our interest rate cap 
agreements which were non-designated derivatives consisted of assets totaling $2.3 million and $6.7 million as of 
December 31, 2024 and 2023, included in "Other assets, net" in our consolidated balance sheets, and liabilities totaling 
$2.3 million and $6.5 million as of December 31, 2024 and 2023, included in "Other liabilities, net" in our consolidated 
balance sheets. 
 

63 
ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA 
 
 
 
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS 
 
 
 
    Page 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm (PCAOB ID No. 34) 
 
64 
Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2024 and 2023 
 
67 
Consolidated Statements of Operations for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022 
 
68 
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 
2022 
 
69 
Consolidated Statements of Equity for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022 
 
70 
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022  
 
71 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 
 
73 
 
 
 
 
 

64 
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM 
To the Shareholders and the Board of Trustees of JBG SMITH Properties 
Opinion on the Financial Statements 
We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of JBG SMITH Properties and subsidiaries (the 
"Company") as of December 31, 2024 and 2023, the related consolidated statements of operations, comprehensive income 
(loss), equity, and cash flows, for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, and the related notes and 
the schedule listed in the Index at Item 15 (collectively referred to as the "financial statements"). In our opinion, the 
financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company as of December 31, 2024 
and 2023, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended 
December 31, 2024, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. 
We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United 
States) (PCAOB), the Company's internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2024, based on criteria 
established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of 
the Treadway Commission and our report dated February 18, 2025, expressed an unqualified opinion on the Company's 
internal control over financial reporting. 
Basis for Opinion 
These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion 
on the Company's financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the PCAOB 
and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and 
the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB. 
We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and 
perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement, 
whether due to error or fraud. Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of 
the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such 
procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. 
Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well 
as evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for 
our opinion. 
Critical Audit Matter 
The critical audit matter communicated below is a matter arising from the current-period audit of the financial statements 
that was communicated or required to be communicated to the audit committee and that (1) relates to accounts or 
disclosures that are material to the financial statements and (2) involved our especially challenging, subjective, or complex 
judgments. The communication of critical audit matters does not alter in any way our opinion on the financial statements, 
taken as a whole, and we are not, by communicating the critical audit matter below, providing a separate opinion on the 
critical audit matter or on the accounts or disclosures to which it relates. 
Real Estate – Impairment Indicators and Impairment- Refer to Notes 2 and 19 to the consolidated financial 
statements 
Critical Audit Matter Description 
The Company evaluates real estate assets for impairment whenever there are changes in circumstances or indicators that 
the carrying amount of the asset may not be recoverable. These indicators may include declining operating performance, 
below average occupancy, shortened anticipated holding periods, and other adverse changes. An impairment exists when 

65 
the carrying amount of an asset exceeds the sum of the undiscounted cash flows expected to result from the use and 
eventual disposition of the asset. 
For those real estate assets where an indicator of impairment has been identified, estimates of future cash flows are based 
on the Company’s current plans, anticipated holding periods and available market information. Estimates of future cash 
flows are subjective and are based, in part, on assumptions regarding future occupancy, rental rates and capital 
requirements. An impairment loss is recognized if the carrying amount of the asset is not recoverable and is measured 
based on the excess of a property's carrying amount over its estimated fair value. Estimated fair values are calculated based 
on the following information in order of preference, dependent upon availability: (i) pending or executed agreements, 
(ii) market prices for comparable properties or (iii) the sum of discounted cash flows. The Company’s estimates of fair 
value are determined using either a discounted cash flow model which requires judgements related to the anticipated 
holding periods, current market conditions and unobservable quantitative inputs, including appropriate capitalization and 
discount rates, or a market approach. 
Given (1) the Company's evaluation of possible indicators of impairment of real estate assets requires management to 
make significant judgments, including anticipated holding periods, when determining whether events or changes in 
circumstances indicate that the carrying amounts of real estate assets may not be recoverable and (2) for those real estate 
assets where indicators of impairment have been identified, the Company’s evaluation of the recoverability and fair value 
of such assets requires management to make significant estimates and assumptions, our audit procedures to evaluate 
(a) whether management appropriately identified impairment indicators (b) the reasonableness of management’s 
undiscounted future cash flows analysis and (c) when required, the reasonableness of the estimated fair values of real estate 
assets required a high degree of auditor judgment and an increased extent of effort, including the need to involve our fair 
value specialists. 
How the Critical Audit Matter Was Addressed in the Audit 
Our audit procedures related to the assessment of real estate assets for possible indicators of impairment, the estimate of 
future operating cash flows, and the determination of fair value for those assets where impairment has been identified 
included the following, among others:  
• 
We tested the effectiveness of controls over management’s identification of possible circumstances that may indicate 
that the carrying amounts of real estate assets may not be recoverable. We tested the effectiveness of controls over 
management’s cash flow recoverability and fair value analyses, including controls over management’s estimates of 
future occupancy, rental rates, capital requirements and, as applicable, capitalization and discount rates and 
management’s selection of comparable properties used in the market approach, when applicable.  
• 
We evaluated the Company’s assessment of impairment indicators by: 
– 
Testing real estate assets for possible indicators of impairment, including searching for adverse asset-specific 
and/or market conditions. 
– 
Inquiring of management and reading business performance reports and board minutes to identify properties that 
should be evaluated for shortened anticipated holding periods. 
– 
Developing an expectation of assets for which impairment indicators are identified in management's analysis.  
• 
We evaluated the Company’s future cash flows prepared when an indicator of impairment has been identified by 
performing the following: 
– 
Discussing with management the assumptions used in the Company’s undiscounted cash flow models and 
evaluating the consistency of the assumptions used with evidence obtained in other areas of the audit. 
– 
Testing the recoverability assessments by developing independent estimates, based in part on applicable third-
party market data, and compared our estimates to those used by management. 

66 
• 
We evaluated the Company’s determination of fair value for those assets where impairment had been identified by 
performing the following: 
– 
With the assistance of our fair value specialists for certain properties, we evaluated the reasonableness of the 
valuation methodology and the market prices for comparable properties, and we developed a range of independent 
estimates of fair value and compared our estimates to those used by management. 
 
/s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP 
McLean, Virginia 
February 18, 2025 
We have served as the Company's auditor since 2016. 
 
 

67 
JBG SMITH PROPERTIES 
Consolidated Balance Sheets 
(In thousands, except par value amounts) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
December 31,  
 
    
2024 
     
2023 
ASSETS 
   
     
  
Real estate, at cost: 
   
     
  
Land and improvements 
 $ 
 1,109,172  
$ 
 1,194,737 
Buildings and improvements 
   
 4,083,937  
  
 4,021,322 
Construction in progress, including land 
   
 338,333  
  
 659,103 
 
   
 5,531,442  
  
 5,875,162 
Less: accumulated depreciation 
   
 (1,419,983) 
  
 (1,338,403)
Real estate, net 
   
 4,111,459  
  
 4,536,759 
Cash and cash equivalents 
   
 145,804  
  
 164,773 
Restricted cash 
   
 37,388  
  
 35,668 
Tenant and other receivables 
   
 23,478  
  
 44,231 
Deferred rent receivable 
   
 170,153  
  
 171,229 
Investments in unconsolidated real estate ventures 
   
 93,654  
  
 264,281 
Deferred leasing costs, net 
  
 69,821  
 
 81,477 
Intangible assets, net 
  
 47,000  
 
 56,616 
Other assets, net 
   
 131,318  
  
 163,481 
Assets held for sale 
   
 190,465  
  
 — 
TOTAL ASSETS 
 $ 
 5,020,540  
$ 
 5,518,515 
 
   
 
  
LIABILITIES, REDEEMABLE NONCONTROLLING INTERESTS AND EQUITY 
 
  
  
Liabilities: 
   
   
  
  
Mortgage loans, net 
 $ 
 1,767,173  
$ 
 1,783,014 
Revolving credit facility 
   
 85,000  
  
 62,000 
Term loans, net 
   
 717,853  
  
 717,172 
Accounts payable and accrued expenses 
   
 101,096  
  
 124,874 
Other liabilities, net 
   
 115,827  
  
 138,869 
Liabilities related to assets held for sale 
   
 901  
  
 — 
Total liabilities 
   
 2,787,850  
  
 2,825,929 
Commitments and contingencies 
   
   
  
  
Redeemable noncontrolling interests 
   
 423,632  
  
 440,737 
Shareholders' equity: 
   
   
  
  
Preferred shares, $0.01 par value - 200,000 shares authorized; none issued 
   
 —  
  
 — 
Common shares, $0.01 par value - 500,000 shares authorized; 84,500 and 
94,309 shares issued and outstanding as of December 31, 2024 and 2023 
   
 846  
  
 944 
Additional paid-in capital 
   
 2,790,403  
  
 2,978,852 
Accumulated deficit 
   
 (997,283) 
  
 (776,962)
Accumulated other comprehensive income 
   
 15,092  
  
 20,042 
Total shareholders' equity of JBG SMITH Properties 
   
 1,809,058  
  
 2,222,876 
Noncontrolling interests 
   
 —  
  
 28,973 
Total equity 
   
 1,809,058  
  
 2,251,849 
TOTAL LIABILITIES, REDEEMABLE NONCONTROLLING 
INTERESTS AND EQUITY 
 $ 
 5,020,540  
$ 
 5,518,515 
 
See accompanying notes to the consolidated financial statements. 
 
 

68 
JBG SMITH PROPERTIES 
Consolidated Statements of Operations 
(In thousands, except per share data) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
    
2023 
 
2022 
REVENUE 
  
     
    
  
Property rental 
 $ 
 456,950  $ 
 483,159  $ 
 491,738 
Third-party real estate services, including reimbursements 
   
 69,465    
 92,051    
 89,022 
Other revenue 
   
 20,897    
 28,988    
 25,064 
Total revenue 
   
 547,312    
 604,198    
 605,824 
EXPENSES 
   
   
     
  
Depreciation and amortization 
   
 208,180    
 210,195    
 213,771 
Property operating 
   
 146,609    
 144,049    
 150,004 
Real estate taxes 
   
 52,606    
 57,668    
 62,167 
General and administrative: 
   
   
   
  
Corporate and other 
   
 58,790    
 54,838    
 58,280 
Third-party real estate services 
   
 74,264    
 88,948    
 94,529 
Share-based compensation related to Formation Transaction and 
special equity awards  
   
 —    
 549    
 5,391 
Transaction and other costs 
   
 5,317    
 8,737    
 5,511 
Total expenses 
   
 545,766    
 564,984    
 589,653 
OTHER INCOME (EXPENSE) 
   
     
     
  
Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, net 
   
 (7,122)   
 (26,999)   
 (17,429)
Interest and other income, net 
   
 11,598    
 15,781    
 18,617 
Interest expense 
   
 (134,068)   
 (108,660)   
 (75,930)
Gain (loss) on the sale of real estate, net 
   
 (2,753)   
 79,335    
 161,894 
Gain (loss) on the extinguishment of debt 
   
 9,235    
 (450)   
 (3,073)
Impairment loss 
  
 (55,427)  
 (90,226)  
 — 
Total other income (expense) 
   
 (178,537)   
 (131,219)   
 84,079 
INCOME (LOSS) BEFORE INCOME TAX (EXPENSE) BENEFIT    
 (176,991)
  
 (92,005)
 100,250 
Income tax (expense) benefit 
   
 (762)   
 296    
 (1,264)
NET INCOME (LOSS) 
   
 (177,753)   
 (91,709)   
 98,986 
Net (income) loss attributable to redeemable noncontrolling interests    
 22,202    
 10,596    
 (13,244)
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests 
   
 12,025    
 1,135    
 (371)
NET INCOME (LOSS) ATTRIBUTABLE TO COMMON 
SHAREHOLDERS 
 $ 
 (143,526) $ 
 (79,978) $ 
 85,371 
EARNINGS (LOSS) PER COMMON SHARE - BASIC AND 
DILUTED 
 $ 
 (1.65) $ 
 (0.78) $ 
 0.70 
WEIGHTED AVERAGE NUMBER OF COMMON SHARES 
OUTSTANDING - BASIC AND DILUTED 
   
 88,330    
 105,095 
   
 119,005 
 
See accompanying notes to the consolidated financial statements. 
 
 

69 
JBG SMITH PROPERTIES 
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) 
(In thousands) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
    
2024 
    
2023 
 
2022 
NET INCOME (LOSS) 
 $ 
 (177,753) $ 
 (91,709) $ 
 98,986 
OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS): 
   
     
     
  
Change in fair value of derivative financial instruments 
   
 30,879    
 2,603    
 67,576 
Reclassification of net (income) loss on derivative financial 
instruments from accumulated other comprehensive income into 
interest expense 
   
 (34,707)   
 (34,776)   
 2,574 
Total other comprehensive income (loss) 
   
 (3,828)
  
 (32,173)   
 70,150 
COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS) 
   
 (181,581)
  
 (123,882)
  
 169,136 
Net (income) loss attributable to redeemable noncontrolling 
interests 
   
 22,202    
 10,596    
 (13,244)
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests 
  
 12,025   
 1,135   
 (371)
Other comprehensive (income) loss attributable to redeemable 
noncontrolling interests 
   
 817    
 4,486    
 (8,411)
Other comprehensive (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling 
interests 
  
 (1,939)  
 2,085   
 (145)
COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS) ATTRIBUTABLE TO JBG 
SMITH PROPERTIES 
 $ 
 (148,476) $ 
 (105,580) $ 
 146,965 
 
See accompanying notes to the consolidated financial statements. 
 
 

70 
JBG SMITH PROPERTIES 
Consolidated Statements of Equity 
(In thousands) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    
 
     
 
     
 
     
 
    Accumulated       
 
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Other  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Additional   
 
 
 Comprehensive  
 
 
 
 
 
 
Common Shares 
 
Paid-In   Accumulated  
Income  
  Noncontrolling  
Total  
 
 
Shares  
Amount  
Capital  
Deficit 
  
(Loss) 
 
Interests 
 
Equity 
BALANCE AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2021 
 
 127,378  $ 
 1,275  $ 
 
3,539,916  $  (609,331) $ 
 (15,950) $ 
 22,507  $ 
 
2,938,417 
Net income attributable to common shareholders and 
noncontrolling interests 
 
 —    
 —    
 —    
 85,371   
 —    
 371    
 85,742 
Redemption of OP Units for common shares 
 
 701    
 7    
 16,697    
 —   
 —    
 —    
 16,704 
Common shares repurchased 
 
 (14,151)  
 (142)   (360,900)  
 —   
 —   
 —    (361,042)
Common shares issued pursuant to employee incentive 
compensation plan and ESPP 
 
 85   
 1   
 2,661   
 —   
 —   
 —   
 2,662 
Dividends declared on common shares ($0.90 per common 
share) 
 
 —   
 —   
 —   
 (104,676)  
 —   
 —    (104,676)
Contributions from noncontrolling interests, net 
 
 —    
 —    
 —    
 —   
 —    
 9,202    
 9,202 
Redeemable noncontrolling interests redemption value 
adjustment and total other comprehensive income 
allocation 
 
 —    
 —    
 65,364    
 —   
 (8,411)   
 —    
 56,953 
Total other comprehensive income 
 
 —    
 —    
 —    
 —   
 70,150    
 —    
 70,150 
Other comprehensive income attributable to noncontrolling 
interests 
 
 —   
 —   
 —   
 —   
 (145)  
 145   
 — 
BALANCE AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2022 
 
 114,013   
 1,141   
 
3,263,738   
 (628,636)  
 45,644   
 32,225   
 
2,714,112 
Net loss attributable to common shareholders and 
noncontrolling interests 
 
 —    
 —    
 —    
 (79,978)  
 —    
 (1,135)   
 (81,113)
Redemption of OP Units for common shares 
 
 2,758    
 28    
 44,592    
 —   
 —    
 —    
 44,620 
Common shares repurchased 
 
 (22,576)  
 (225)   (335,088)  
 —   
 —   
 —    (335,313)
Common shares issued pursuant to employee incentive 
compensation plan and ESPP 
 
 114   
 —   
 2,506   
 —   
 —   
 —   
 2,506 
Dividends declared on common shares ($0.675 per 
common share) 
 
 —   
 —   
 —   
 (68,348)  
 —   
 —   
 (68,348)
Distributions to noncontrolling interests, net 
 
 —    
 —    
 —    
 —   
 —    
 (32)   
 (32)
Redeemable noncontrolling interests redemption value 
adjustment and total other comprehensive loss allocation 
 —    
 —    
 3,104    
 —   
 4,486    
 —    
 7,590 
Total other comprehensive loss 
 
 —    
 —    
 —    
 —   
 (32,173)   
 —    
 (32,173)
Other comprehensive loss attributable to noncontrolling 
interests 
 
 —   
 —   
 —   
 —   
 2,085   
 (2,085)  
 — 
BALANCE AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2023 
 
 94,309   
 944   
 
2,978,852   
 (776,962)  
 20,042   
 28,973   
 
2,251,849 
Net loss attributable to common shareholders and 
noncontrolling interests 
 
 —    
 —    
 —    
 (143,526)  
 —    
 (12,025)    (155,551)
Redemption of OP Units for common shares 
 
 1,025    
 11    
 17,060    
 —   
 —    
 —    
 17,071 
Common shares repurchased 
 
 (10,929)  
 (109)   (170,661)  
 —   
 —   
 —    (170,770)
Common shares issued pursuant to employee incentive 
compensation plan and ESPP 
 
 95   
 —   
 2,187   
 —   
 —   
 —   
 2,187 
Dividends declared on common shares ($0.875 per 
common share) 
 
 —   
 —   
 —   
 (76,795)  
 —   
 —   
 (76,795)
Acquisition of noncontrolling interests 
 
 —   
 —   
 (30,475)  
 —   
 —   
 (18,972)  
 (49,447)
Contributions from noncontrolling interests, net 
 
 —    
 —    
 —    
 —   
 —    
 20    
 20 
Redeemable noncontrolling interests redemption value 
adjustment and total other comprehensive loss allocation 
 —    
 —    
 (6,560)   
 —   
 817    
 —    
 (5,743)
Total other comprehensive loss 
 
 —    
 —    
 —    
 —   
 (3,828)   
 —    
 (3,828)
Other comprehensive income attributable to noncontrolling 
interests 
 
 —   
 —   
 —   
 —   
 (1,939)  
 1,939   
 — 
Other 
 
 —   
 —   
 —   
 —   
 —   
 65   
 65 
BALANCE AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2024 
 
 84,500  $ 
 846  $ 
 
2,790,403  $  (997,283) $ 
 15,092  $ 
 —  $ 
 
1,809,058 
 
See accompanying notes to the consolidated financial statements. 
 
 

71 
JBG SMITH PROPERTIES 
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows 
(In thousands) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
    
2024 
     
2023 
     
2022 
OPERATING ACTIVITIES: 
   
     
    
 
  
Net income (loss) 
 $ 
 (177,753) 
$ 
 (91,709) 
$ 
 98,986 
  Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net cash provided by 
operating activities: 
   
   
  
   
  
  
Share-based compensation expense 
   
 29,524  
  
 32,100  
  
 41,272 
Depreciation and amortization expense, including amortization of 
deferred financing costs 
   
 214,992  
  
 215,628  
  
 217,841 
Deferred rent 
   
 (15,531) 
  
 (20,664) 
  
 (23,602)
Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, net 
   
 7,122  
  
 26,999  
  
 17,429 
Amortization of market lease intangibles, net 
   
 161  
  
 (960) 
  
 (1,127)
Amortization of lease incentives 
   
 5,631  
  
 1,711  
  
 7,734 
(Gain) loss on the extinguishment of debt 
   
 (9,235) 
  
 450  
  
 3,073 
Impairment loss 
  
 55,427  
 
 90,226  
 
 — 
(Gain) loss on the sale of real estate, net 
   
 2,753  
  
 (79,335) 
  
 (161,894)
Loss on operating lease and other receivables 
   
 2,595  
  
 882  
  
 2,160 
Income from investments, net 
  
 (3,358) 
 
 (972) 
 
 (14,488)
Return on capital from unconsolidated real estate ventures 
   
 1,894  
  
 20,701  
  
 11,407 
Other non-cash items 
   
 5,806  
  
 10,818  
  
 (5,517)
Changes in operating assets and liabilities: 
   
 
  
   
  
  
Tenant and other receivables 
   
 18,212  
  
 11,123  
  
 (13,154)
Other assets, net 
   
 (2,089) 
  
 (8,959) 
  
 (10,737)
Accounts payable and accrued expenses 
   
 606  
  
 (11,255) 
  
 (1,282)
Other liabilities, net 
   
 (7,364) 
  
 (13,412) 
  
 9,936 
Net cash provided by operating activities 
   
 129,393  
  
 183,372  
  
 178,037 
INVESTING ACTIVITIES: 
   
   
  
   
  
  
Development costs, construction in progress and real estate additions 
   
 (218,029) 
  
 (333,744) 
  
 (326,741)
Acquisition of real estate 
   
 —  
  
 (19,551) 
  
 (65,302)
Proceeds from the sale of real estate 
   
 202,024  
  
 281,525  
  
 928,908 
Proceeds from the sale of investments 
  
 —  
 
 —  
 
 19,030 
Proceeds from derivative financial instruments 
  
 8,230  
 
 1,922  
 
 — 
Payments on derivative financial instruments 
  
 (6,468) 
 
 (9,830) 
 
 — 
Distributions of capital from unconsolidated real estate ventures and other 
investments 
   
 164,562  
  
 10,503  
  
 59,717 
Investments in unconsolidated real estate ventures and other investments    
 (6,164) 
  
 (29,004) 
  
 (91,591)
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities 
   
 144,155  
  
 (98,179) 
  
 524,021 
FINANCING ACTIVITIES: 
   
   
  
   
  
  
Borrowings under mortgage loans 
   
 187,895  
  
 345,140  
  
 179,744 
Borrowings under revolving credit facility 
   
 318,000  
  
 371,750  
  
 100,000 
Borrowings under term loans 
   
 —  
  
 170,000  
  
 150,000 
Repayments of mortgage loans 
   
 (197,954) 
  
 (281,854) 
  
 (270,676)
Repayments of revolving credit facility 
   
 (295,000) 
  
 (309,750) 
  
 (400,000)
Proceeds from derivative financial instruments 
  
 —  
 
 9,600  
 
 — 
Payments on derivative financial instruments 
  
 (5,796) 
 
 (1,922) 
 
 — 
Debt issuance and modification costs 
   
 (5,096) 
  
 (17,579) 
  
 (5,137)
Acquisition/redemption of noncontrolling interests 
   
 (49,409) 
  
 (647) 
 
 (9,531)
Proceeds from common shares issued pursuant to ESPP 
   
 945  
  
 1,102  
  
 1,458 
Common shares repurchased 
  
 (170,770) 
 
 (335,313) 
 
 (361,042)
Dividends paid to common shareholders 
   
 (62,007) 
  
 (94,002) 
  
 (107,688)
Distributions to redeemable noncontrolling interests 
   
 (11,564) 
  
 (15,318) 
  
 (16,409)
Distributions to noncontrolling interests 
  
 (41) 
 
 (32) 
 
 (182)
Contributions from noncontrolling interests 
  
 —  
 
 —  
 
 9,383 
Net cash used in financing activities 
   
 (290,797) 
  
 (158,825) 
  
 (730,080)
 

72 
JBG SMITH PROPERTIES 
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows 
(In thousands) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
     
2022 
Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents, and restricted cash 
 $ 
 (17,249) 
$ 
 (73,632)  $ 
 (28,022)
Cash and cash equivalents, and restricted cash, beginning of period 
   
 200,441  
  
 274,073 
 
 
 302,095 
Cash and cash equivalents, and restricted cash, end of period 
 $ 
 183,192  
$ 
 200,441 
 $ 
 274,073 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, AND RESTRICTED CASH, END OF PERIOD: 
 
  
   
  
  
Cash and cash equivalents 
 $ 
 145,804  
$ 
 164,773  
$ 
 241,098 
Restricted cash 
   
 37,388  
  
 35,668  
  
 32,975 
Cash and cash equivalents, and restricted cash 
 $ 
 183,192  
$ 
 200,441  
$ 
 274,073 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURE OF CASH FLOW AND NON-CASH INFORMATION:  
  
   
  
  
Cash paid for interest (net of capitalized interest of $10,383, $17,357 and 
$10,888 in 2024, 2023 and 2022) 
 $ 
 116,342  
$ 
 88,755  
$ 
 71,861 
Accrued capital expenditures included in accounts payable and accrued 
expenses 
   
 38,610  
  
 63,136  
  
 73,612 
Write-off of fully depreciated assets 
   
 31,809  
  
 6,281  
  
 19,794 
Cash paid for income taxes 
   
 117  
  
 1,916  
  
 1,205 
Accrued dividends to common shareholders 
   
 14,788  
  
 —  
  
 25,653 
Accrued distributions to redeemable noncontrolling interests 
   
 2,823  
  
 —  
  
 3,968 
Redemption of OP Units for common shares 
   
 17,071  
  
 44,620  
  
 16,704 
Recognition (derecognition) of operating lease right-of-use asset 
  
 (13,724) 
 
 61,443  
 
 — 
Recognition (derecognition) of liabilities related to operating lease right-
of-use asset 
  
 (13,724) 
 
 61,443  
 
 — 
Derecognition of finance lease right-of-use assets 
   
 —  
  
 —  
  
 (179,668)
Derecognition of liabilities related to finance lease right-of-use assets 
   
 —  
  
 —  
  
 (163,586)
Cash paid for amounts included in the measurement of lease liabilities 
for operating leases 
   
 9,639  
  
 5,178  
  
 1,906 
 
See accompanying notes to the consolidated financial statements. 
 
 

73 
JBG SMITH PROPERTIES 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 
1.          Organization and Basis of Presentation 
Organization 
JBG SMITH Properties ("JBG SMITH"), a Maryland real estate investment trust, owns, operates and develops mixed-use 
properties concentrated in amenity-rich, Metro-served submarkets in and around Washington, D.C., most notably National 
Landing, that we believe have long-term growth potential and appeal to residential, office and retail tenants. Through an 
intense focus on placemaking, JBG SMITH cultivates vibrant, highly amenitized, walkable neighborhoods throughout the 
Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. Approximately 75.0% of our holdings are in the National Landing submarket in 
Northern Virginia, which is anchored by four key demand drivers: Amazon.com, Inc.'s ("Amazon") headquarters; Virginia 
Tech's $1 billion Innovation Campus; proximity to the Pentagon; and our placemaking initiatives and public infrastructure 
improvements. In addition, our third-party real estate services business provides fee-based real estate services to third 
parties, including the legacy funds formerly organized by The JBG Companies ("JBG") (the "JBG Legacy Funds"). 
Substantially all our assets are held by, and our operations are conducted through, JBG SMITH Properties LP ("JBG 
SMITH LP"), our operating partnership. As of December 31, 2024, JBG SMITH, as its sole general partner, controlled 
JBG SMITH LP and owned 86.0% of its OP Units, after giving effect to the conversion of certain vested long-term 
incentive partnership units ("LTIP Units") that are convertible into OP Units. JBG SMITH is referred to herein as "we," 
"us," "our" or other similar terms. References to "our share" refer to our ownership percentage of consolidated and 
unconsolidated assets in real estate ventures, but exclude our 10.0% subordinated interest in one commercial building and 
our 33.5% subordinated interest in four commercial buildings (the "Fortress Assets"), as well as the associated non-
recourse mortgage loans, held through unconsolidated real estate ventures; these interests and debt are excluded because 
our investment in each real estate venture is zero, we do not anticipate receiving any near-term cash flow distributions 
from the real estate ventures, and we have not guaranteed their obligations or otherwise committed to providing financial 
support. 
We were organized for the purpose of receiving, via the spin-off on July 17, 2017 (the "Separation"), substantially all of 
the assets and liabilities of Vornado Realty Trust's ("Vornado") Washington, D.C. segment. On July 18, 2017, we acquired 
the management business and certain assets and liabilities of JBG (the "Combination"). The Separation and the 
Combination are collectively referred to as the "Formation Transaction."  
As of December 31, 2024, our Operating Portfolio consisted of 38 operating assets comprising 16 multifamily assets 
totaling 6,781 units (6,781 units at our share), 20 commercial assets totaling 6.7 million square feet (6.3 million square 
feet at our share) and two wholly owned land assets for which we are the ground lessor. Additionally, we have one under-
construction multifamily asset with 775 units (775 units at our share) and 19 assets in our development pipeline totaling 
11.0 million square feet (8.9 million square feet at our share) of estimated potential development density. 
We derive our revenue primarily from leases with multifamily and commercial tenants. Revenue under our multifamily 
leases is generally due on a monthly basis with terms of approximately one year or less, and may include income from 
utility recoveries, parking and other miscellaneous items. Our commercial leases include fixed and percentage rents, and 
reimbursements from tenants for certain expenses such as real estate taxes, property operating expenses, and repairs and 
maintenance. In addition, our third-party real estate services business provides fee-based real estate services. 
Only commercial leases with the U.S. federal government accounted for 10% or more of our total revenue as follows: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
     
2022 
  
 
 
(Dollars in thousands) 
Rental revenue from the U.S. federal government 
 $ 
 64,958  
$ 
 64,439  
$ 
 75,516  
Percentage of total revenue 
   
 11.9 %    
 10.7 %    
 12.5 %
 

74 
Basis of Presentation 
The accompanying consolidated financial statements and notes are prepared in accordance with accounting principles 
generally accepted in the United States of America ("GAAP"). All intercompany transactions and balances have been 
eliminated. 
The accompanying consolidated financial statements include our accounts and those of our wholly owned subsidiaries and 
consolidated variable interest entities ("VIEs"), including JBG SMITH LP. See Note 6 for additional information. The 
portions of the equity and net income (loss) of consolidated entities that are not attributable to us are presented separately 
as amounts attributable to noncontrolling interests in our consolidated financial statements.  
2.          Summary of Significant Accounting Policies 
Use of Estimates 
The preparation of the consolidated financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires us to make estimates and 
assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, and the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities 
as of the date of the consolidated financial statements and the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the 
reporting periods. Actual results could differ from those estimates. 
Asset Acquisitions  
We account for asset acquisitions, which includes the consolidation of previously unconsolidated real estate ventures, at 
cost, including transaction costs, plus the fair value of any assumed debt. We estimate the fair values of acquired tangible 
assets (consisting of real estate, tenant and other receivables, and other assets, as applicable), identified intangible assets 
and liabilities (consisting of in-place leases and above- and below-market leases, as applicable), assumed debt and other 
liabilities, and noncontrolling interests, as applicable, based on our evaluation of information and estimates available at 
the date of acquisition. Based on these estimates, we allocate the purchase price, including all transaction costs related to 
the acquisition and any contingent consideration, to the identified assets acquired and liabilities assumed based on their 
relative fair value. The results of operations of acquisitions are prospectively included in our consolidated financial 
statements beginning with the date of the acquisition. 
The fair values of buildings are determined using the "as-if vacant" approach whereby we use discounted cash flow models 
with inputs and assumptions that we believe are consistent with current market conditions for similar assets. The most 
significant assumptions in determining the allocation of the purchase price to buildings are the exit capitalization rate, 
discount rate, estimated market rents and hypothetical expected lease-up periods, when applicable. We assess the fair value 
of land based on market comparisons and development projects using an income approach of cost plus a margin. 
The fair values of identified intangible assets and liabilities are determined based on the following: 
• 
The value allocable to the above- or below-market component of an acquired in-place lease is determined based 
upon the present value (using a discount rate which reflects the risks associated with the acquired lease) of the 
difference between: (i) the contractual amounts to be received pursuant to the lease over its remaining term and 
(ii) management's estimate of the amounts that would be received using market rates over the remaining term of 
the lease. Amounts allocated to above-market leases are recorded as lease intangible assets in "Intangible assets, 
net" in our consolidated balance sheets, and amounts allocated to below-market leases are recorded as lease 
intangible liabilities in "Other liabilities, net" in our consolidated balance sheets. These intangibles are amortized 
to "Property rental revenue" in our consolidated statements of operations over the remaining terms of the 
respective leases. 
• 
Factors considered in determining the value allocable to in-place leases during hypothetical lease-up periods 
related to space that is leased at the time of acquisition include: (i) lost rent and operating cost recoveries during 
the hypothetical lease-up period and (ii) theoretical leasing commissions required to execute similar leases. These 
intangible assets are recorded as lease intangible assets in "Intangible assets, net" in our consolidated balance 

75 
sheets and are amortized to "Depreciation and amortization expense" in our consolidated statements of operations 
over the remaining term of the existing lease. 
Real Estate 
Real estate is carried at cost, net of accumulated depreciation and amortization. Maintenance and repairs are expensed as 
incurred and are included in "Property operating expenses" in our consolidated statements of operations.  
Construction in progress, including land, is carried at cost, and no depreciation is recorded. All direct and indirect costs 
related to development activities, including redevelopment activities, are capitalized to the extent that we believe such 
costs are recoverable through the value of the property into "Construction in progress, including land" in our consolidated 
balance sheets, except for certain demolition costs, which are expensed as incurred. Direct development costs incurred 
include: pre-development expenditures directly related to a specific project, development and construction costs, interest, 
insurance and real estate taxes. Indirect development costs include: employee salaries and benefits, travel and other related 
costs that are directly associated with the development. Our method of calculating capitalized interest expense is based 
upon applying our weighted average borrowing rate to the actual accumulated expenditures if the property does not have 
property specific debt. If the property is encumbered by specific debt, we will capitalize both the interest incurred 
applicable to that debt and additional interest expense using our weighted average borrowing rate for any accumulated 
expenditures in excess of the principal balance of the debt encumbering the property. The capitalization of such expenses 
ceases when the real estate is ready for its intended use, but no later than one-year from substantial completion of major 
construction activities at which point the costs associated with a property are allocated to its various components. 
Depreciation and amortization expense require an estimate of the useful life of each property and improvement. 
Depreciation and amortization expense are recognized on a straight-line basis over estimated useful lives, which range 
from three to 40 years. Tenant improvements are amortized on a straight-line basis over the lives of the related leases, 
which approximate the useful lives of the tenant improvements. When assets are sold or retired, their costs and related 
accumulated depreciation are removed from the accounts with the resulting gains (losses) reflected in net income (loss) 
for the period. 
Our real estate and related intangible assets are reviewed for impairment whenever there are changes in circumstances or 
indicators that the carrying amount of the assets may not be recoverable. These indicators may include declining operating 
performance, below average occupancy, shortened anticipated holding periods, costs in excess of budgets for under-
construction assets and other adverse changes. An impairment exists when the carrying amount of an asset exceeds the 
sum of the undiscounted cash flows expected to result from the use and eventual disposition of the asset. Estimates of 
future cash flows are based on our current plans, anticipated holding periods and available market information at the time 
the analyses are prepared. Longer anticipated holding periods for real estate assets directly reduce the likelihood of 
recording an impairment loss. An impairment loss is recognized if the carrying amount of the asset is not recoverable and 
is measured based on the excess of the property's carrying amount over its estimated fair value. Estimated fair values are 
calculated based on the following information in order of preference, dependent upon availability: (i) pending or executed 
agreements, (ii) market prices for comparable properties or (iii) the sum of discounted cash flows.  
If our estimates of future cash flows, anticipated holding periods, asset strategy or fair values change, based on market 
conditions, anticipated selling prices or other factors, our evaluation of impairment losses may be different and such 
differences could be material to our consolidated financial statements. Estimates of future cash flows are subjective and 
are based, in part, on assumptions regarding future occupancy, rental rates, capitalization and discount rates and capital 
requirements that could differ materially from actual results. 
Cash and Cash Equivalents 
Cash and cash equivalents consist of highly liquid investments with a purchase date life to maturity of three months or less 
and are carried at cost, which approximates fair value due to their short-term maturities. 

76 
Restricted Cash 
Restricted cash consists primarily of proceeds from property dispositions held in escrow, security deposits held on behalf 
of our tenants and cash escrowed under loan agreements for debt service, real estate taxes, property insurance and capital 
improvements. 
Investments in Real Estate Ventures 
We analyze each real estate venture at acquisition, formation, after a change in the ownership agreement, after a change 
in the entity's economics or after any other reconsideration event to determine whether the entity is a VIE. An entity is a 
VIE because it is in the development stage and/or does not hold sufficient equity at risk, or conducts substantially all its 
operations on behalf of an investor with disproportionately few voting rights. If it is determined that an entity is a VIE in 
which we have a variable interest, we assess whether we are the primary beneficiary of the VIE to determine whether it 
should be consolidated. We will consolidate a VIE if we are the primary beneficiary of the VIE, which entails having the 
power to direct the activities that most significantly impact the VIE's economic performance. We are not the primary 
beneficiary of a VIE when we do not have voting control, lack the power to direct the activities that most significantly 
impact the entity's economic performance, or the limited partners (or non-managing members) have substantive 
participatory rights. If it is determined that the real estate venture is not a VIE, then the determination as to whether we 
consolidate is based on whether we have a controlling financial interest in the real estate venture, which is based on our 
voting interests and the degree of influence we have over the real estate venture. Management uses judgment when 
determining if we are the primary beneficiary of a VIE or have a controlling financial interest in a real estate venture 
determined not to be a VIE. Factors considered in determining whether we have the power to direct the activities that most 
significantly impact the entity's economic performance include voting rights, involvement in day-to-day capital and 
operating decisions, and the extent of our involvement in the entity. 
We use the equity method of accounting for investments in unconsolidated real estate ventures when we have significant 
influence but are not the primary beneficiary of a VIE or do not have a controlling financial interest in a real estate venture 
determined not to be a VIE. Significant influence is typically indicated through ownership of 20% or more of the voting 
interests. Under the equity method, we record our investments in these entities in "Investments in unconsolidated real 
estate ventures" in our consolidated balance sheets, and our proportionate share of earnings (losses) earned by the real 
estate venture is recognized in "Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, net" in the accompanying consolidated 
statements of operations.  
We earn revenue from the management services we provide to unconsolidated real estate ventures. These fees are 
determined in accordance with the terms specific to each arrangement and may include property and asset management 
fees, or transactional fees for leasing, acquisition, development and construction, financing and legal services provided. 
We account for this revenue gross of our ownership interest in each respective real estate venture and recognize such 
revenue in "Third-party real estate services, including reimbursements" in our consolidated statements of operations when 
earned. Our proportionate share of related expenses is recognized in "Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, net" 
in our consolidated statements of operations. 
We may also earn incremental promote distributions if certain financial return benchmarks are achieved upon ultimate 
disposition of the underlying properties. Promote revenue is recognized when certain earnings events have occurred, and 
the amount of revenue is determinable and collectible. Any promote revenue is reflected in "Loss from unconsolidated 
real estate ventures, net" in our consolidated statements of operations. In the event our investment in a real estate venture 
is reduced to zero, and we are not obligated to provide for additional losses, have not guaranteed its obligations or otherwise 
committed to providing financial support, we will discontinue the equity method of accounting until such point that our 
share of net income equals the share of net losses not recognized during the period the equity method was suspended. 
With regard to distributions from unconsolidated real estate ventures, we use the information that is available to us to 
determine the nature of the underlying activity that generated the distributions. Using the nature of distribution approach, 
cash flows generated from the operations of an unconsolidated real estate venture are classified as a return on investment 
(cash inflow from operating activities) and cash flows from property sales, debt refinancing or sales of our investments 
are classified as a return of investment (cash inflow from investing activities). 

77 
On a periodic basis, we evaluate our investments in unconsolidated real estate ventures for impairment. An investment in 
a real estate venture is considered impaired if we determine that its fair value is less than the net carrying value of the 
investment in that real estate venture on an other-than-temporary basis. Cash flow projections for the investments consider 
property level factors such as expected future operating income, trends and prospects, anticipated holding periods, as well 
as the effects of demand, competition and other factors. We consider various qualitative factors to determine if a decrease 
in the value of our investment is other-than-temporary. These factors include the age of the venture, our intent and ability 
to retain our investment in the real estate venture, financial condition and long-term prospects of the real estate venture 
and relationships with our partners and banks. If we believe that the decline in the fair value of the investment is temporary, 
no impairment loss is recorded. If our analysis indicates that there is an other-than temporary impairment related to the 
investment in a particular real estate venture, the carrying value of the venture will be adjusted to an amount that reflects 
the estimated fair value of the investment.  
We evaluate reconsideration events as we become aware of them. Reconsideration events include, among other criteria, 
amendments to real estate venture agreements or changes in the capital requirements of the real estate venture. A 
reconsideration event could cause us to consolidate an unconsolidated real estate venture or deconsolidate a consolidated 
entity. 
Intangibles 
Intangible assets primarily consist of: (i) in-place leases, below-market ground rent obligations, and above-market real 
estate leases that were recorded in connection with the acquisition of properties and (ii) management and leasing contracts 
and options to enter into ground leases that were acquired in the Combination. Intangible liabilities consist of above-market 
ground rent obligations and below-market real estate leases that are also recorded in connection with the acquisition of 
properties. Both intangible assets and liabilities are amortized and accreted using the straight-line method over their 
applicable remaining useful life. When a lease or contract is terminated early, any remaining unamortized or unaccreted 
balances are charged to earnings. The useful lives of intangible assets are evaluated each reporting period with any changes 
in estimated useful lives being accounted for over the revised remaining useful life. 
Intangible assets also include the wireless spectrum licenses we acquired. While the licenses are issued for ten years, as 
long as we act within the requirements and constraints of the regulatory authorities, the renewal and extension of these 
licenses is reasonably certain at minimal cost, which would be capitalized as part of the asset. Accordingly, we have 
concluded that the licenses are indefinite-lived intangible assets. 
Investments 
Investments in equity securities without readily determinable fair values are carried at cost. Investments in investment 
funds without readily determinable fair values that qualify for the net asset value ("NAV") practical expedient are carried 
at fair value based on their reported NAV. Investments in equity securities and investment funds are included in "Other 
assets, net" in our consolidated balance sheets. Realized and unrealized gains (losses) are included in "Interest and other 
income, net" in our consolidated statements of operations. 
Assets Held for Sale 
Assets, primarily consisting of real estate, are classified as held for sale when all the necessary criteria are met. The criteria 
include: (i) management, having the authority to approve action, commits to a plan to sell the property in its present 
condition, (ii) the sale of the property is at a price reasonable in relation to its current fair value and (iii) the sale is probable 
and expected to be completed within one year. Real estate held for sale is carried at the lower of carrying amounts or 
estimated fair value less disposal costs. Depreciation and amortization expense is not recognized on real estate classified 
as held for sale. 

78 
Deferred Costs 
Deferred leasing costs include direct and incremental costs incurred in the successful negotiation of leases, including 
leasing commissions and other costs, which are deferred and amortized on a straight-line basis over the corresponding 
lease term. Unamortized leasing costs are charged to expense upon the early termination of the lease. 
Deferred financing costs consist of loan issuance costs directly related to financing transactions that are deferred and 
amortized over the term of the related loan as a component of interest expense. Unamortized deferred financing costs 
related to our mortgage loans and term loans are presented as a direct deduction from the carrying amounts of the related 
debt instruments, while such costs related to our revolving credit facility are included in other assets. 
Noncontrolling Interests 
We identify our noncontrolling interests separately in our consolidated balance sheets. Amounts of consolidated net 
income (loss) attributable to redeemable noncontrolling interests and to the noncontrolling interests in consolidated 
subsidiaries are presented separately in our consolidated statements of operations. 
Redeemable Noncontrolling Interests - Redeemable noncontrolling interests primarily consists of OP Units issued in 
conjunction with the Formation Transaction and LTIP Units issued to employees. Redeemable noncontrolling interests are 
generally redeemable at the option of the holder for our common shares, or cash at our election, subject to certain 
limitations, and are presented in the mezzanine section between total liabilities and shareholders' equity in our consolidated 
balance sheets. The carrying amount of redeemable noncontrolling interests is adjusted to its redemption value at the end 
of each reporting period, but no less than its initial carrying value, with such adjustments recognized in "Additional paid-
in capital." See Note 13 for additional information. 
Noncontrolling Interests - Noncontrolling interests represents the portion of equity that we do not own in entities we 
consolidate, including interests in consolidated real estate ventures. 
Derivative Financial Instruments and Hedge Accounting 
Derivative financial instruments are used at times to manage exposure to variable interest rate risk. Derivative financial 
instruments are recognized as either assets or liabilities and are measured at fair value. The accounting for changes in the 
fair value of a derivative depends on the intended use of the derivative and the resulting designation. Cash flows and 
related gains (losses) associated with derivative financial instruments are classified as operating cash flows in our 
consolidated statements of cash flows, unless the derivative financial instrument contains an other-than-insignificant 
financing element at inception, in which case the related cash flows are reported as either cash flows from investing or 
financing activities depending on the derivative's off-market nature at inception. 
Derivative Financial Instruments Designated as Effective Hedges - Certain derivative financial instruments, consisting of 
interest rate swap and cap agreements, are cash flow hedges that are designated as effective hedges, and are carried at their 
estimated fair value on a recurring basis. We assess the effectiveness of our hedges both at inception and on an ongoing 
basis. If the hedges are deemed to be effective, the fair value is recorded in "Accumulated other comprehensive income" 
in our consolidated balance sheets and is subsequently reclassified into "Interest expense" in our consolidated statements 
of operations in the period that the hedged forecasted transactions affect earnings. Our hedges become less than perfectly 
effective if the critical terms of the hedging instrument and the forecasted transactions do not perfectly match such as 
notional amounts, settlement dates, reset dates, calculation period and interest rates. In addition, we evaluate the default 
risk of the counterparty by monitoring the creditworthiness of the counterparty.  
Derivative financial instruments and hedging activities require management to make judgments on the nature of its 
derivatives and their effectiveness as hedges. These judgments determine if the changes in fair value of the derivative 
instruments are reported in our consolidated statements of operations, or in our consolidated statements of comprehensive 
income (loss).  

79 
Non-Designated Derivatives - Certain derivative financial instruments, consisting of interest rate cap agreements, are used 
to manage our exposure to interest rate movements, but do not meet the accounting requirements to be classified as hedging 
instruments. These derivatives are carried at their estimated fair value on a recurring basis with realized and unrealized 
gains (losses) recorded in "Interest expense" in our consolidated statements of operations.  
Fair Value of Assets and Liabilities 
Accounting Standards Codification ("ASC") 820 ("Topic 820"), Fair Value Measurement and Disclosures, defines fair 
value and establishes a framework for measuring fair value. The objective of fair value is to determine the price that would 
be received upon the sale of an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at 
the measurement date (the exit price). Topic 820 establishes a fair value hierarchy that prioritizes observable and 
unobservable inputs used to measure fair value into three levels: 
Level 1 — quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets that are accessible at the measurement date for assets or 
liabilities; 
Level 2 — observable prices that are based on inputs not quoted in active markets, but corroborated by market data; and 
Level 3 — unobservable inputs that are used when little or no market data is available. 
The fair value hierarchy gives the highest priority to Level 1 inputs and the lowest priority to Level 3 inputs. In determining 
fair value, we utilize valuation techniques that maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable 
inputs to the extent possible as well as consider counterparty credit risk in our assessment of fair value. Investments that 
are valued using NAV as a practical expedient are excluded from the fair value hierarchy disclosures. 
Revenue Recognition 
We have leases with various tenants across our portfolio of properties, which generate rental income and operating cash 
flows for our benefit. Through these leases, we provide tenants with the right to control the use of our real estate, which 
tenants agree to use and control. The right to control our real estate conveys to our tenants substantially all of the economic 
benefits and the right to direct how and for what purpose the real estate is used throughout the period of use, thereby 
meeting the definition of a lease. Leases will be classified as either operating, sales-type or direct finance leases based on 
whether the lease is structured in effect as a financed purchase. 
Property rental revenue includes base rent each tenant pays in accordance with the terms of its respective lease and is 
reported on a straight-line basis over the non-cancellable term of the lease, which includes the effects of periodic step-ups 
in rent and rent abatements under the lease. When a renewal option is included within the lease, we assess whether the 
option is reasonably certain of being exercised against relevant economic factors to determine whether the option period 
should be included as part of the lease term. Further, property rental revenue includes tenant reimbursement revenue from 
the recovery of all or a portion of the operating expenses and real estate taxes of the respective assets. Tenant 
reimbursements, which vary each period, are non-lease components that are not the predominant activity within the 
contract. We have elected the practical expedient that allows us to combine certain lease and non-lease components of our 
operating leases. Non-lease components are recognized together with fixed base rent in "Property rental revenue," as 
variable lease income in the same periods as the related expenses are incurred. Certain commercial leases may also provide 
for the payment by the lessee of additional rents based on a percentage of sales, which are recorded as variable lease 
income in the period the additional rents are earned. 
We commence rental revenue recognition when the tenant takes possession of the leased space or controls the physical 
use of the leased space and when the leased space is substantially ready for its intended use. In circumstances where we 
provide a tenant improvement allowance for improvements that are owned by the tenant, we recognize the allowance as a 
reduction of property rental revenue on a straight-line basis over the term of the lease commencing when the tenant takes 
possession of the space. Differences between rental revenue recognized and amounts due under the respective lease 
agreements are recorded as an increase or decrease to "Deferred rent receivable" in our consolidated balance sheets. 
Property rental revenue also includes the amortization or accretion of acquired above- and below-market leases. We 
periodically evaluate the collectability of amounts due from tenants and recognize an adjustment to property rental revenue 
for accounts receivable and deferred rent receivable if we conclude it is not probable, we will collect substantially all of 

80 
the remaining lease payments under the lease agreements. Any changes to the provision for lease revenue determined to 
be not probable of collection are included in "Property rental revenue" in our consolidated statements of operations. We 
exercise judgment in assessing the probability of collection and consider payment history, current credit status and 
economic outlook in making this determination. 
Third-party real estate services revenue, including reimbursements, includes property and asset management fees, and 
transactional fees for leasing, acquisition, development and construction, financing, and legal services. These fees are 
determined in accordance with the terms specific to each arrangement and are recognized as the related services are 
performed. Development fees are earned from providing services to third-party property owners and our unconsolidated 
real estate ventures. The performance obligations associated with our development services contracts are satisfied over 
time and we recognize our development fee revenue using a time-based measure of progress over the course of the 
development project due to the stand-ready nature of the promised services. The transaction prices for our performance 
obligations are variable based on the costs ultimately incurred to develop the underlying assets and are estimated based on 
their expected value. Our transaction prices, and the corresponding recognition of revenue, are constrained such that a 
significant reversal of revenue is not probable when the variability is subsequently resolved. Judgments impacting the 
timing and amount of revenue recognized from our development services contracts include the determination of the nature 
and number of performance obligations within a contract, estimates of total development project costs, from which the 
fees are typically derived, the application of a constraint to our transaction price and estimates of the period of time over 
which the development services are expected to be performed, which is the period over which the revenue is recognized. 
We recognize development fees earned from unconsolidated real estate venture projects to the extent of our venture 
partners' ownership interest.  
Third-Party Real Estate Services Expenses 
Third-party real estate services expenses include the costs associated with the management services provided to our 
unconsolidated real estate ventures and other third parties, including amounts paid to third-party contractors for 
construction projects that we manage. We allocate personnel and other overhead costs using estimates of the time spent 
performing services for our third-party real estate services and other allocation methodologies. 
Lessee Accounting 
We have, or have entered in the past, operating and finance leases, including ground leases on certain of our properties. 
When a renewal option is included within a lease, we assess whether the option is reasonably certain of being exercised 
against relevant economic factors to determine whether the option period should be included as part of the lease term. 
Lease payments associated with renewal periods that we are reasonably certain will be exercised are included in the 
measurement of the corresponding lease liability and right-of-use asset. Lease expense for our operating leases is 
recognized on a straight-line basis over the expected lease term and is included in our consolidated statements of operations 
in "Property operating expenses." Amortization of the right-of-use asset associated with a finance lease is recognized on a 
straight-line basis over the expected lease term and is included in our consolidated statements of operations in 
"Depreciation and amortization expense" with the related interest on our outstanding lease liability included in "Interest 
expense." 
Certain lease agreements include variable lease payments that, in the future, will vary based on changes in inflationary 
measures, market rates or our share of expenditures of the leased premises. Such variable payments are recognized in lease 
expense in the period in which the variability is determined. Certain lease agreements may also include various non-lease 
components that primarily relate to property operating expenses associated with our office leases, which also vary each 
period. We have elected the practical expedient which allows us to combine lease and non-lease components for our ground 
and office leases and recognize variable non-lease components in lease expense when incurred. 
We discount our future lease payments for each lease to calculate the related lease liability using an estimated incremental 
borrowing rate computed based on observable corporate borrowing rates reflective of the general economic environment, 
taking into consideration our creditworthiness and various financing and asset specific considerations, adjusted to 
approximate a secured borrowing for the lease term. We made a policy election to forgo recording right-of-use assets and 
the related lease liabilities for leases with initial terms of 12 months or less. 

81 
Income Taxes 
We have elected to be taxed as a real estate investment trust ("REIT") under sections 856-860 of the Internal Revenue 
Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"). Under those sections, a REIT which distributes at least 90% of its REIT taxable 
income as dividends to its shareholders each year and which meets certain other conditions will not be taxed on that portion 
of its taxable income which is distributed to its shareholders. We currently adhere and intend to continue to adhere to these 
requirements and to maintain our REIT status in future periods. 
As a REIT, we can reduce our taxable income by distributing all or a portion of such taxable income to shareholders. Future 
distributions will be declared and paid at the discretion of the Board of Trustees and will depend upon cash generated by 
operating activities, our financial condition, capital requirements, annual dividend requirements under the REIT provisions 
of the Code and such other factors as our Board of Trustees deems relevant. 
We also participate in the activities conducted by our subsidiary entities that have elected to be treated as taxable REIT 
subsidiaries ("TRS") under the Code. As such, we are subject to federal, state, and local taxes on the income from these 
activities. Income taxes attributable to our TRSs are accounted for under the asset and liability method. Under the asset 
and liability method, deferred income taxes arise from temporary differences between the tax basis of assets and liabilities 
and their reported amounts in our consolidated financial statements, which will result in taxable or deductible amounts in 
the future. We provide for a valuation allowance for deferred income tax assets if we believe all or some portion of the 
deferred tax asset may not be realized. Any increase or decrease in the valuation allowance that results from a change in 
circumstances that causes a change in the estimated ability to realize the related deferred tax asset is included in deferred 
tax benefit (expense). 
ASC 740 ("Topic 740"), Income Taxes, provides guidance for how uncertain tax positions should be recognized, measured, 
presented and disclosed in our consolidated financial statements. Topic 740 requires the evaluation of tax positions taken 
in the course of preparing our tax returns to determine whether the tax positions are "more-likely-than-not" of being 
sustained by the applicable tax authority. Tax benefits of positions not deemed to meet the more-likely-than-not threshold 
are recorded as a tax expense in the current year. 
Earnings (Loss) Per Common Share 
Basic earnings (loss) per common share is computed by dividing net income (loss) available to common shareholders by 
the weighted average common shares outstanding during the period. Unvested share-based compensation awards that 
entitle holders to receive non-forfeitable distributions are considered participating securities. Consequently, we are 
required to apply the two-class method of computing basic and diluted earnings (loss) that would otherwise have been 
available to common shareholders. Under the two-class method, earnings for the period are allocated between common 
shareholders and participating securities based on their respective rights to receive dividends. During periods of net loss, 
losses are allocated only to the extent the participating securities are required to absorb their share of such losses. 
Distributions to participating securities in excess of their allocated income (loss) are shown as a reduction to net income 
(loss) attributable to common shareholders. Diluted earnings (loss) per common share reflects the potential dilution of the 
assumed exchange of various unit and share-based compensation awards into common shares to the extent they are 
dilutive. 
Share-Based Compensation 
The fair value of share-based compensation awards granted to our trustees, management or employees is determined, 
depending on the type of award, using the Monte Carlo or Black-Scholes methods, which is intended to estimate the fair 
value of the awards at the grant date using dividend yields, expected volatilities that are primarily based on available 
implied data and peer group companies' historical data and post-vesting restriction periods. The risk-free interest rate is 
based on the U.S. Treasury yield curve in effect at the time of grant. The shortcut method is used for determining the 
expected life used in the valuation method. 
Compensation expense is based on the fair value of our common shares at the date of the grant and is recognized ratably 
over the vesting period using a graded vesting attribution model. Compensation expense for share-based compensation 

82 
awards made to retirement eligible employees is recognized over a six-month period after the grant date or over the 
remaining period until they become retirement eligible. We account for forfeitures as they occur. Distributions paid on 
unvested OP Units and LTIP Units are recorded to "Redeemable noncontrolling interests" in our consolidated balance 
sheets. Distributions paid on unvested Restricted Share Units ("RSUs") are recorded to "Additional paid-in capital" in our 
consolidated balance sheets. 
Recent Accounting Pronouncements 
Standard Adopted 
Segment Reporting 
In November 2023, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued Accounting Standards Update ("ASU") 
2023-07, "Segment Reporting (Topic 280): Improvements to Reportable Segments Disclosures." ASU 2023-07 enhances 
disclosures of significant segment expenses regularly provided to the chief operating decision maker ("CODM") and 
extends certain annual disclosures to interim periods. Retrospective adoption to all periods presented is required. ASU 
2023-07 does not change the existing guidance on how a public entity identifies and determines its reportable segments. 
In 2024, we adopted ASU 2023-07, which did not have an impact on our consolidated financial statements, but resulted in 
incremental segment disclosures. See Note 20 for additional information. 
Standards Not Yet Adopted 
Expense Disaggregation Disclosures  
In November 2024, the FASB issued ASU 2024-03, "Income Statement - Reporting Comprehensive Income - Expense 
Disaggregation Disclosures (Subtopic 220-40): Disaggregation of Income Statement Expenses." ASU 2024-03 requires 
expanded interim and annual disclosures of certain expense information in the notes to the consolidated financial 
statements. The guidance is effective for annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2026, and interim 
reporting periods within annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2027, with early adoption permitted. The 
guidance can be applied on a prospective or retrospective basis. We are currently evaluating the potential impact of 
adopting this new guidance on our consolidated financial statement disclosures. 
Climate-Related Disclosures  
In March 2024, the SEC issued final rules on the enhancement and standardization of climate-related disclosures. The 
rules require disclosure of, among other things, (i) actual and potential material impacts of climate-related risks on our 
strategy, business model and outlook, (ii) climate-related targets and goals that have materially affected or are reasonably 
likely to materially affect our business, results of operations or financial condition, (iii) governance and management of 
climate-related risks and (iv) material Scope 1 and Scope 2 greenhouse gas emissions. Additionally, the rules require 
disclosures in the notes to the financial statements regarding the effects of severe weather events and other natural 
conditions, subject to certain materiality thresholds, and certain carbon offsets and renewable energy certificates. The rules 
are effective on a phased-in timeline beginning in the annual reports for the year ended December 31, 2025. In April 2024, 
the SEC announced a stay of these climate disclosure rules pending judicial review. We are currently evaluating the 
potential impact of adopting these new rules on our consolidated financial statement disclosures. 
Income Taxes 
In December 2023, the FASB issued ASU 2023-09, "Income Taxes (Topic 740): Improvements to Income Tax 
Disclosures" ("Topic 740"). Topic 740 modifies the rules on income tax disclosures to require entities to disclose 
(i) specific categories in the rate reconciliation, (ii) the income (loss) from continuing operations before income tax 
expense or benefit (separated between domestic and foreign) and (iii) income tax expense or benefit from continuing 
operations (separated by federal, state and foreign). Topic 740 also requires entities to disclose their income tax payments 
to international, federal, state and local jurisdictions, among other changes. The guidance is effective for annual periods 
beginning after December 15, 2024. Early adoption is permitted for annual financial statements that have not yet been 
issued or made available for issuance. This guidance should be applied on a prospective basis, but retrospective application 

83 
is permitted. We are currently evaluating the potential impact of adopting this new guidance on our consolidated financial 
statements and related disclosures. 
3.          Acquisitions, Dispositions and Assets Held for Sale 
Acquisitions 
During 2023, we paid the deferred purchase price of $19.6 million related to the 2020 acquisition of a development parcel, 
formerly the Americana hotel. 
In October 2022, we acquired the remaining 50.0% ownership interest in 8001 Woodmont, a 322-unit multifamily asset 
in Bethesda, Maryland previously owned by an unconsolidated real estate venture, for a purchase price of $115.0 million, 
including the assumption of the $51.9 million mortgage loan at our share. The asset was encumbered by a $103.8 million 
mortgage loan and was consolidated as of the date of acquisition. We recorded our investment in the asset at the carryover 
basis for our previously held equity investment plus the incremental cash consideration paid to acquire our partner's 
interest. 
In August 2022, we acquired the remaining 36.0% ownership interest in Atlantic Plumbing, a 310-unit multifamily asset 
in Washington, D.C. previously owned by an unconsolidated real estate venture, which was encumbered by a 
$100.0 million mortgage loan, for a purchase price of $19.7 million and our partner’s share of the working capital. The 
mortgage loan was repaid in August 2022. Atlantic Plumbing was consolidated as of the date of acquisition. We recorded 
our investment in the asset at the carryover basis for our previously held equity investment plus the incremental cash 
consideration paid to acquire our partner's interest. 
 

84 
Dispositions 
 
The following is a summary of disposition activity: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
   
   
 
Gain (Loss) 
 
  
  
 
Gross 
 
Cash 
 
on the Sale 
 
  
  
 
Sales 
 
Proceeds 
 
of Real 
Date Disposed     
Assets 
    
Segment 
    
Price 
    
from Sale 
    
Estate 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(In thousands) 
Year Ended December 31, 2024 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
January 22, 2024 
 North End Retail 
 
Multifamily  $ 
 14,250  $ 
 12,410  $ 
 (1,200)
September 17, 2024 Fort Totten Square 
 
Multifamily   
 86,800   
 84,600   
 (5,352)
December 19, 2024  2101 L Street (1) 
 
Commercial   
 110,101   
 105,014   
 — 
 
 Other (2) 
 
 
  
  
  
 3,799 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 $ 
 (2,753)
Year Ended December 31, 2023 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
March 17, 2023 
 Development Parcel 
 
Other 
 $ 
 5,500  $ 
 4,954  $ 
 (53)
March 23, 2023 
 4747 Bethesda Avenue (3) 
 
Commercial   
  
  
 40,053 
September 20, 2023 Falkland Chase-South & West 
and Falkland Chase-North 
 
Multifamily   
 95,000   
 93,094   
 1,208 
October 4, 2023 
 5 M Street Southwest 
 
Other 
  
 29,500   
 28,585   
 430 
November 30, 2023 
Crystal City Marriott 
 
Commercial   
 80,000   
 79,563   
 37,051 
December 5, 2023  Capitol Point-North-75 New 
York Avenue 
 
Other 
  
 11,516   
 11,285   
 (23)
 
 Other (4) 
 
 
  
  
  
 669 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 $ 
 79,335 
Year Ended December 31, 2022 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
March 28, 2022 
 Development Parcel 
 
Other 
 $ 
 3,250  $ 
 3,149  $ 
 (136)
April 1, 2022 
 Universal Buildings (5) 
 
Commercial   
 228,000   
 194,737   
 41,245 
April 13, 2022 
  7200 Wisconsin Avenue,  
 1730 M Street,  
 RTC-West and  
 Courthouse Plaza 1 and 2 (6) 
  
Commercial/ 
Other 
   
 580,000    
 527,694   
 (4,047)
May 25, 2022 
 Pen Place 
 
Other 
  
 198,000   
 197,528   
 121,502 
December 23, 2022  Land Option 
 
Other 
  
 6,150   
 5,800   
 3,330 
 
  
 
 
  
  
 $ 
 161,894 
 
(1) 
In connection with the sale of 2101 L Street, the lender of the related $120.9 million mortgage loan accepted the proceeds from the 
sale and $6.7 million of cash as repayment of the mortgage loan, resulting in a $9.2 million gain on the extinguishment of debt, 
which was included in "Gain (loss) on the extinguishment of debt" in our consolidated statement of operations for the year ended 
December 31, 2024. 
(2) 
Primarily related to the reversal of certain previously recorded contingent liabilities which were relieved in connection with the 
sale of Central Place Tower by one of our unconsolidated real estate ventures. See Note 5 for additional information.  
(3) 
We sold an 80.0% interest in the asset for a gross sales price of $196.0 million, representing a gross valuation of $245.0 million. 
See Note 5 for additional information.  
(4) 
Related to prior period dispositions. 
(5) 
Cash proceeds from sale excludes a lease termination fee of $24.3 million received during the first quarter of 2022. 
(6) 
Assets were sold to an unconsolidated real estate venture. See Note 5 for additional information. "RTC-West" refers to RTC-West, 
RTC-West Trophy Office and RTC-West Land. In April 2022, $164.8 million of mortgage loans related to 1730 M Street and 
RTC-West were repaid.  
 
 

85 
Assets Held for Sale 
The following is a summary of assets held for sale as of December 31, 2024. There were no assets held for sale as of 
December 31, 2023. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
   
 Liabilities Related
 
  
  
 
Number of  
Assets Held  
to Assets Held 
Assets 
    Segment     
Location 
    
Units 
    
for Sale 
    
for Sale 
 
 
 
  
  
  (In thousands)   
8001 Woodmont 
 Multifamily  Bethesda, Maryland  
 322  $
 190,465  $ 
 901 
 
 
4.          Tenant and Other Receivables 
The following is a summary of tenant and other receivables: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
 
 
(In thousands) 
Tenants 
 
$ 
 13,483  
$ 
 30,895 
Third-party real estate services 
 
  
 6,246  
  
 8,959 
Other 
 
  
 3,749  
  
 4,377 
Total tenant and other receivables 
 
$ 
 23,478  
$ 
 44,231 
 
 
5.          Investments in Unconsolidated Real Estate Ventures 
The following is a summary of the composition of our investments in unconsolidated real estate ventures: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
     
Effective 
  
 
  
 
 
 
Ownership 
 
December 31,  
Real Estate Venture 
     
Interest (1)      
2024 
     
2023 
 
 
 
 
(In thousands) 
J.P. Morgan Global Alternatives ("J.P. Morgan") (2) 
 
50.0% 
 
$ 
 74,188  
$ 
 72,742 
4747 Bethesda Venture 
 
20.0% 
 
 
 10,813  
 
 13,118 
Brandywine Realty Trust (3) 
  
30.0% 
 
  
 6,954  
  
 13,681 
Prudential Global Investment Management ("PGIM") (4) 
  
50.0% 
 
 
 678  
 
 163,375 
Landmark Partners ("Landmark") (5) 
  
18.0% 
 
  
 552  
  
 605 
CBREI Venture (6) 
  
10.0% 
 
  
 169  
  
 180 
Other 
   
   
 300  
 
 580 
Total investments in unconsolidated real estate ventures (7) (8) 
 
 
 $ 
 93,654  
$ 
 264,281 
 
(1) 
Reflects our effective ownership interests in the underlying real estate as of December 31, 2024. We have multiple investments 
with certain venture partners in the underlying real estate. 
(2) 
J.P. Morgan is the advisor for an institutional investor. 
(3) 
Impairment losses of $6.7 million related to development parcels were included in "Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, 
net" in our consolidated statement of operations for the year ended December 31, 2024. 
(4) 
An impairment loss of $25.3 million related to Central Place Tower was included in "Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, 
net" in our consolidated statement of operations for the year ended December 31, 2023. In February 2024, the venture sold its 
interest in Central Place Tower. 
(5) 
In November 2023, the venture sold its interest in Rosslyn Gateway-North, Rosslyn Gateway-South, Rosslyn Gateway-South Land 
and Rosslyn Gateway-North Land ("Rosslyn Gateway"). Impairment losses totaling $19.3 million related to the L'Enfant Plaza 
assets and the Rosslyn Gateway assets were included in "Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, net" in our consolidated 
statement of operations for the year ended December 31, 2022. Excludes the L'Enfant Plaza assets for which we had a zero-
investment balance and discontinued applying the equity method of accounting after September 30, 2022. In October 2024, the 
lender foreclosed on the mortgage loan secured by the L’Enfant Plaza assets and took possession of the properties. 

86 
(6) 
In August 2023, the venture sold its interest in Stonebridge at Potomac Town Center. An impairment loss of $3.3 million related 
to The Foundry was included in "Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, net" in our consolidated statement of operations 
for the year ended December 31, 2023. Excludes The Foundry for which we had a zero-investment balance and discontinued 
applying the equity method of accounting after September 30, 2023. In April 2024, the lender foreclosed on the mortgage loan 
secured by The Foundry and took possession of the property. In August 2022, we acquired the remaining 36.0% ownership interest 
in Atlantic Plumbing, an asset previously owned by the venture. See Note 3 for additional information.  
(7) 
Excludes (i) 10.0% subordinated interest in one commercial building, (ii) the Fortress Assets, (iii) the L'Enfant Plaza assets and 
(iv) The Foundry. Also, excludes our interest in an investment in the real estate venture that owns 1101 17th Street for which we 
have discontinued applying the equity method of accounting since June 30, 2018 because we received distributions in excess of 
our contributions and share of earnings, which reduced our investment to zero; further, we are not obligated to provide for losses, 
have not guaranteed its obligations or otherwise committed to provide financial support.  
(8) 
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, our total investments in unconsolidated real estate ventures were greater than our share of the 
net book value of the underlying assets by $10.6 million and $8.7 million, resulting principally from our zero-investment balance 
in certain real estate ventures and capitalized interest. 
We provide leasing, property management and other real estate services to our unconsolidated real estate ventures. We 
recognized revenue, including expense reimbursements, of $16.3 million, $21.7 million and $24.0 million for each of the 
three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, for such services. 
The following is a summary of disposition activity by our unconsolidated real estate ventures: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
   
 
Mortgage 
 Proportionate 
 
 
Real Estate 
 
 
  
 
Gross 
 
Loans 
 
Share of  
 
 
Venture 
 
 
 Ownership  
Sales 
 
Repaid by 
 
Aggregate 
Date Disposed      
Partner 
 
Assets 
 Percentage     
Price 
 
Venture 
 Gain (Loss) (1) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(Dollars in thousands) 
Year Ended December 31, 2024 
 
 
  
   
   
   
February 13, 2024  
PGIM 
 Central Place Tower 
 
50.0% 
 $ 
 325,000 
$ 
 —  $ 
 480 
Year Ended December 31, 2023 
 
 
  
   
   
   
August 24, 2023 
 
CBREI Venture  
Stonebridge at 
Potomac Town Center 
 
10.0% 
 $ 
 172,500 
$ 
 79,600  $ 
 641 
November 14, 2023  
Landmark 
 
Rosslyn Gateway 
 
18.0% 
  
 52,000 
 
 44,844   
 (230)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 $ 
 411 
Year Ended December 31, 2022 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
January 27, 2022 
  
Landmark 
 
The Alaire, The Terano 
and 12511 Parklawn 
Drive  
 
1.8% - 
18.0% 
  $ 
 137,500 
$ 
 79,829  $ 
 5,243 
May 10, 2022 
 
Landmark 
 
Galvan 
 
1.8% 
  
 152,500 
 
 89,500   
 407 
June 1, 2022 
 
Canadian Pension 
Plan Investment 
Board 
 
1900 N Street 
 
55.0% 
 
 
 265,000 
 
 151,709  
 
 529 
December 15, 2022  
CBREI Venture  
The Gale Eckington 
 
5.0% 
 
 
 215,550 
 
 110,813  
 
 618 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 $ 
 6,797 
 
(1) 
Included in "Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, net" in our consolidated statements of operations. Additionally, we 
recognized $3.8 million related to certain previously recorded contingent liabilities, which were relieved in connection with the 
sale of Central Place Tower and included in "Gain (loss) on the sale of real estate, net" in our consolidated statement of operations 
for the year ended December 31, 2024.  
4747 Bethesda Venture 
In March 2023, we sold an 80.0% interest in 4747 Bethesda Avenue to 4747 Bethesda Venture for a gross sales price of 
$196.0 million, representing a gross valuation of $245.0 million. In connection with the transaction, the real estate venture 
assumed the related $175.0 million mortgage loan. 

87 
Fortress Investment Group LLC ("Fortress") 
In April 2022, we formed an unconsolidated real estate venture with affiliates of Fortress to recapitalize a 1.6 million 
square foot office portfolio and land parcels for a gross sales price of $580.0 million comprising four wholly owned 
commercial assets (7200 Wisconsin Avenue, 1730 M Street, RTC-West and Courthouse Plaza 1 and 2). Additionally, we 
contributed $66.1 million in cash for a 33.5% interest in the venture, while Fortress contributed $131.0 million in cash for 
a 66.5% interest in the venture. In connection with the transaction, the venture obtained mortgage loans totaling 
$458.0 million secured by the properties, of which $402.0 million was drawn at closing. We provide asset management, 
property management and leasing services to the venture. Because our interest in the venture is subordinated to a 15% 
preferred return to Fortress, we do not anticipate receiving any near-term cash flow distributions from it. Per the terms of 
the venture agreement, we determined the venture was not a VIE and we do not have a controlling financial interest in the 
venture. As of the transaction date, our investment in the venture was zero, and we have discontinued applying the equity 
method of accounting as we have not guaranteed its obligations or otherwise committed to providing financial support.  
The following is a summary of the debt of our unconsolidated real estate ventures: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Weighted 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Average Effective 
December 31,  
 
     Interest Rate (1)      
2024 
     
2023 
 
 
 
 
(In thousands) 
Variable rate (2) 
  
5.68% 
 
$ 
 175,000  
$ 
 175,000 
Fixed rate (3) 
  
4.13% 
 
  
 60,000  
  
 60,000 
Mortgage loans (4) 
 
 
  
 235,000  
  
 235,000 
Unamortized deferred financing costs and premium / discount, net  
 
  
 (5,795) 
  
 (8,531)
Mortgage loans, net (4) (5) 
 
 
$ 
 229,205  
$ 
 226,469 
 
(1) 
Weighted average effective interest rate as of December 31, 2024. 
(2) 
Includes variable rate mortgage loans with interest rate cap agreements. 
(3) 
Includes variable rate mortgage loans with interest rates fixed by interest rate swap agreements. 
(4) 
Excludes mortgage loans related to the Fortress Assets, the L'Enfant Plaza assets and The Foundry. In April 2024, the lender 
foreclosed on the mortgage loan secured by The Foundry and took possession of the property. In October 2024, the lender 
foreclosed on the mortgage loan secured by the L’Enfant Plaza assets and took possession of the properties. 
(5) 
See Note 21 for additional information on guarantees related to our unconsolidated real estate ventures. 
The following is a summary of the financial information for our unconsolidated real estate ventures: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
 
  
(In thousands) 
Combined balance sheet information: (1) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Real estate, net 
 
$ 
 424,170  
$ 
 729,791 
Other assets, net 
 
  
 64,478  
  
 137,771 
Total assets 
 
$ 
 488,648  
$ 
 867,562 
 
 
 
 
 
Mortgage loans, net 
 
$ 
 229,205  
$ 
 226,469 
Other liabilities, net 
 
  
 27,019  
  
 47,251 
Total liabilities 
 
  
 256,224  
  
 273,720 
Total equity 
 
  
 232,424  
  
 593,842 
Total liabilities and equity 
 
$ 
 488,648  
$ 
 867,562 
 

88 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
     
2022 
 
  
(In thousands) 
Combined income statement information: (1) 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
Total revenue 
 $ 
 37,219  $ 
 85,280  $ 
 143,665 
Operating income (loss) (2) 
   
 (14,195)   
 (62,668)   
 91,473 
Net income (loss) (2) 
   
 (30,041)   
 (85,551)   
 59,215 
 
(1) 
Excludes amounts related to the Fortress Assets. Excludes combined balance sheet information for both periods presented and 
combined income statement information for 2024, 2023 and the fourth quarter of 2022 related to the L'Enfant Plaza assets as we 
discontinued applying the equity method of accounting after September 30, 2022. Excludes combined balance sheet information 
for both periods presented and combined income statement information for 2024 and the fourth quarter of 2023 related to The 
Foundry as we discontinued applying the equity method of accounting after September 30, 2023. 
(2) 
Includes the gain from the sale of various assets totaling $894,000, $3.0 million and $114.9 million for each of the three years in 
the period ended December 31, 2024. Includes impairment losses of $22.5 million, $80.7 million and $37.7 million for each of the 
three years in the period ended December 31, 2024.  
6.          Variable Interest Entities 
Unconsolidated VIEs 
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, we had interests in entities deemed to be VIEs. Although we may be responsible for 
managing the day-to-day operations of these investees, we are not the primary beneficiary of these VIEs, as we do not 
hold unilateral power over activities that, when taken together, most significantly impact the respective VIE's economic 
performance. We account for our investment in these entities under the equity method. As of December 31, 2024 and 
2023, the net carrying amounts of our investment in these entities were $82.0 million and $87.3 million, which were 
included in "Investments in unconsolidated real estate ventures" in our consolidated balance sheets. Our equity in the 
income of unconsolidated VIEs was included in "Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, net" in our consolidated 
statements of operations. Our maximum loss exposure in these entities is limited to our investments, construction 
commitments and debt guarantees. See Note 21 for additional information. 
Consolidated VIEs 
JBG SMITH LP is our most significant consolidated VIE. We hold 86.0% of the limited partnership interest in JBG SMITH 
LP, act as the general partner and exercise full responsibility, discretion and control over its day-to-day management. The 
noncontrolling interests of JBG SMITH LP do not have substantive liquidation rights, substantive kick-out rights without 
cause or substantive participating rights that could be exercised by a simple majority of noncontrolling interest limited 
partners (including by such a limited partner unilaterally). Because the noncontrolling interest holders do not have these 
rights, JBG SMITH LP is a VIE. As general partner, we have the power to direct the activities of JBG SMITH LP that 
most significantly affect its economic performance, and through our majority interest, we have both the right to receive 
benefits from and the obligation to absorb losses of JBG SMITH LP. Accordingly, we are the primary beneficiary of JBG 
SMITH LP and consolidate it in our financial statements. Because we conduct our business through JBG SMITH LP, its 
total assets and liabilities comprise substantially all of our consolidated assets and liabilities. 
In March 2021, we leased the land underlying 1900 Crystal Drive located in National Landing to a lessee, which 
constructed an 808-unit multifamily asset comprising two towers, The Grace and Reva, with ground floor retail. The 
ground lessee engaged us to be the development manager for the construction of 1900 Crystal Drive, and separately, we 
were the lessee in a master lease of the asset. In June 2024, we acquired the ground lessee's interest in 1900 Crystal Drive 
for $26.6 million of which $4.7 million was a reduction of "Noncontrolling interests" in our consolidated balance sheet. 
In December 2021, we leased the land underlying 2000 South Bell Street and 2001 South Bell Street ("2000/2001 South 
Bell Street") located in National Landing to a lessee, which is constructing a 775-unit multifamily asset comprising two 
towers, Valen and The Zoe, with ground floor retail. The ground lessee engaged us to be the development manager for the 
construction of 2000/2001 South Bell Street, and separately, we were the lessee in a master lease of the asset. In December 

89 
2024, we acquired the ground lessee's interest in 2000/2001 South Bell Street for $22.8 million of which $14.3 million 
was a reduction of "Noncontrolling interests" in our consolidated balance sheet. 
As of December 31, 2023, we determined that 1900 Crystal Drive and 2000/2001 South Bell Street were VIEs and that 
we were the primary beneficiary of the VIEs. Accordingly, we consolidated the VIEs with the lessee's ownership interest 
shown as "Noncontrolling interests" in our consolidated balance sheet. As of December 31, 2023, we consolidated 1900 
Crystal Drive and 2000/2001 South Bell Street with total assets of $503.2 million, and liabilities of $293.3 million. VIE 
assets primarily consisted of construction in progress and VIE liabilities primarily consisted of mortgage loans. As of 
December 31, 2024, as a result of the above transactions, 1900 Crystal Drive and 2000/2001 South Bell Street were no 
longer VIEs. 
7.          Deferred Leasing Costs, Net 
The following is a summary of the deferred leasing costs, net: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
 
 
(In thousands) 
Deferred leasing costs 
 
$ 
 161,406  
$ 
 173,019 
Accumulated amortization 
 
  
 (91,585) 
  
 (91,542)
Deferred leasing costs, net 
 
$ 
 69,821  
$ 
 81,477 
 
 
8.          Intangible Assets, Net 
The following is a summary of the intangible assets, net: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
December 31, 2024 
 
December 31, 2023 
 
     
Gross 
     
Accumulated 
Amortization 
Net 
 
Gross 
     
Accumulated 
Amortization 
Net 
 
 
(In thousands) 
Lease intangible assets: 
   
     
   
 
 
 
     
   
 
In-place leases 
 
$ 
 7,799  
$ 
 (6,330) 
$ 
 1,469  
$ 
 14,767  
$ 
 (9,874) 
$ 
 4,893 
Above-market real estate leases 
 
  
 528  
  
 (481) 
  
 47  
  
 5,321  
  
 (4,580) 
  
 741 
 
 
 
 8,327  
 
 (6,811) 
 
 1,516  
 
 20,088  
 
 (14,454) 
 
 5,634 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Other identified intangible assets: 
 
  
   
  
   
  
   
  
   
  
   
  
  
Wireless spectrum licenses 
 
 
 25,780  
 
 —  
 
 25,780  
 
 25,780  
 
 —  
 
 25,780 
Option to enter into ground lease 
 
 
 17,090  
 
 —  
 
 17,090  
 
 17,090  
 
 —  
 
 17,090 
Management and leasing contracts  
  
 43,600  
  
 (40,986) 
  
 2,614  
  
 43,600  
  
 (35,488) 
  
 8,112 
 
 
 
 86,470  
 
 (40,986) 
 
 45,484  
 
 86,470  
 
 (35,488) 
 
 50,982 
Total intangible assets, net 
 
$ 
 94,797  
$ 
 (47,797) 
$ 
 47,000  
$  106,558  
$ 
 (49,942) 
$ 
 56,616 
 
The following is a summary of amortization expense related to lease and other identified intangible assets: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
     
2022 
 
 
(In thousands) 
In-place lease amortization (1) 
 $ 
 1,350  $ 
 4,972  $ 
 8,594 
Above-market real estate lease amortization (2) 
   
 569    
 720    
 738 
Management and leasing contract amortization (1) 
   
 5,499    
 5,590    
 5,905 
Total amortization expense related to lease and other identified intangible assets 
 
$ 
 7,418  
$ 
 11,282  
$ 
 15,237 
 
(1) 
Amounts are included in "Depreciation and amortization expense" in our consolidated statements of operations. 

90 
(2) 
Amounts are included in "Property rental revenue" in our consolidated statements of operations. 
The following is a summary of the estimated amortization related to lease and other identified intangible assets for the 
next five years and thereafter as of December 31, 2024: 
 
 
 
 
Year ending December 31,  
     
Amount 
 
 
(In thousands) 
2025 
 $ 
 2,738 
2026 
  
 664 
2027 
  
 281 
2028 
  
 174 
2029 
  
 41 
Thereafter 
  
 232 
Total (1) 
 
$ 
 4,130 
 
(1) 
Estimated amortization related to the option to enter into ground lease is excluded from the amortization table above as the ground 
lease does not have a definite start date. Additionally, the wireless spectrum licenses are excluded from the amortization table as 
they are indefinite-lived intangible assets. 
9.          Other Assets, Net 
The following is a summary of other assets, net: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
 
 
(In thousands) 
Prepaid expenses 
 
$ 
 10,834  
$ 
 13,215 
Derivative financial instruments, at fair value 
 
 
 25,682  
 
 42,341 
Deferred financing costs, net 
 
  
 7,280  
  
 10,199 
Operating lease right-of-use assets 
 
 
 44,034  
 
 60,329 
Investments in funds (1) 
 
 
 27,665  
 
 21,785 
Other investments (2) 
 
 
 3,237  
 
 3,487 
Other 
 
  
 12,586  
  
 12,125 
Total other assets, net 
 
$ 
 131,318  
$ 
 163,481 
 
(1) 
Consists of investments in real estate-focused technology companies which are recorded at their fair value based on their reported 
net asset value. For each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, unrealized gains were $4.8 million, $1.3 million 
and $2.1 million related to these investments. For each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, realized losses 
related to these investments were $1.3 million, $758,000 and $1.2 million. Unrealized and realized gains (losses) were included in 
"Interest and other income, net" in our consolidated statements of operations. 
(2) 
Primarily consists of equity investments that are carried at cost. For each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, 
realized gains (losses) were ($250,000), $436,000 and $13.5 million related to these investments, which were included in "Interest 
and other income, net" in our consolidated statements of operations. 

91 
10.          Debt 
Mortgage Loans 
The following is a summary of mortgage loans: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Weighted 
Average 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Effective 
 
December 31,  
 
    Interest Rate (1) 
   
2024 
    
2023 
 
 
 
 
(In thousands) 
Variable rate (2) 
  
5.58% 
 
$ 
 587,254  
$ 
 608,582 
Fixed rate (3) 
  
4.79% 
 
  
 1,196,479  
  
 1,189,643 
Mortgage loans 
 
 
 
  
 1,783,733  
  
 1,798,225 
Unamortized deferred financing costs and premium / discount, net 
 
 
 
  
 (16,560) 
  
 (15,211)
Mortgage loans, net 
 
 
 
$ 
 1,767,173  
$ 
 1,783,014 
 
(1) 
Weighted average effective interest rate as of December 31, 2024. 
(2) 
Includes variable rate mortgage loans with interest rate cap agreements. For mortgage loans with interest rate caps, the weighted 
average interest rate cap strike was 3.36%, and the weighted average maturity date of the interest rate caps is the first quarter of 
2026. The interest rate cap strike is exclusive of the credit spreads associated with the mortgage loans. As of December 31, 2024, 
one-month term Secured Overnight Financing Rate ("SOFR") was 4.33% and the 30-day average SOFR was 4.53%. 
(3) 
Includes variable rate mortgage loans with interest rates fixed by interest rate swap agreements. 
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, the net carrying value of real estate collateralizing our mortgage loans totaled 
$2.1 billion and $2.2 billion. Our mortgage loans contain covenants that limit our ability to incur additional indebtedness 
on these properties and, in certain circumstances, require lender approval of tenant leases and/or yield maintenance upon 
repayment prior to maturity. 
In November 2024, the mortgage loan collateralized by The Grace and Reva was refinanced with a five-year interest-only 
$273.6 million mortgage loan with a fixed interest rate of 5.19%.  
In January 2023, we entered into a $187.6 million loan facility, collateralized by The Wren and F1RST Residences. The 
loan has a seven-year term and a fixed interest rate of 5.13%. Proceeds from the loan were used, in part, to repay the 
$131.5 million mortgage loan collateralized by 2121 Crystal Drive, which had a fixed interest rate of 5.51%.  
In December 2024, in connection with the sale of 2101 L Street, the lender of the related $120.9 million mortgage loan 
accepted the proceeds from the sale and $6.7 million of cash as repayment of the mortgage loan, resulting in a $9.2 million 
gain on the extinguishment of debt, which was included in "Gain (loss) on the extinguishment of debt" in our consolidated 
statement of operations for the year ended December 31, 2024. In September 2024, we repaid the $83.3 million mortgage 
loan collateralized by 201 12th Street S., 200 12th Street S., and 251 18th Street S. In June 2023, we repaid $142.4 million 
in mortgage loans collateralized by Falkland Chase-South & West and 800 North Glebe Road. 
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, we had various interest rate swap and cap agreements on certain of our mortgage 
loans with an aggregate notional value of $1.4 billion and $1.7 billion. See Note 19 for additional information. 
Revolving Credit Facility and Term Loans 
As of December 31, 2024, our unsecured revolving credit facility and term loans totaling $1.5 billion consisted of a 
$750.0 million revolving credit facility maturing in June 2027, a $200.0 million term loan ("Tranche A-1 Term Loan") 
maturing in January 2026, as extended in September 2024, a $400.0 million term loan ("Tranche A-2 Term Loan") 
maturing in January 2028 and a $120.0 million term loan ("2023 Term Loan") maturing in June 2028. We have the option 
to increase the $750.0 million revolving credit facility or add term loans up to $500.0 million. The revolving credit facility 
has two six-month extension options, and the Tranche A-1 Term Loan has one remaining one-year extension option. 

92 
Based on the terms as of December 31, 2024, the interest rate for the credit facility varies based on a ratio of our total 
outstanding indebtedness to a valuation of certain real property and assets, and ranges (i) in the case of the revolving credit 
facility, from daily SOFR plus 1.40% to daily SOFR plus 1.85%, (ii) in the case of the Tranche A-1 Term Loan, from one-
month term SOFR plus 1.15% to one-month term SOFR plus 1.75%, (iii) in the case of the Tranche A-2 Term Loan, from 
one-month term SOFR plus 1.25% to one-month term SOFR plus 1.80% and (iv) in the case of the 2023 Term Loan, from 
one-month term SOFR plus 1.25% to one-month term SOFR plus 1.80%. 
The following is a summary of amounts outstanding under the revolving credit facility and term loans: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Effective 
 
December 31,  
 
     Interest Rate (1)  
2024 
     
2023 
 
 
 
 
(In thousands) 
Revolving credit facility (2) (3) 
  
5.98% 
 
$ 
 85,000  
$ 
 62,000 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tranche A-1 Term Loan (4) 
  
5.34% 
 
$ 
 200,000  
$ 
 200,000 
Tranche A-2 Term Loan (5) 
  
4.20% 
 
  
 400,000  
  
 400,000 
2023 Term Loan (6) 
 
5.41% 
 
 
 120,000  
 
 120,000 
Term loans 
  
   
  
 720,000  
  
 720,000 
Unamortized deferred financing costs, net 
  
   
  
 (2,147) 
  
 (2,828)
Term loans, net 
     
 
$ 
 717,853  
$ 
 717,172 
 
(1) 
Effective interest rate as of December 31, 2024. The interest rate for the revolving credit facility excludes a 0.20% and 0.15% 
facility fee as of December 31, 2024 and 2023. 
(2) 
As of December 31, 2024, daily SOFR was 4.49%. As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, letters of credit with an aggregate face 
amount of $15.2 million and $467,000 were outstanding under our revolving credit facility.  
(3) 
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, excludes $7.3 million and $10.2 million of net of deferred financing costs related to our 
revolving credit facility that were included in "Other assets, net" in our consolidated balance sheets. 
(4) 
As of December 31, 2024, the interest rate swaps fixed SOFR at a weighted average interest rate of 4.00% through the extended 
maturity date of January 2027.  
(5) 
As of December 31, 2024, the interest rate swaps fixed SOFR at a weighted average interest rate of 2.81% through the maturity 
date. 
(6) 
As of December 31, 2024, the interest rate swap fixed SOFR at an interest rate of 4.01% through the maturity date. 
Principal Maturities 
The following is a summary of principal maturities of debt outstanding, including mortgage loans, the revolving credit 
facility and the term loans, as of December 31, 2024: 
 
 
 
 
Year ending December 31,  
     
Amount 
 
 
(In thousands) 
2025 
 
$ 
 312,370 
2026 
 
  
 312,483 
2027 
 
  
 424,814 
2028 
 
  
 609,566 
2029 
 
  
 376,087 
Thereafter 
 
  
 553,413 
Total 
 
$ 
 2,588,733 
 
 
 

93 
11.          Other Liabilities, Net 
The following is a summary of other liabilities, net: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
 
 
(In thousands) 
Lease intangible liabilities 
 
$ 
 2,996  
$ 
 5,978 
Accumulated amortization 
 
  
 (1,713) 
  
 (2,482)
Lease intangible liabilities, net 
 
$ 
 1,283  
$ 
 3,496 
Lease incentive liabilities 
 
  
 2,590  
  
 7,546 
Liabilities related to operating lease right-of-use assets 
 
  
 44,430  
  
 64,501 
Prepaid rent 
 
  
 12,978  
  
 10,946 
Security deposits 
 
  
 11,167  
  
 12,133 
Environmental liabilities 
 
  
 17,468  
  
 17,568 
Deferred tax liability, net 
 
  
 3,917  
  
 3,326 
Dividends payable 
 
  
 17,611  
  
 — 
Derivative financial instruments, at fair value 
 
  
 2,395  
  
 14,444 
Other 
 
  
 1,988  
  
 4,909 
Total other liabilities, net 
 
$ 
 115,827  
$ 
 138,869 
 
Amortization revenue included in "Property rental revenue" in our consolidated statements of operations related to lease 
intangible liabilities for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024 was $408,000, $1.7 million and 
$1.9 million. 
The following is a summary of the estimated amortization of lease intangible liabilities for the next five years and thereafter 
as of December 31, 2024: 
 
 
 
 
Year ending December 31,  
     
Amount 
 
 
(In thousands) 
2025 
 
$ 
 292 
2026 
 
  
 218 
2027 
 
  
 101 
2028 
 
  
 92 
2029 
 
  
 86 
Thereafter 
 
  
 494 
Total 
 
$ 
 1,283 
 
 
12.          Income Taxes 
We have elected to be taxed as a REIT, and accordingly, we have incurred no federal income tax expense related to our 
REIT subsidiaries except for our TRSs.  
Our consolidated financial statements include the operations of our TRSs, which are subject to federal, state and local 
income taxes on their taxable income. As a REIT, we may also be subject to federal excise taxes if we engage in certain 
types of transactions. Continued qualification as a REIT depends on our ability to satisfy the REIT distribution tests, stock 
ownership requirements and various other qualification tests. The net basis of our assets and liabilities for tax reporting 
purposes is approximately $657.3 million higher than the amounts reported in our consolidated balance sheet as of 
December 31, 2024. 

94 
The following is a summary of our income tax (expense) benefit: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
     
2022 
 
 
(In thousands) 
Current tax expense 
 
$ 
 (171) 
$ 
 (1,282) 
$ 
 (1,701)
Deferred tax (expense) benefit 
 
  
 (591) 
  
 1,578  
  
 437 
Income tax (expense) benefit 
 
$ 
 (762) 
$ 
 296  
$ 
 (1,264)
 
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, we have a net deferred tax liability of $3.9 million and $3.3 million primarily related 
to basis differences in management and leasing contracts and other investments, partially offset by deferred tax assets 
associated with tax versus book differences and related general and administrative expenses. We are subject to federal, 
state and local income tax examinations by taxing authorities for the tax years ending in 2020 through 2023. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
 
 
(In thousands) 
Deferred tax assets: 
   
     
  
Accrued bonus 
 
$ 
 —  
$ 
 474 
Deferred revenue 
 
  
 158  
  
 503 
Capital loss 
 
  
 187  
  
 — 
Charitable contributions 
 
  
 1,344  
  
 748 
Basis difference - real estate 
 
 
 399  
 
 — 
Other 
 
  
 308  
  
 171 
Total deferred tax assets 
 
  
 2,396  
  
 1,896 
Valuation allowance 
 
  
 (1,531) 
  
 (748)
Total deferred tax assets, net of valuation allowance 
 
  
 865  
  
 1,148 
Deferred tax liabilities: 
 
  
   
  
  
Basis difference - intangible assets 
 
  
 (2,090) 
  
 (2,739)
Basis difference - real estate 
 
 
 —  
 
 (344)
Basis difference - investments 
 
 
 (2,660) 
 
 (1,348)
Other 
 
  
 (32) 
  
 (43)
Total deferred tax liabilities 
 
  
 (4,782) 
  
 (4,474)
Net deferred tax liability 
 
$ 
 (3,917) 
$ 
 (3,326)
 
During the year ended December 31, 2024, our Board of Trustees declared cash dividends totaling $0.875 of which $0.540 
was taxable as ordinary income for federal income tax purposes (which includes $0.168 of qualified dividends), $0.160 
were non-dividend distributions and the remaining $0.175 will be determined in 2025. During the year ended 
December 31, 2023, our Board of Trustees declared cash dividends totaling $0.675 of which $0.135 was taxable as 
ordinary income for federal income tax purposes and $0.540 were capital gain distributions. During the year ended 
December 31, 2022, our Board of Trustees declared cash dividends totaling $0.90 of which $0.025 was taxable as ordinary 
income for federal income tax purposes and $0.875 were capital gain distributions.  
 
13.          Redeemable Noncontrolling Interests 
OP Units held by persons other than JBG SMITH are redeemable for cash or, at our election, our common shares, subject 
to certain limitations. Vested LTIP Units are redeemable into OP Units. During the years ended December 31, 2024 and 
2023, unitholders redeemed 1.0 million and 2.8 million OP Units, which we elected to redeem for an equivalent number 
of our common shares. As of December 31, 2024, outstanding OP Units and redeemable LTIP Units totaled 13.8 million, 
representing a 14.0% ownership interest in JBG SMITH LP. Our OP Units and certain vested LTIP Units are presented at 
the higher of their redemption value or their carrying value, with adjustments to the redemption value recognized in 
"Additional paid-in capital" in our consolidated balance sheets. Redemption value per OP Unit is equivalent to the market 
value of one of our common shares at the end of the period.  

95 
The following is a summary of the activity of redeemable noncontrolling interests: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
 
2024 
 
2023 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
Consolidated  
 
 
 
 
JBG 
 
JBG 
 
Real Estate 
 
 
 
 
    
SMITH LP 
    
SMITH LP 
    
Venture (2) 
    
Total 
 
  
(In thousands) 
Balance, beginning of period 
 $ 
 440,737  
$ 
 480,663  
$ 
 647  
$ 
 481,310 
Redemptions 
   
 (17,071) 
  
 (44,620) 
  
 (647) 
  
 (45,267)
LTIP Units issued in lieu of cash compensation (1)    
 3,835  
  
 5,213  
  
 —  
  
 5,213 
Net loss 
   
 (22,202) 
  
 (10,596) 
  
 —  
  
 (10,596)
Other comprehensive loss 
   
 (817) 
  
 (4,486) 
  
 —  
  
 (4,486)
Distributions 
   
 (14,386) 
  
 (11,351) 
  
 —  
  
 (11,351)
Share-based compensation expense 
   
 26,976  
  
 29,018  
  
 —  
  
 29,018 
Adjustment to redemption value 
   
 6,560  
  
 (3,104) 
  
 —  
  
 (3,104)
Balance, end of period 
 $ 
 423,632  
$ 
 440,737  
$ 
 —  
$ 
 440,737 
 
(1) 
See Note 15 for additional information. 
(2) 
As of December 31, 2022, we held a 99.7% ownership interest in a real estate venture that owned The Wren, a multifamily asset. 
In February 2023, the partner redeemed its 0.3% interest, increasing our ownership interest to 100.0%.  
 
14.          Property Rental Revenue 
The following is a summary of property rental revenue from our non-cancellable leases: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
2024 
     
2023 
 
2022 
 
(In thousands) 
Fixed 
$ 
 422,784  $ 
 436,933  $ 
 447,007 
Variable 
 
 34,166   
 46,226   
 44,731 
Property rental revenue 
$ 
 456,950  $ 
 483,159  $ 
 491,738 
 
As of December 31, 2024, the amounts that are contractually due from lease payments under our operating leases on an 
annual basis for the next five years and thereafter are as follows: 
 
 
 
 
Year ending December 31,  
     
Amount 
 
 
(In thousands) 
2025 
 
$ 
 283,230 
2026 
 
  
 178,445 
2027 
 
  
 169,687 
2028 
 
  
 151,042 
2029 
 
  
 133,170 
Thereafter 
 
 
 1,733,151 
 
 
$ 
 2,648,725 

96 
 
 
15.          Share-Based Payments and Employee Benefits 
OP UNITS 
Certain OP Units issued in the Combination to the former owners of JBG/Operating Partners, L.P. vested over a period of 
60 months based on continued employment. Compensation expense for these OP Units was recognized over the graded 
vesting period through July 2022. The total-grant date fair value of the OP Units that vested for the year ended 
December 31, 2022 was $14.7 million. 
JBG SMITH 2017 Omnibus Share Plan 
On June 23, 2017, our Board of Trustees adopted the JBG SMITH 2017 Omnibus Share Plan (the "Plan"), effective as of 
July 17, 2017, and authorized the reservation of 10.3 million common shares pursuant to the Plan. In April 2021, our 
shareholders approved an amendment to the Plan to increase the common shares reserved for issuance under the Plan by 
8.0 million common shares, and in April 2024, our shareholders approved an amendment to the Plan to increase the 
common shares reserved for issuance under the Plan by 7.5 million common shares to 25.8 million total common shares. 
As of December 31, 2024, there were 10.2 million common shares available for issuance under the Plan. 
Formation Awards 
The formation awards issued in the Combination ("Formation Awards") were structured in the form of profits interests in 
JBG SMITH LP that provided for a share of appreciation determined by the increase in the value of a common share at 
the time of conversion over the volume-weighted average price of a common share at the time the formation unit was 
granted. The Formation Awards, subject to certain conditions, generally vested 25% on each of the third and fourth 
anniversaries and 50% on the fifth anniversary of the date granted, subject to continued employment. Compensation 
expense for these awards was recognized over a five-year period through July 2022. 
The value of vested Formation Awards is realized through conversion of the award into a number of LTIP Units, and 
subsequent conversion into a number of OP Units determined based on the difference between the volume-weighted 
average price of a common share at the time the Formation Award was granted and the value of a common share on the 
conversion date. The conversion ratio between Formation Awards and LTIP Units, which starts at zero, is the quotient of: 
(i) the excess of the value of a common share on the conversion date above the per share value at the time the Formation 
Award was granted over (ii) the value of a common share as of the date of conversion. Formation Awards have a finite 
10-year term over which their value is allowed to increase and during which they may be converted into LTIP Units (and 
in turn, OP Units). Holders of Formation Awards will not receive distributions or allocations of net income (net loss) prior 
to conversion to LTIP Units. 
The total-grant date fair value of the Formation Awards that vested for the year ended December 31, 2022 was $8.9 million. 
Time-Based LTIP Units and LTIP Units 
During each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, we granted to certain employees 974,140, 979,138 
and 644,995 LTIP Units with time-based vesting requirements ("Time-Based LTIP Units") and a weighted average grant-
date fair value of $15.93, $17.56 and $27.39 per unit that primarily vest ratably over four years subject to continued 
employment. Compensation expense for these units is primarily being recognized over a four-year period. 
During each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, we granted 209,047, 280,342 and 252,206 fully 
vested LTIP Units to certain employees, who elected to receive all or a portion of their cash bonuses related to prior service 
as LTIP Units. The LTIP Units had a grant-date fair value of $14.27, $15.90 and $22.19 per unit. 
During each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, as part of their annual compensation, we granted 
to non-employee trustees a total of 141,422, 155,523 and 95,084 fully vested LTIP Units with a grant-date fair value of 
$12.40, $11.30 and $20.90 per unit. The LTIP Units may not be sold while a trustee is serving on the Board of Trustees. 

97 
The aggregate grant-date fair value of the Time-Based LTIP Units and LTIP Units granted (collectively "Granted LTIPs") 
for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024 was $20.3 million, $23.4 million and $25.7 million. 
Holders of the Granted LTIPs have the right to convert vested units into OP Units, which are then subsequently 
exchangeable for our common shares. Granted LTIPs do not have redemption rights, but any OP Units into which units 
are converted are entitled to redemption rights. Granted LTIPs, generally, vote with the OP Units and do not have any 
separate voting rights except in connection with actions that would materially and adversely affect the rights of the Granted 
LTIPs. The Granted LTIPs were valued based on the closing common share price on the date of grant, less a discount for 
post-grant restrictions. The discount was determined using Monte Carlo simulations based on the following significant 
assumptions: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
    
2024 
    
2023 
    
2022 
Expected volatility 
    33.0 % to 35.0% 
26.0% to 31.0% 
30.0% to 41.0% 
Risk-free interest rate 
  
4.4% to 4.8% 
3.4% to 4.9% 
0.4% to 2.9% 
Post-grant restriction periods 
  
2 to 6 years 
2 to 6 years 
 
2 to 6 years 
 
The following is a summary of the Granted LTIPs activity: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Weighted  
 
 
Unvested  
Average Grant- 
 
     
 Shares 
     Date Fair Value
Unvested as of December 31, 2023 
 
 1,865,712  
$ 
 24.62 
Granted 
 
 1,324,609  
 
 15.29 
Vested 
 
 (796,398) 
 
 20.16 
Forfeited 
 
 (136,447) 
 
 20.29 
Unvested as of December 31, 2024 
 
 2,257,476  
 
 20.99 
 
The total-grant date fair value of the Granted LTIPs that vested for each of the three years in the period ended 
December 31, 2024 was $16.1 million, $28.0 million and $27.2 million. 
Appreciation-Only LTIP Units ("AO LTIP Units")  
During each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, we granted to certain employees 1.9 million, 
1.7 million and 1.5 million performance-based AO LTIP Units with a weighted average grant-date fair value of $3.79, 
$3.73 and $4.44 per unit. The AO LTIP Units are structured in the form of profits interests that provide for a share of 
appreciation determined by the increase in the value of a common share at the time of conversion over the participation 
threshold of $18.93, $20.83 and $32.30 for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024. The AO LTIP 
Units are subject to a total shareholder return ("TSR") modifier whereby the number of AO LTIP Units that will ultimately 
be earned will be increased or reduced by as much as 25%. The AO LTIP Units have a three-year performance period with 
50% of the AO LTIP Units earned vesting at the end of the three-year performance period and the remaining 50% vesting 
on the fourth anniversary of the grant date, subject to continued employment. The AO LTIP Units expire on the tenth 
anniversary of their grant date. 
The aggregate grant-date fair value of the AO LTIP Units granted for each of the three years in the period ended 
December 31, 2024 was $7.1 million, $6.4 million and $6.6 million, valued using Monte Carlo simulations based on the 
following significant assumptions: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024      
2023 
     
2022 
Expected volatility 
    
32.0% 
30.0% 
27.0% 
Dividend yield 
  
3.2% 
3.2% 
2.7% 
Risk-free interest rate 
  
4.1% 
4.1% 
1.6% 
 

98 
The following is a summary of the AO LTIP Units activity: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
 
     
Weighted  
 
 
Unvested   
Average Grant- 
 
 
Shares  Date Fair Value
Unvested as of December 31, 2023 
   3,099,950  $ 
 4.07 
Granted 
   1,876,312    
 3.79 
Forfeited 
  
 (6,615)   
 4.44 
Unvested as of December 31, 2024 
   4,969,647    
 3.96 
Performance-Based LTIP Units 
LTIP Units with performance-based vesting requirements ("Performance-Based LTIP Units") are performance-based 
equity compensation pursuant to which participants have the opportunity to earn LTIP Units based on the relative 
performance of the TSR of our common shares compared to the companies in the FTSE Nareit Equity Office Index, over 
the defined performance period beginning on the grant date, inclusive of dividends and stock price appreciation. 
Our Performance-Based LTIP Units granted in January 2020 had a three-year performance period. 50% of the 
Performance-Based LTIP Units would have vested at the end of the three-year performance period and the remaining 50% 
would have vested on the fourth anniversary of the date of grant, subject to continued employment. However, the 
Performance-Based LTIP Units did not achieve a positive absolute TSR at the end of the three-year performance period, 
but achieved at least the threshold level of the relative performance criteria. Therefore, 50% of the units were forfeited, 
and the remaining units will vest if and when we achieve a positive TSR during the succeeding seven years, measured at 
the end of each quarter. Compensation expense for these units was recognized over a four-year period through 
January 2024.  
Our Performance-Based LTIP Units granted in July 2021 have a six-year performance period. 50% vest on the fifth 
anniversary of the grant date and 25% on each of the sixth and seventh anniversaries of the grant date, subject to continued 
employment, based on our achievement of four share price targets during the performance period commencing on the first 
anniversary of the grant date and ending on the sixth anniversary of the grant date. Additionally, in January 2022, we 
granted to certain employees 21,705 Performance-Based LTIP Units with a grant-date fair value of $17.68 per unit that 
vest over the same time period. Compensation expense for these units is being recognized over a seven-year period. 
The aggregate grant-date fair value of the Performance-Based LTIP Units for the year ended December 31, 2022 was 
$384,000, valued using Monte Carlo simulations based on the following significant assumptions: 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended 
  
 
December 31, 2022 
  
Expected volatility 
    
28.0%  
Dividend yield 
  
2.7%  
Risk-free interest rate 
  
1.5%  
 
The following is a summary of the Performance-Based LTIP Units activity: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
 
     
Weighted  
 
 
Unvested   
Average Grant- 
 
 
Shares  Date Fair Value
Unvested as of December 31, 2023 
  
 765,830  $ 
 22.58 
Forfeited 
  
 (60,076)   
 23.07 
Unvested as of December 31, 2024 
  
 705,754    
 22.54 
RSUs 
During each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, we granted to certain non-executive employees 
74,842, 78,681 and 39,536 RSUs with time-based vesting requirements ("Time-Based RSUs") and a weighted average 

99 
grant-date fair value of $17.21, $18.94 and $29.36 per unit. Vesting requirements and compensation expense recognition 
for the Time-Based RSUs are primarily consistent to those of the Time-Based LTIP Units granted during each of the 
three years in the period ended December 31, 2024. 
The aggregate grant-date fair value of the RSUs granted during each of the three years in the period ended 
December 31, 2024 was $1.3 million, $1.5 million and $1.2 million. The Time-Based RSUs were valued based on the 
closing common share price on the date of grant. 
The following is a summary of the Time-Based RSUs activity: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
 
     
Weighted 
 
 
Unvested  
 
Average Grant- 
 
 
Shares 
 
Date Fair Value 
Unvested as of December 31, 2023 
  
 70,750  
$ 
 22.46 
Granted 
  
 74,842  
  
 17.21 
Vested 
 
 (37,484) 
 
 21.25 
Forfeited 
  
 (2,905) 
  
 17.21 
Unvested as of December 31, 2024 
  
 105,203  
  
 19.30 
 
The aggregate total-grant date fair value of the RSUs that vested for each of the three years in the period ended 
December 31, 2024 was $796,000, $1.1 million and $271,000. 
ESPP 
The ESPP authorized the issuance of up to 2.1 million common shares. The ESPP provides eligible employees an option 
to contribute up to $25,000 in any calendar year, through payroll deductions, toward the purchase of our common shares 
at a discount of 15.0% of the closing price of a common share on relevant determination dates. As of December 31, 2024, 
there were 1.6 million common shares available for issuance under the ESPP. 
Pursuant to the ESPP, employees purchased 71,221, 84,673 and 79,040 common shares for $945,000, $1.1 million and 
$1.5 million during each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, valued using the Black Scholes model 
based on the following significant assumptions: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
    
2024 
 
2023 
 
2022 
Expected volatility 
    26.0% to 48.0%  30.0% to 37.0% 
23.0% to 30.0% 
Dividend yield 
  
4.2% to 4.6%  2.4% to 6.3% 
1.6% to 4.1% 
Risk-free interest rate 
  
5.3% to 5.6%  4.7% to 5.4% 
0.2% to 2.4% 
Expected life 
 
3 months  
6 months 
6 months 
 

100 
Share-Based Compensation Expense 
The following is a summary of share-based compensation expense: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
    
2024 
     
2023 
    
2022 
 
  
(In thousands) 
Time-Based LTIP Units 
 $ 
 16,826  $ 
 16,822  $ 
 19,378 
AO LTIP Units and Performance-Based LTIP Units 
   
 8,598    
 10,647    
 12,615 
LTIP Units 
   
 1,552    
 1,000    
 1,000 
Other equity awards (1) 
   
 4,475    
 5,394    
 6,610 
Share-based compensation expense - other 
   
 31,451    
 33,863    
 39,603 
Share-based compensation related to Formation Transaction and special equity 
awards (2) 
   
 —    
 549    
 5,391 
Total share-based compensation expense 
   
 31,451    
 34,412    
 44,994 
Less: amount capitalized 
   
 (1,927)   
 (2,312)   
 (3,722)
Share-based compensation expense 
 $ 
 29,524  $ 
 32,100  $ 
 41,272 
 
(1) 
Primarily comprising compensation expense for: (i) fully vested LTIP Units issued to certain employees in lieu of all or a portion 
of any cash bonuses earned, (ii) RSUs and (iii) shares issued under our ESPP. 
(2) 
Included in "General and administrative expense: Share-based compensation related to Formation Transaction and special equity 
awards" in our consolidated statements of operations. Includes share-based compensation expense for awards issued in connection 
with the Formation Transaction and with our successful pursuit of Amazon's headquarters in National Landing all of which were 
fully expensed as of December 31, 2023.  
As of December 31, 2024, we had $22.1 million of total unrecognized compensation expense related to unvested share-
based payment arrangements, which is expected to be recognized over a weighted average period of 2.2 years. 
Employee Benefits 
We have a 401(k) defined contribution plan covering substantially all of our officers and employees which permits 
participants to defer compensation up to the maximum amount permitted by law. We provide a discretionary matching 
contribution. Employer contributions vest after one year of service. Our contributions for each of the three years in the 
period ended December 31, 2024 were $1.9 million, $2.3 million and $2.4 million. 
2025 Grants 
In January 2025, we granted (i) 549,292 AO LTIP Units with a participation threshold of $16.98 and expiration on the 
fifth anniversary of their grant date, (ii) 735,682 Time-Based LTIP Units, which require a three-year post vesting hold for 
certain executives, (iii) 98,029 Time-Based RSUs and (iv) 957,000 LTIP Units with performance-based vesting 
requirements to certain employees. Additionally, we granted 162,301 fully vested LTIP Units to certain employees who 
elected to receive all or a portion of their cash bonus earned, related to 2024 service, as LTIP Units. 

101 
16.          Transaction and Other Costs 
The following is a summary of transaction and other costs: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
     
2022 
 
  
(In thousands) 
Completed, potential and pursued transaction expenses (1) 
 $ 
 2,340  $ 
 1,625  $ 
 2,660 
Severance and other costs 
   
 2,333    
 4,491    
 2,038 
Demolition costs 
  
 644   
 2,621   
 813 
Transaction and other costs 
 $ 
 5,317  $ 
 8,737  $ 
 5,511 
 
(1) 
Includes legal and other costs related to pursued transactions and dead deal costs. 
 
17.          Interest Expense 
The following is a summary of interest expense: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
     
2022 
 
  
(In thousands) 
Interest expense before capitalized interest 
 $ 
 131,924  $ 
 117,811  $ 
 87,246 
Amortization of deferred financing costs 
   
 17,405    
 9,779    
 4,532 
Interest expense related to finance lease right-of-use assets 
  
 —   
 —   
 2,091 
Net (gain) loss on non-designated derivatives: 
   
   
     
  
Net unrealized (gain) loss 
   
 83    
 7,822    
 (7,355)
Net realized loss 
   
 —    
 —    
 304 
Capitalized interest 
   
 (15,344)   
 (26,752)   
 (10,888)
Interest expense 
 $ 
 134,068  $ 
 108,660  $ 
 75,930 
 
 
18.          Shareholders' Equity and Earnings (Loss) Per Common Share 
Common Shares Repurchased 
Our Board of Trustees previously authorized the repurchase of up to $1.5 billion of our outstanding common shares. In 
February 2025, our Board of Trustees increased our common share repurchase authorization to $2.0 billion. During the 
year ended December 31, 2024, we repurchased and retired 10.9 million common shares for $170.7 million, a weighted 
average purchase price per share of $15.60. During the year ended December 31, 2023, we repurchased and retired 
22.6 million common shares for $335.3 million, a weighted average purchase price per share of $14.83. During the year 
ended December 31, 2022, we repurchased and retired 14.2 million common shares for $361.0 million, a weighted average 
purchase price per share of $25.49. Since we began the share repurchase program through December 31, 2024, we have 
repurchased and retired 56.8 million common shares for $1.1 billion, a weighted average purchase price per share of 
$19.87. 
During the first quarter of 2025, through February 14, 2025, we repurchased and retired 2.1 million common shares for 
$32.3 million, a weighted average purchase price per share of $15.15, pursuant to a repurchase plan under Rule 10b5-1 of 
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. 

102 
Earnings (Loss) Per Common Share 
The following is a summary of the calculation of basic and diluted earnings (loss) per common share and a reconciliation 
of net income (loss) to the amounts of net income (loss) available to common shareholders used in calculating basic and 
diluted earnings (loss) per common share: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
 
2024 
    
2023 
     
2022 
 
 
(In thousands, except per share amounts) 
Net income (loss) 
 $ 
 (177,753) $ 
 (91,709) $ 
 98,986 
Net (income) loss attributable to redeemable noncontrolling interests 
   
 22,202    
 10,596    
 (13,244)
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests 
   
 12,025    
 1,135    
 (371)
Net income (loss) attributable to common shareholders 
  
 (143,526)  
 (79,978)   
 85,371 
Distributions to participating securities 
   
 (2,463)   
 (2,054)   
 (1,860)
Net income (loss) available to common shareholders - basic and diluted 
 $ 
 (145,989) $ 
 (82,032) $ 
 83,511 
 
   
   
   
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding - basic and diluted 
   
 88,330    
 105,095    
 119,005 
 
   
   
   
Earnings (loss) per common share - basic and diluted 
 $ 
 (1.65) $ 
 (0.78) $ 
 0.70 
 
The effect of the redemption of OP Units, Time-Based LTIP Units, fully vested LTIP Units and special equity awards that 
were outstanding as of the end of each period is excluded in the computation of diluted earnings (loss) per common share 
as the assumed exchange of such units for common shares on a one-for-one basis was antidilutive (the assumed redemption 
of these units would have no impact on the determination of diluted earnings (loss) per share). Since OP Units, Time-
Based LTIP Units, LTIP Units and special equity awards, which are held by noncontrolling interests, are attributed gains 
at an identical proportion to the common shareholders, the gains attributable and their equivalent weighted average impact 
are excluded from net income (loss) available to common shareholders and from the weighted average number of common 
shares outstanding in calculating diluted earnings (loss) per common share. AO LTIP Units, Performance-Based LTIP 
Units, Formation Awards and RSUs, which totaled 7.9 million, 6.8 million and 5.9 million for each of the three years in 
the period ended December 31, 2024, were excluded from the calculation of diluted earnings (loss) per common share as 
they were antidilutive, but potentially could be dilutive in the future. 
 
19.          Fair Value Measurements 
Fair Value Measurements on a Recurring Basis 
To manage or hedge our exposure to interest rate risk, we follow established risk management policies and procedures, 
including the use of a variety of derivative financial instruments.  
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, we had various derivative financial instruments consisting of interest rate swap and 
cap agreements that are measured at fair value on a recurring basis. The net unrealized gain on our derivative financial 
instruments designated as effective hedges was $17.2 million and $22.7 million as of December 31, 2024 and 2023, and 
was recorded in "Accumulated other comprehensive income" in our consolidated balance sheets, of which a portion was 
reclassified to "Redeemable noncontrolling interests." Within the next 12 months, we expect to reclassify $5.6 million of 
the net unrealized gain as a decrease to interest expense. 
The fair values of the derivative financial instruments are based on the estimated amounts we would receive or pay to 
terminate the contracts at the reporting date and are determined using interest rate pricing models and observable inputs. 
The derivative financial instruments are classified within Level 2 of the valuation hierarchy. 

103 
 The following is a summary of assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Fair Value Measurements 
 
    
Total 
    
Level 1 
    
Level 2 
    
Level 3 
 
 
(In thousands) 
December 31, 2024 
    
   
   
   
Derivative financial instruments designated as effective hedges: 
   
     
     
     
  
Classified as assets in "Other assets, net" 
 $ 
 23,367   
 —  $ 
 23,367   
 — 
Classified as liabilities in "Other liabilities, net" 
  
 90    
 —   
 90    
 — 
Non-designated derivatives: 
   
     
     
     
  
Classified as assets in "Other assets, net" 
   
 2,315    
 —    
 2,315    
 — 
Classified as liabilities in "Other liabilities, net" 
   
 2,305    
 —    
 2,305    
 — 
 
 
 
  
  
  
December 31, 2023 
   
     
     
     
  
Derivative financial instruments designated as effective hedges: 
   
     
     
     
  
Classified as assets in "Other assets, net" 
 $ 
 35,632   
 —  $ 
 35,632   
 — 
Classified as liabilities in "Other liabilities, net" 
  
 7,936    
 —   
 7,936    
 — 
Non-designated derivatives: 
   
     
     
     
  
Classified as assets in "Other assets, net" 
   
 6,709    
 —    
 6,709    
 — 
Classified as liabilities in "Other liabilities, net" 
   
 6,508    
 —    
 6,508    
 — 
 
The fair values of our derivative financial instruments were determined using widely accepted valuation techniques, 
including discounted cash flow analysis on the expected cash flows of the derivative financial instrument. This analysis 
reflected the contractual terms of the derivative, including the period to maturity, and used observable market-based inputs, 
including interest rate market data and implied volatilities in such interest rates. While it was determined that the majority 
of the inputs used to value the derivatives fall within Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy, the credit valuation adjustments 
associated with the derivatives also utilized Level 3 inputs, such as estimates of current credit spreads to evaluate the 
likelihood of default. However, as of December 31, 2024 and 2023, the significance of the impact of the credit valuation 
adjustments on the overall valuation of the derivative financial instruments was assessed, and it was determined that these 
adjustments were not significant to the overall valuation of the derivative financial instruments. As a result, it was 
determined that the derivative financial instruments in their entirety should be classified in Level 2 of the fair value 
hierarchy. The net unrealized gains (losses) included in "Other comprehensive income (loss)" in our consolidated 
statements of comprehensive income (loss) for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024 were 
attributable to the net change in unrealized gains (losses) related to effective derivative financial instruments that were 
outstanding during those periods, none of which were reported in our consolidated statements of operations as the 
derivative financial instruments were documented and qualified as hedging instruments. Realized and unrealized gains 
(losses) related to non-designated derivatives are included in "Interest expense" in our consolidated statements of 
operations. 
Fair Value Measurements on a Nonrecurring Basis 
Our real estate assets are reviewed for impairment whenever there are changes in circumstances or indicators that the 
carrying amount of the assets may not be recoverable.  
During the year ended December 31, 2024, this assessment resulted in the impairment of 1901 South Bell Street, 2101 L 
Street, 8001 Woodmont and two development parcels, which had an estimated fair value totaling $332.5 million based on 
a market approach and were classified as Level 2 in the fair value hierarchy. 2101 L Street was sold in December 2024. 
The impairment loss totaled $55.4 million, which was included in "Impairment loss" in our consolidated statement of 
operations for the year ended December 31, 2024.  
During the year ended December 31, 2023, this assessment resulted in the impairment of three commercial assets and one 
development parcel. Our estimate of the fair value of 2101 L Street of $121.3 million was determined using a discounted 
cash flow model and was classified as Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy, which considers, among other things, the 
anticipated holding period, current market conditions and utilizes unobservable quantitative inputs, including capitalization 
and discount rates. Our estimate of the fair value of 2100 Crystal Drive, 2200 Crystal Drive and a development parcel 

104 
totaling $56.4 million was based on a market approach and were classified as Level 2 in the fair value hierarchy. The 
development parcel was sold in December 2023. The impairment loss totaled $90.2 million, which was included in 
"Impairment loss" in our consolidated statement of operations for the year ended December 31, 2023. 
There were no assets measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis as of December 31, 2022. 
Financial Assets and Liabilities Not Measured at Fair Value 
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, all financial instruments and liabilities were reflected in our consolidated balance 
sheets at amounts which, in our estimation, reasonably approximated their fair values, except for the following: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
December 31, 2024 
 
December 31, 2023 
 
     
Carrying 
     
 
     
Carrying 
     
 
 
 
Amount (1) 
 
Fair Value  
Amount (1) 
 
Fair Value 
 
  
(In thousands) 
Financial liabilities: 
   
     
     
     
  
Mortgage loans 
 
$ 
 1,783,733  
$ 
 1,749,904  
$ 
 1,798,225  
$ 
 1,753,251 
Revolving credit facility 
 
  
 85,000  
  
 84,886  
  
 62,000  
  
 62,000 
Term loans 
 
  
 720,000  
  
 715,929  
  
 720,000  
  
 715,950 
 
(1) 
The carrying amount consists of principal only.  
The fair values of the mortgage loans, revolving credit facility and term loans were determined using Level 2 inputs of the 
fair value hierarchy. The fair value of our mortgage loans is estimated by discounting the future contractual cash flows of 
these instruments using current risk-adjusted rates available to borrowers with similar credit profiles based on market 
sources. The fair value of our revolving credit facility and term loans is calculated based on the net present value of 
payments over the term of the facilities using estimated market rates for similar notes and remaining terms. 
 
20.          Segment Information 
We own, operate and develop mixed-use properties concentrated in and around Washington, D.C. We derive our revenue 
primarily from leases with multifamily and commercial tenants. In addition, our third-party real estate services business 
provides fee-based real estate services. Our operating segments are aligned with our method of internal reporting and the 
way our Chief Executive Officer, who is also our CODM, makes key operating decisions, evaluates financial results, 
allocates resources and manages our business. Accordingly, our three operating and reportable segments are multifamily, 
commercial, and third-party real estate services. 
The CODM measures and evaluates the performance of our operating segments based on only the following measures at 
our share pertaining to each of our segments: 
• 
Net operating income ("NOI") (multifamily and commercial) - which includes our proportionate share of revenue 
and expenses attributable to real estate ventures. NOI includes property rental revenue and other property revenue, 
and deducts property expenses. NOI excludes deferred rent, commercial lease termination revenue, related party 
management fees, interest expense, and certain other non-cash adjustments, including the accretion of acquired 
below-market leases and the amortization of acquired above-market leases and below-market ground lease 
intangibles. 
• 
Net third-party real estate services, excluding reimbursements - which includes revenue streams generated by this 
segment, excluding reimbursement revenue, as well as the expenses attributable to this segment at our 
proportionate share, calculated by excluding real estate services revenue from our interests in such real estate 
ventures. 
The CODM uses these measures predominantly in the annual budget and forecasting process as well as in his review of 
our quarterly financial results when making decisions about the allocation of operating and capital resources to each 
segment. 

105 
We have included disclosure of NOI and the results of our third-party real estate services business at our share to align 
with our internal reporting given the repositioning of our portfolio and the information used by our CODM. 
The following is a summary of NOI at our share for our multifamily and commercial segments, including a reconciliation 
to our total NOI at share: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31, 2024 
 
     
Multifamily 
     
Commercial 
     
Total 
 
  
(In thousands, at our share) 
Property rental revenue 
 
$ 
 214,431  
$ 
 230,039  
$ 
 444,470 
Other property revenue 
 
 
 3,677  
 
 17,517  
 
 21,194 
Total property revenue 
 
  
 218,108  
  
 247,556  
  
 465,664 
Property expense: 
 
  
 
  
   
  
  
  Real estate taxes 
 
  
 22,197  
  
 27,103  
  
 49,300 
  Payroll 
 
 
 16,347  
 
 13,293  
 
 29,640 
  Utilities 
 
 
 15,337  
 
 14,311  
 
 29,648 
  Repairs and maintenance 
 
 
 22,396  
 
 22,088  
 
 44,484 
  Other property operating 
 
 
 11,612  
 
 17,733  
 
 29,345 
Total property expense 
 
  
 87,889  
  
 94,528  
  
 182,417 
NOI from reportable segments 
 
$ 
 130,219  
$ 
 153,028  
 
 283,247 
Other NOI (1) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 (5,968)
NOI 
 
 
 
 
 
$ 
 277,279 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31, 2023 
 
     
Multifamily 
     
Commercial 
     
Total 
 
 
(In thousands, at our share) 
Property rental revenue 
 
$ 
 205,061  
$ 
 285,652  
$ 
 490,713 
Other property revenue 
 
 
 8,068  
 
 19,106  
 
 27,174 
Total property revenue 
 
  
 213,129  
  
 304,758  
  
 517,887 
Property expense: 
 
  
   
  
   
  
  
  Real estate taxes 
 
  
 21,924  
  
 37,698  
  
 59,622 
  Payroll 
 
 
 19,060  
 
 15,245  
 
 34,305 
  Utilities 
 
 
 14,905  
 
 16,949  
 
 31,854 
  Repairs and maintenance 
 
 
 15,978  
 
 24,043  
 
 40,021 
  Other property operating 
 
 
 11,862  
 
 20,616  
 
 32,478 
Total property expense 
 
  
 83,729  
  
 114,551  
  
 198,280 
NOI from reportable segments 
 
$ 
 129,400  
$ 
 190,207  
 
 319,607 
Other NOI (1) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 (1,115)
NOI 
 
 
 
 
 
$ 
 318,492 
 

106 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31, 2022 
 
     
Multifamily 
     
Commercial 
     
Total 
 
 
(In thousands, at our share) 
Property rental revenue 
 
$ 
 185,727  
$ 
 340,207  
$ 
 525,934 
Other property revenue 
 
 
 6,070  
 
 19,381  
 
 25,451 
Total property revenue 
 
  
 191,797  
  
 359,588  
  
 551,385 
Property expense: 
 
  
   
  
   
  
  
Real estate taxes 
 
  
 21,582  
  
 44,654  
  
 66,236 
  Payroll 
 
 
 17,710  
 
 17,823  
 
 35,533 
  Utilities 
 
 
 14,305  
 
 20,181  
 
 34,486 
  Repairs and maintenance 
 
 
 14,395  
 
 30,842  
 
 45,237 
  Other property operating 
 
 
 10,692  
 
 22,286  
 
 32,978 
Total property expense 
 
  
 78,684  
  
 135,786  
  
 214,470 
NOI from reportable segments 
 
$ 
 113,113  
$ 
 223,802  
 
 336,915 
Other NOI (1) 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 (2,547)
NOI 
 
  
 
  
 
$ 
 334,368 
 
(1) 
Includes activity related to development assets and land assets for which we are the ground lessor. 
 
The following is a summary of our third-party real estate services business at our share: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
     
2022 
 
  
(In thousands, at our share) 
Property management fees 
 $ 
 16,138  $ 
 18,983  $ 
 18,001 
Asset management fees 
   
 4,088    
 4,925    
 5,994 
Development fees 
   
 2,573    
 10,253    
 8,325 
Leasing fees 
   
 3,757    
 5,538    
 6,001 
Construction management fees 
   
 1,210    
 1,383    
 521 
Other service revenue 
   
 5,038    
 4,840    
 4,862 
Third-party real estate services revenue, excluding reimbursements 
   
 32,804    
 45,922    
 43,704 
Third-party real estate services expenses, excluding reimbursements 
  
 36,836   
 42,403   
 47,334 
Net third-party real estate services, excluding reimbursements 
 $ 
 (4,032) $ 
 3,519  $ 
 (3,630)
 
 
 

107 
The following is a reconciliation of revenue at our share to total revenue per the consolidated statements of operations: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
    
2024 
    
2023 
    
2022 
 
  
(In thousands) 
Total property revenue at our share 
 $ 
 465,664  $ 
 517,887  $ 
 551,385 
Third-party real estate services revenue, excluding reimbursements, at our share   
 32,804   
 45,922   
 43,704 
Reimbursement revenue (1) 
  
 35,332   
 43,520   
 39,638 
Our share of revenue attributable to unconsolidated real estate ventures 
   
 (10,807)   
 (27,893)   
 (43,613)
Other property revenue 
  
 4,889   
 (835)  
 (3,193)
Other adjustments (2) 
   
 19,430    
 25,597    
 17,903 
Total revenue per consolidated statements of operations  
 $ 
 547,312  $ 
 604,198  $ 
 605,824 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(1) 
Represents reimbursements of expenses incurred by us on behalf of third parties, including allocated payroll costs and amounts 
paid to third-party contractors for construction management projects  
(2) 
Adjustment to include deferred rent, above/below market lease amortization, commercial lease termination revenue, and lease 
incentive amortization. 
The following is the reconciliation of NOI at our share to net income (loss) before income tax (expense) benefit: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
     
2022 
 
  
(In thousands) 
NOI at our share 
 $ 
 277,279  $ 
 318,492  $ 
 334,368 
Net third-party real estate services, excluding reimbursements, at our share 
  
 (4,032)  
 3,519   
 (3,630)
Add: 
   
     
     
  
Loss from unconsolidated real estate ventures, net 
   
 (7,122)   
 (26,999)   
 (17,429)
Interest and other income, net 
   
 11,598    
 15,781    
 18,617 
Gain (loss) on the sale of real estate, net 
   
 (2,753)   
 79,335    
 161,894 
Less: 
   
     
     
  
Depreciation and amortization expense 
   
 208,180    
 210,195    
 213,771 
General and administrative expense: 
   
     
     
  
Corporate and other 
   
 58,790    
 54,838    
 58,280 
Share-based compensation related to Formation Transaction and special equity 
awards  
   
 —    
 549    
 5,391 
Transaction and other costs 
   
 5,317    
 8,737    
 5,511 
Interest expense 
   
 134,068    
 108,660    
 75,930 
(Gain) loss on the extinguishment of debt 
   
 (9,235)   
 450    
 3,073 
Impairment loss 
  
 55,427   
 90,226   
 — 
Adjustments: 
  
  
  
Our share of net third-party real estate services attributable to unconsolidated 
real estate ventures 
  
 (767)  
 (416)  
 (1,877)
NOI attributable to unconsolidated real estate ventures at our share 
   
 (6,808)   
 (19,452)  
 (26,861)
Non-cash rent adjustments (1) 
   
 9,482    
 23,482   
 17,442 
Other adjustments (2) 
   
 (1,321)   
 (12,092)  
 (20,318)
Total adjustments 
   
 586    
 (8,478)  
 (31,614)
Income (loss) before income tax (expense) benefit  
 $ 
 (176,991) $ 
 (92,005) $ 
 100,250 
 
(1) 
Adjustment to include deferred rent, above/below market lease amortization and lease incentive amortization. 
(2) 
Adjustment to include payments associated with assumed lease liabilities related to operating properties and to exclude commercial 
lease termination revenue, related party management fees, corporate entity activity and inter-segment activity. 
 

108 
21.          Commitments and Contingencies 
Insurance 
We maintain general liability insurance with limits of $150.0 million per occurrence and in the aggregate, and property 
and rental value insurance coverage with limits of $1.0 billion per occurrence, with sub-limits for certain perils such as 
floods and earthquakes on each of our properties. We also maintain coverage, through our wholly owned captive insurance 
subsidiary, for a portion of the first loss on the above limits and for both conventional terrorist acts and for nuclear, 
biological, chemical or radiological terrorism events with limits of $2.0 billion per occurrence. These policies are partially 
reinsured by third-party insurance providers. 
We will continue to monitor the state of the insurance market, and the scope and costs of coverage for acts of terrorism. 
We cannot anticipate what coverage will be available on commercially reasonable terms in the future. We are responsible 
for deductibles and losses in excess of the insurance coverage, which could be material. 
Our debt, consisting of mortgage loans secured by our properties, a revolving credit facility and term loans, contains 
customary covenants requiring adequate insurance coverage. Although we believe that we currently have adequate 
insurance coverage, we may not be able to obtain an equivalent amount of coverage at a reasonable cost in the future. If 
lenders insist on greater coverage than we are able to obtain, it could adversely affect our ability to finance or refinance 
our properties. 
Construction Commitments 
As of December 31, 2024, we had one asset under construction and started construction on a new amenity hub at 2011 
Crystal Drive that, based on our current plans and estimates, require an additional $73.3 million to complete, which we 
anticipate will be primarily expended over the next year. These capital expenditures are generally due as the work is 
performed, and we expect to finance them primarily with debt proceeds. 
Environmental Matters 
Most of our assets have been subject, at some point, to environmental assessments that are intended to evaluate the 
environmental condition of the subject and surrounding assets. These environmental assessments generally have included 
a historical review, a public records review, a visual inspection of the site and surrounding assets, visual or historical 
evidence of underground storage tanks and other features, and the preparation and issuance of a written report. Soil, soil 
vapor and/or groundwater subsurface testing is conducted at our assets, when necessary, to further investigate any 
conditions identified by the initial assessment that could reasonably be expected to pose a material concern to the property 
or result in us incurring material environmental liabilities as a result of redevelopment. The tests may not, however, have 
included extensive sampling or subsurface investigations. In each case where the environmental assessments have 
identified conditions requiring remedial actions required by law, we have initiated appropriate actions. The environmental 
assessments have not revealed any material environmental contamination that we believe would have a material adverse 
effect on our overall business, financial condition or results of operations, or that have not been anticipated and remediated 
during site redevelopment as required by law. Nevertheless, there can be no assurance that the identification of new areas 
of contamination, changes in the extent or known scope of contamination, the discovery of additional sites or changes in 
cleanup requirements would not result in significant cost to us. Environmental liabilities totaled $17.5 million and 
$17.6 million as of December 31, 2024 and 2023, and are included in "Other liabilities, net" in our consolidated balance 
sheets. 
Legal Proceedings  
In November 2023, the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia 
against RealPage, Inc., a provider of revenue management systems, numerous multifamily rental companies, and 14 
owners and/or operators of multifamily housing in the District of Columbia, including JBG Associates, L.L.C., one of our 
subsidiaries, alleging that the defendants violated the District of Columbia Antitrust Act by unlawfully agreeing to 
use RealPage, Inc. revenue management systems and sharing sensitive data. While we intend to vigorously defend against 
this lawsuit, given the current stage of the District of Columbia’s lawsuit, we are unable to predict the outcome or estimate 

109 
the amount of loss, if any, that may result from the lawsuit. While we do not believe that these proceedings will have a 
material adverse effect on our financial condition, we cannot give assurance that the proceedings will not have a material 
effect on our results of operations or cash flows in the event of a negative outcome. 
There are various other legal actions arising in the ordinary course of business. In our opinion, the outcome of such matters 
is not expected to have a material adverse effect on our financial position, results of operations or cash flows. 
Operating and Finance Leases 
As of December 31, 2024, we are obligated under non-cancellable operating leases, including our corporate office lease 
and a ground lease on a property, with terms extending through the year 2037. As of December 31, 2024, our operating 
lease liabilities were calculated based on the weighted average discount rates of 6.9% and had a weighted average 
remaining lease term of 12.4 years. 
As of December 31, 2024, future minimum lease payments under our non-cancellable operating leases are as follows: 
 
 
 
 
Year ending December 31,  
     
Amount 
 
 
(In thousands) 
2025 
 
$ 
 6,617 
2026 
 
  
 5,487 
2027 
 
  
 5,662 
2028 
 
  
 4,405 
2029 
 
  
 4,515 
Thereafter 
 
  
 40,426 
Total future minimum lease payments 
 
  
 67,112 
Imputed interest 
 
  
 (22,682)
Total liabilities related to lease right-of-use assets 
 
$ 
 44,430 
During the year ended December 31, 2024, we incurred $5.9 million of fixed operating lease expenses, and $118,000 of 
variable operating lease expenses. During the year ended December 31, 2023, we incurred $5.4 million of fixed operating 
lease expenses, and $180,000 of variable operating lease expenses. In April 2022, we sold the finance ground leases at 
1730 M Street and Courthouse Plaza 1 and 2 to an unconsolidated real estate venture. During the year ended December 31, 
2022, we incurred $601,000 and $2.6 million of fixed operating and finance lease expenses, and $97,000 of variable 
operating lease expenses. 
Other 
As of December 31, 2024, we had committed tenant-related obligations totaling $43.8 million ($43.5 million related to 
our consolidated entities and $309,000 related to our unconsolidated real estate ventures at our share). The timing and 
amounts of payments for tenant-related obligations are uncertain and may only be due upon satisfactory performance of 
certain conditions. 
From time to time, we (or ventures in which we have an ownership interest) have agreed, and may in the future agree with 
respect to unconsolidated real estate ventures, to (i) guarantee portions of the principal, interest and other amounts in 
connection with borrowings, (ii) provide customary environmental indemnifications and nonrecourse carve-outs (e.g., 
guarantees against fraud, misrepresentation and bankruptcy) in connection with borrowings, or (iii) provide guarantees to 
lenders and other third parties for the completion and stabilization of development projects. We customarily have 
agreements with our outside venture partners whereby the partners agree to reimburse the real estate venture or us for their 
share of any payments made under certain of these guarantees. At times, we also have agreements with certain of our 
outside venture partners whereby we agree to either indemnify the partners and/or the associated ventures with respect to 
certain contingent liabilities associated with operating assets or to reimburse our partner for its share of any payments 
made by them under certain guarantees. Guarantees (excluding environmental) customarily terminate either upon the 
satisfaction of specified circumstances or repayment of the underlying debt. Amounts that we may be required to pay in 

110 
future periods in relation to guarantees associated with budget overruns or operating losses are not estimable. As of 
December 31, 2024, we had no principal payment guarantees related to our unconsolidated real estate ventures. 
As of December 31, 2024, we had additional capital commitments totaling $9.6 million related to our investments in real 
estate-focused technology companies.  
 
Additionally, with respect to borrowings of our consolidated entities, we may agree to (i) guarantee portions of the 
principal, interest and other amounts, (ii) provide customary environmental indemnifications and nonrecourse carve-outs 
(e.g., guarantees against fraud, misrepresentation and bankruptcy) or (iii) provide guarantees to lenders, tenants and other 
third parties for the completion and stabilization of development projects. As of December 31, 2024, we had no debt 
principal payment guarantees related to our consolidated real estate assets. 
22.          Transactions with Related Parties 
Our third-party real estate services business provides fee-based real estate services to third parties, including the JBG 
Legacy Funds. In connection with the contribution to us of certain assets formerly owned by the JBG Legacy Funds as 
part of the Formation Transaction, the general partner and managing member interests in the JBG Legacy Funds that were 
held by certain former JBG executives (and who became members of our management team and/or Board of Trustees) 
were not transferred to us and remain under the control of these individuals. In addition, certain members of our senior 
management team and Board of Trustees have ownership interests in the JBG Legacy Funds, and own carried interests in 
each fund and in certain of our real estate ventures that entitle them to receive cash payments if the fund or real estate 
venture achieves certain return thresholds. 
During 2024, we combined our impact investing activities, including management of the Washington Housing Initiative 
("WHI") Impact Pool, with the newly formed LEO Impact Capital, our impact investment management platform. The 
WHI Impact Pool completed fundraising in 2020 with capital commitments totaling $114.4 million, which included a 
commitment from us of $11.2 million. As of December 31, 2024, our remaining commitment was $2.9 million. 
The third-party real estate services revenue, including expense reimbursements, from the JBG Legacy Funds and the WHI 
Impact Pool and its affiliates was $13.0 million, $21.3 million and $20.0 million for each of the three years in the period 
ended December 31, 2024. As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, we had receivables from the JBG Legacy Funds and the 
WHI Impact Pool and its affiliates totaling $2.1 million and $3.5 million for such services. 
Commencing in March 2023, in connection with the sale of an 80.0% interest in 4747 Bethesda Avenue in 2023, we leased 
our corporate offices from an unconsolidated real estate venture and incurred $5.4 million and $5.0 million of rent expense 
for the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, which was included in "General and administrative expense" in our 
consolidated statements of operations.  
We rented our former corporate offices from an unconsolidated real estate venture and made payments totaling $922,000 
for the year ended December 31, 2022.  
 
We have agreements with Building Maintenance Services ("BMS"), an entity in which we have a minor preferred interest, 
to supervise cleaning, engineering and security services at our properties. We paid BMS $9.5 million, $9.3 million and 
$10.7 million for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, which was included in "Property 
operating expenses" in our consolidated statements of operations. 

111 
ITEM 9. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND 
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES 
None. 
 
ITEM 9A. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES 
Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures 
As required by Rule 13a-15(b) under the Exchange Act, we carried out an evaluation, under the supervision and with the 
participation of management, including our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, of the effectiveness of 
the design and operation of our disclosure controls and procedures. Based on this evaluation, our Chief Executive Officer 
and Chief Financial Officer concluded that as of December 31, 2024, our disclosure controls and procedures were 
effective. 
Management's Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting 
Management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over our financial reporting (as such 
term is defined in Rule 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Exchange Act). Our internal control over financial reporting is 
a process designed under the supervision of our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer to provide reasonable 
assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of our consolidated financial statements for 
external reporting purposes in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. Our internal control over 
financial reporting includes policies and procedures that (i) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, 
accurately and fairly reflect transactions and dispositions of our assets, (ii) provide reasonable assurance that transactions 
are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of consolidated financial statements in accordance with U.S. generally 
accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures are being made only in accordance with authorizations 
of our management and directors, and (iii) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of 
unauthorized acquisitions, use or disposition of our assets that could have a material effect on our consolidated financial 
statements. 
As of December 31, 2024, management conducted an assessment of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial 
reporting based on the framework established in Internal Control - Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee 
of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO). Based on this assessment, management has concluded 
that our internal control over financial reporting was effective as of December 31, 2024. 
Deloitte & Touche LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, has audited our consolidated financial 
statements and has issued a report on the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting, which is included 
herein. 
Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting 
There have been no changes in our internal control over financial reporting during the quarter ended December 31, 2024 
that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting. 
 
 

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REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM 
To the Shareholders and the Board of Trustees of JBG SMITH Properties 
Opinion on Internal Control over Financial Reporting 
We have audited the internal control over financial reporting of JBG SMITH Properties and subsidiaries (the "Company") 
as of December 31, 2024, based on criteria established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the 
Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO). In our opinion, the Company maintained, 
in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2024, based on criteria 
established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework (2013) issued by COSO. 
We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United 
States) (PCAOB), the consolidated financial statements as of and for the year ended December 31, 2024, of the Company 
and our report dated February 18, 2025, expressed an unqualified opinion on those consolidated financial statements. 
Basis for Opinion 
The Company's management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its 
assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, included in the accompanying Management's 
Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company's internal 
control over financial reporting based on our audit. We are a public accounting firm registered with the PCAOB and are 
required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the 
applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB. 
We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform 
the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained 
in all material respects. Our audit included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, 
assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal 
control based on the assessed risk, and performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. 
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion. 
Definition and Limitations of Internal Control over Financial Reporting 
A company's internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the 
reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with 
generally accepted accounting principles. A company's internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and 
procedures that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the 
transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded 
as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, 
and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management 
and directors of the company; and (3) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of 
unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company's assets that could have a material effect on the financial 
statements. 
Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, 
projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate 
because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate. 
/s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP 
McLean, Virginia 
February 18, 2025 
 
 

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ITEM 9B. OTHER INFORMATION 
TRADING ARRANGEMENTS 
During the three months ended December 31, 2024, none of our officers or trustees adopted or terminated any contract, 
instruction or written plan for the purchase or sale of our securities that was intended to satisfy the affirmative defense 
conditions of Rule 10b5-1(c) or any "non-Rule 10b5-1 trading arrangement." 
MATERIAL U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES 
The following discussion summarizes our taxation and the material U.S. federal income tax consequences to holders of 
our common shares, preferred shares and depositary shares (together with common shares and preferred shares, the 
"shares") as well as our warrants and rights (together with the shares, the "securities") and is provided for general 
information only. This is not tax advice. The tax treatment of our shareholders will vary depending upon the holder's 
particular situation, and this discussion does not deal with all aspects of taxation that may be relevant to particular 
shareholders in light of their personal investment or tax circumstances. This section also does not deal with all aspects of 
taxation that may be relevant to certain types of shareholders to which special provisions of the U.S. federal income tax 
laws apply, including: 
• 
dealers in securities or currencies; 
• 
traders in securities that elect to use a mark-to-market method of accounting for their securities holdings; 
• 
banks; 
• 
life insurance companies; 
• 
tax-exempt organizations; 
• 
certain insurance companies; 
• 
persons liable for the alternative minimum tax; 
• 
persons that hold shares that are a hedge, that are hedged against interest rate or currency risks or that are part of 
a straddle or conversion transaction; 
• 
persons that purchase or sell shares as part of a wash sale for tax purposes; 
• 
persons who do not hold our shares as capital assets; and 
• 
U.S. shareholders whose functional currency is not the U.S. dollar. 
This summary is based on the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the "Code"), its legislative history, existing and proposed 
regulations under the Code, published rulings and court decisions. This summary describes the provisions of these sources 
of law only as they are currently in effect. All of these sources of law may change at any time, and any change in the law 
may apply retroactively. 
If a partnership holds our shares, the U.S. federal income tax treatment of a partner generally depends on the status of the 
partner and the tax treatment of the partnership. A partner in a partnership holding our shares should consult its tax advisor 
with regard to the U.S. federal income tax treatment of an investment in our shares. 
We urge you to consult with your tax advisors regarding the federal, state, local and foreign tax consequences to you of 
acquiring, owning and selling our shares, in light of your particular circumstances. 
Taxation of JBG SMITH as a REIT 
We elected to be taxed as a REIT under Sections 856 through 860 of the Code, commencing with our taxable year that 
ended December 31, 2017 (our first taxable year). We believe that we are organized and operate in such a manner as to 

114 
qualify for taxation as a REIT under the applicable provisions of the Code. We conduct our business as an umbrella 
partnership REIT, pursuant to which substantially all of our assets are held by our operating partnership, JBG SMITH LP. 
We are the sole general partner of JBG SMITH LP and we own 86.0% of its outstanding OP Units. JBG SMITH LP owns, 
directly or indirectly, majority interests in several subsidiary REITs and minority interests in certain other subsidiary REITs 
through its interests in certain joint ventures. Our subsidiary REITs are subject to the same REIT qualification requirements 
and other limitations described herein that apply to us (and in certain cases, are subject to more stringent REIT qualification 
requirements). 
When we offer our shares, we will request an opinion of Hogan Lovells US LLP, our REIT tax counsel, to the effect that 
we have been organized and have operated in conformity with the requirements for qualification and taxation as a REIT, 
effective for each of our taxable years ended December 31, 2017, through and including our immediately preceding 
calendar year, and that our current organization and current and intended method of operation will enable us to continue 
to meet the requirements for qualification and taxation as a REIT under the Code for the taxable year in which the offering 
occurs and thereafter. 
It must be emphasized that the opinion of Hogan Lovells US LLP, described in the preceding paragraph, regarding our 
status as a REIT, will rely, without independent investigation or verification, on various assumptions relating to our 
organization and operation and on prior opinions provided by Sullivan & Cromwell LLP and Hogan Lovells US LLP, as 
described below under "Failure to Qualify as a REIT," as to the qualification and taxation of Vornado, each REIT that was 
contributed by VRLP to JBG SMITH LP and each REIT that was contributed to JBG SMITH LP by JBG, as a REIT, and 
will be conditioned upon fact-based representations and covenants made by our management regarding our organization, 
assets and income, and the present and future conduct of our business operations. While we intend to continue to operate 
so that we continue to qualify to be taxed as a REIT, given the highly complex nature of the rules governing REITs, the 
ongoing importance of factual determinations, and the possibility of future changes in our circumstances, no assurance can 
be given by Hogan Lovells US LLP or by us that we will qualify to be taxed as a REIT for any particular year. Any such 
opinion will be expressed as of the date issued. In connection with such opinion, Hogan Lovells US LLP will have no 
obligation to advise us or our shareholders of any subsequent change in the matters stated, represented or assumed, or of 
any subsequent change in the applicable law. You should be aware that opinions of counsel are not binding on the IRS, 
and no assurance can be given that the IRS will not challenge the conclusions set forth in any such opinion. Hogan Lovells 
US LLP's opinion would not foreclose the possibility that we may have to use one or more of the REIT savings provisions 
discussed below, which could require us to pay an excise or penalty tax (which could be significant in amount) in order to 
maintain our REIT qualification. 
Our qualification and taxation as a REIT depend on our ability to meet, on a continuing basis, through actual operating 
results, distribution levels and diversity of share ownership, various qualification requirements imposed upon REITs by 
the Code, the compliance with which will not be monitored by Hogan Lovells US LLP. Our ability to qualify to be taxed 
as a REIT also requires that we satisfy certain tests, some of which depend upon the fair market values of assets that we 
own directly or indirectly. Such values may not be susceptible to a precise determination. Accordingly, no assurance can 
be given that the actual results of our operations for any taxable year will satisfy such requirements for qualification and 
taxation as a REIT. 
As noted above, we have elected, and believe we have been organized and have operated in such a manner as to qualify, 
to be taxed as a REIT for U.S. federal income tax purposes, from and after our taxable year that ended December 31, 2017 
(our first taxable year). The material qualification requirements are summarized below under "-Requirements for 
Qualification." While we believe that we operate so that we qualify to be taxed as a REIT, no assurance can be given that 
the IRS will not challenge our qualification, or that we will be able to operate in accordance with the REIT requirements 
in the future. Please refer to "-Failure to Qualify as a REIT." The discussion in this section "-Taxation of JBG SMITH as 
a REIT" assumes that we will qualify as a REIT. 
As a REIT, we generally do not have to pay federal corporate income taxes on our net income that we currently distribute 
to our shareholders. This treatment substantially eliminates the "double taxation" at the corporate and shareholder levels 
that generally results from investment in a regular corporation. Our dividends, however, typically are not eligible for (i) the 
reduced rates of tax applicable to dividends received by noncorporate shareholders, except in limited circumstances, and 
(ii) the corporate dividends received deduction. For taxable years beginning before January 1, 2026, however, U.S. 

115 
shareholders that are individuals, trusts or estates may deduct 20% of the aggregate amount of ordinary dividends 
distributed by us, subject to certain limitations. Our capital gain dividends and qualified dividend income generally are 
subject to a maximum 23.8% rate (which rate takes into account the maximum capital gain rate of 20% and the 3.8% 
Medicare tax on net investment income, described below under "-Net Investment Income Tax"). See "-Taxation of U.S. 
Shareholders-Taxation of Taxable U.S. Shareholders-Taxation of Dividends." 
Any net operating losses, foreign tax credits and other tax attributes generated or incurred by us generally do not pass 
through to our shareholders, subject to special rules for certain items such as the capital gain that we recognize. See "-
Taxation of U.S. Shareholders-Taxation of Taxable U.S. Shareholders-Taxation of Dividends." 
Although we generally do not pay federal corporate income tax on our net income that we currently distribute to our 
shareholders, we will have to pay U.S. federal income tax as follows: 
• 
First, we will have to pay tax at regular corporate rates on any undistributed REIT taxable income, including 
undistributed net capital gains. 
• 
Second, if we elect to treat property that we acquire in connection with certain leasehold terminations or a 
foreclosure of a mortgage loan as "foreclosure property," we may thereby avoid (i) the 100% prohibited 
transactions tax on gain from a resale of that property (if the sale otherwise would constitute a prohibited 
transaction); and (ii) the inclusion of any income from such property as non-qualifying income for purposes of 
the REIT gross income tests discussed below. Income from the sale or operation of the property may be subject 
to U.S. federal corporate income tax at the highest applicable rate (currently 21%). 
• 
Third, if we have net income from "prohibited transactions," as defined in the Code, we will have to pay a 100% 
tax on that income. Prohibited transactions are, in general, certain sales or other dispositions of property, other 
than foreclosure property, held primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of business. 
• 
Fourth, if we should fail to satisfy the 75% gross income test or the 95% gross income test, as discussed below 
under "-Requirements for Qualification-Income Tests," but have nonetheless maintained our qualification as a 
REIT because we have satisfied some other requirements, we will have to pay a 100% tax on an amount equal to 
(a) the gross income attributable to the greater of (i) 75% of our gross income over the amount of gross income 
that is qualifying income for purposes of the 75% test, and (ii) 95% of our gross income over the amount of gross 
income that is qualifying income for purposes of the 95% test, multiplied by (b) a fraction intended to reflect our 
profitability. 
• 
Fifth, if we should fail to distribute during each calendar year at least the sum of (1) 85% of our REIT ordinary 
income for that year, (2) 95% of our REIT capital gain net income for that year and (3) any undistributed taxable 
income from prior periods, we would have to pay a 4% excise tax on the excess of that required distribution over 
the sum of the amounts actually distributed and retained amounts on which income tax is paid at the corporate 
level. 
• 
Sixth, if we acquire any asset from a C corporation in certain transactions in which we succeed to the basis of the 
asset or any other property in the hands of the C corporation as the basis of the asset in our hands, and we recognize 
gain on the disposition of that asset during the five-year period beginning on the date on which we acquired that 
asset, then we will have to pay tax on the built-in gain at the highest regular corporate rate. A C corporation means 
generally a corporation that has to pay full corporate-level tax. 
• 
Seventh, if we derive "excess inclusion income" from a residual interest in a REMIC or certain interests in a TMP 
we could be subject to corporate level federal income tax at a 21% rate to the extent that such income is allocable 
to certain types of tax-exempt shareholders that are not subject to unrelated business income tax, such as 
government entities. 
• 
Eighth, if we receive non-arm's-length income from a TRS, or as a result of services provided by a TRS to our 
tenants or to us, we will be subject to a 100% tax on the amount of our non-arm's-length income. 
• 
Ninth, if we fail to satisfy a REIT asset test, as described below, due to reasonable cause and we nonetheless 
maintain our REIT qualification because of specified cure provisions, we will generally be required to pay a tax 

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equal to the greater of $50,000 or the highest corporate tax rate multiplied by the net income generated by the 
nonqualifying assets that caused us to fail such test. 
• 
Tenth, if we fail to satisfy any provision of the Code that would result in our failure to qualify as a REIT (other 
than a violation of the REIT gross income tests or a violation of the asset tests described below) and the violation 
is due to reasonable cause, we may retain our REIT qualification but will be required to pay a penalty of $50,000 
for each such failure. 
• 
Eleventh, we have a number of TRSs, the net income of which will be subject to U.S. federal, state and local 
corporate income tax at normal rates. 
Notwithstanding our qualification as a REIT, we and our subsidiaries also may be subject to a variety of other taxes, 
including payroll taxes, property and other taxes on our assets, operations and net worth. We also could be subject to tax 
in other situations and on transactions not presently contemplated. 
Requirements for Qualification 
The Code defines a REIT as a corporation, trust or association: 
• 
which is managed by one or more directors or trustees; 
• 
the beneficial ownership of which is evidenced by transferable shares, or by transferable certificates of beneficial 
interest; 
• 
that would otherwise be taxable as a domestic corporation, but for Sections 856 through 859 of the Code; 
• 
that is neither a financial institution nor an insurance company to which certain provisions of the Code apply; 
• 
the beneficial ownership of which is held by 100 or more persons (except with respect to the first taxable year for 
which an election to be taxed as a REIT is made); 
• 
during the last half of each taxable year, not more than 50% in value of the outstanding shares of which is owned, 
directly or constructively, by five or fewer individuals, as defined in the Code to include certain entities (the "not 
closely held requirement") (except with respect to the first taxable year for which an election to be taxed as a 
REIT is made); and 
• 
that meets certain other tests, including tests described below regarding the nature of its income and assets. 
The Code provides that the conditions described in the first through fourth bullet points above must be met during the 
entire taxable year and that the condition described in the fifth bullet point above must be met during at least 335 days of 
a taxable year of 12 months, or during a proportionate part of a taxable year of less than 12 months. We satisfy the 
conditions described in the first through sixth bullet points of the preceding paragraph. Our declaration of trust provides 
for restrictions regarding the ownership and transfer of our shares of beneficial interest, which restrictions are intended to 
assist us in continuing to satisfy the share ownership requirements described in the fifth and sixth bullet points of the 
preceding paragraph. The ownership and transfer restrictions pertaining to our common shares are described in this 
prospectus under the heading "Description of Shares of Beneficial Interest-Common Shares-Restrictions on Ownership of 
Common Shares." 
Ownership of Subsidiary Entities 
Ownership of Partnerships, Limited Liability Companies and Qualified REIT Subsidiaries 
If we are a partner in an entity that is treated as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes, Treasury regulations 
under Section 856 of the Code provide that for purposes of the gross income and asset tests applicable to REITs that are 
described below, we will be deemed to own our proportionate share of the assets of the partnership and will be deemed to 
be entitled to the income of the partnership attributable to that share. In addition, the character of the assets and gross 
income of the partnership will retain the same character in our hands for purposes of Section 856 of the Code, including 

117 
for purposes of satisfying the gross income tests and the asset tests. As the sole general partner of our operating partnership, 
JBG SMITH LP, we have direct control over it and indirect control over the subsidiaries in which JBG SMITH LP or a 
subsidiary has a controlling interest. We currently intend to operate these entities in a manner consistent with the 
requirements for our qualification as a REIT. If we are or become a limited partner or non-managing member in any 
partnership or limited liability company and such entity takes or expects to take actions that could jeopardize our status as 
a REIT or require us to pay tax, we may be forced to dispose of our interest in such entity (including possibly by transferring 
the interest to one of our TRSs). In addition, it is possible that a partnership or limited liability company could take an 
action that could cause us to fail a gross income or asset test, and that we would not become aware of such action in time 
for us to dispose of our interest in the partnership or limited liability company or take other corrective action on a timely 
basis. In that case, we could fail to qualify as a REIT unless we were entitled to relief as described below in "-Failure to 
Qualify as a REIT." In addition, actions taken by partnerships in which we own an interest can affect the determination of 
whether we have net income from prohibited transactions. See the fourth bullet in the list under "-Taxation of JBG SMITH 
as a REIT" for a brief description of prohibited transactions. 
Under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015, liability is imposed on a partnership (rather than its partners) for adjustments to 
reported partnership taxable income resulting from audits or other tax proceedings. The liability can include an imputed 
underpayment of tax, calculated by using the highest marginal U.S. federal income tax rate, as well as interest and penalties 
on such imputed underpayment of tax. Using certain rules, partnerships may be able to transfer these liabilities to their 
partners. In the event any adjustments are imposed by the IRS on the taxable income reported by JBG SMITH LP or any 
of our other subsidiary partnerships, we intend to use the audit rules to the extent possible to allow us to transfer any 
liability with respect to such adjustments to the partners of JBG SMITH LP (which would include us) or the partners of 
any other subsidiary partnership who should properly bear such liability. However, there is no assurance that we will 
qualify under those rules or that we will have the authority to use those rules under the operating agreements for certain of 
our subsidiary partnerships. 
If we own a corporate subsidiary that is a QRS, the QRS generally is disregarded for U.S. federal income tax purposes, 
and its assets, liabilities and items of income, deduction and credit are treated as assets, liabilities and items of income, 
deduction and credit of ours, including for purposes of the gross income and asset tests that apply to us as a REIT. A QRS 
is any corporation other than a TRS that is wholly owned by us. Other entities that are wholly owned by us, including 
single member limited liability companies that have not elected to be taxed as corporations for U.S. federal income tax 
purposes, also generally are disregarded as separate entities for U.S. federal income tax purposes, including for purposes 
of the REIT income and asset tests. Disregarded subsidiaries, along with any partnerships in which we hold an equity 
interest, are sometimes referred to herein as "pass-through subsidiaries." 
If a disregarded subsidiary ceases to be wholly owned by us (for example, if any equity interest in the subsidiary is acquired 
by a person other than us or another disregarded subsidiary of ours), the subsidiary's separate existence no longer would 
be disregarded for U.S. federal income tax purposes. Instead, the subsidiary would have multiple owners and would be 
treated either as a partnership or a taxable corporation. Such an event could, depending on the circumstances, adversely 
affect our ability to satisfy the various asset and gross income requirements applicable to REITs, including the requirement 
that REITs generally may not own, directly or indirectly, more than 10% of the securities of another corporation unless it 
is a TRS, a QRS or another REIT. See "-Income Tests" and "-Asset Tests." 
Ownership of Subsidiary REITs 
JBG SMITH LP owns, directly or indirectly, majority interests in several subsidiary REITs and minority interests in certain 
other subsidiary REITs through our interests in certain joint ventures. We believe that these subsidiary REITs are organized 
and operate in a manner that permits them to qualify for taxation as a REIT for U.S. federal income tax purposes. However, 
if any of these subsidiary REITs were to fail to qualify as a REIT, then (i) the subsidiary REIT would become subject to 
regular U.S. corporate income tax, as described herein, see "-Failure to Qualify as a REIT" below, and (ii) our equity 
interest in such subsidiary REIT would cease to be a qualifying real estate asset for purposes of the 75% asset test and 
could become subject to the 5% asset test, the 10% voting share asset test, and the 10% value asset test generally applicable 
to our ownership in corporations other than REITs, QRSs and TRSs. See "-Asset Tests" below. If a subsidiary REIT were 
to fail to qualify as a REIT and if we were not able to treat the subsidiary REIT as a TRS of ours pursuant to certain 
prophylactic elections we have made, it is possible that we would not meet the 10% voting share test and the 10% value 

118 
test with respect to our indirect interest in such entity, in which event we would fail to qualify as a REIT unless we could 
avail ourselves of certain relief provisions. 
Taxable REIT Subsidiaries 
JBG SMITH LP owns a number of TRSs. A TRS is any corporation in which a REIT directly or indirectly owns stock, 
provided that the REIT and that corporation make a joint election to treat that corporation as a TRS. The election can be 
revoked at any time as long as the REIT and the TRS revoke such election jointly. In addition, if a TRS holds, directly or 
indirectly, more than 35% of the securities of any other corporation other than a REIT (by vote or by value), then that other 
corporation is also treated as a TRS. A corporation can be a TRS with respect to more than one REIT. 
A TRS is subject to U.S. federal income tax at regular corporate rates (currently a maximum rate of 21%), and may also 
be subject to state and local taxation. Any dividends paid or deemed paid by any one of our TRSs will also be taxable, 
either (1) to us to the extent the dividend is retained by us, or (2) to our shareholders to the extent the dividends received 
from the TRS are paid to our shareholders. We may hold more than 10% of the stock of a TRS without jeopardizing our 
qualification as a REIT notwithstanding the rule described below under "-Asset Tests" that generally precludes ownership 
of more than 10% of any issuer's securities. However, as noted below, for us to qualify as a REIT, the securities of all the 
TRSs in which we have invested either directly or indirectly may not represent more than 20% of the total value of our 
assets. Other than certain activities related to operating or managing a lodging or health care facility, a TRS may generally 
engage in any business, including the provision of customary or non-customary services to tenants of the parent REIT. 
Income Tests 
To maintain our qualification as a REIT, we annually must satisfy two gross income requirements. 
• 
First, we must derive at least 75% of our gross income, excluding gross income from prohibited transactions, for 
each taxable year directly or indirectly from investments relating to real property, mortgage loans on real property 
or investments in REIT equity securities, including "rents from real property," as defined in the Code, or from 
certain types of temporary investments. Rents from real property generally include our expenses that are paid or 
reimbursed by tenants. 
• 
Second, at least 95% of our gross income, excluding gross income from prohibited transactions, for each 
taxable year must be derived from real property investments as described in the preceding bullet point, dividends, 
interest and gain from the sale or disposition of stock or securities, or from any combination of these types of 
sources. 
Rents that we receive will qualify as rents from real property in satisfying the gross income requirements for a REIT 
described above only if the rents satisfy several conditions. 
• 
First, the amount of rent must not be based in whole or in part on the income or profits of any person. However, 
an amount received or accrued generally will not be excluded from rents from real property solely because it is 
based on a fixed percentage or percentages of receipts or sales. 
• 
Second, the Code provides that rents received from a tenant will not qualify as rents from real property in 
satisfying the gross income tests if the REIT, directly or under the applicable attribution rules, owns a 10% or 
greater interest in that tenant; except that rents received from a TRS under certain circumstances qualify as rents 
from real property even if we own more than a 10% interest in the subsidiary. We refer to a tenant in which we 
own a 10% or greater interest as a "related party tenant." 
• 
Third, if rent attributable to personal property leased in connection with a lease of real property is greater than 
15% of the total rent received under the lease, then the portion of rent attributable to the personal property will 
not qualify as rents from real property. 
• 
Finally, for rents received to qualify as rents from real property, the REIT generally must not operate or manage 
the property or furnish or render services to the tenants of the property, other than through an independent 

119 
contractor from whom the REIT derives no revenue or through a TRS. However, we may directly perform certain 
services that landlords usually or customarily render when renting space for occupancy only or that are not 
considered rendered to the occupant of the property. 
We expect that we will not derive material rents from related party tenants. We also expect that we will not derive material 
rental income attributable to personal property, except where the personal property is leased in connection with the lease 
of real property and the amount of which is less than 15% of the total rent received under the lease. 
We directly perform services for some of our tenants. We do not believe that the provision of these services will cause our 
gross income attributable to these tenants to fail to be treated as rents from real property. If we were to directly provide 
services to a tenant that are other than those that landlords usually or customarily provide when renting space for occupancy 
only, amounts received or accrued by us for any of these services will not be treated as rents from real property for purposes 
of the REIT gross income tests. However, the amounts received or accrued for these services will not cause other amounts 
received with respect to the property to fail to be treated as rents from real property unless the amounts treated as received 
in respect of the services, together with amounts received for certain management services, exceed 1% of all amounts 
received or accrued by us during the taxable year with respect to the property. If the sum of the amounts received in respect 
of the services to tenants and management services described in the preceding sentence exceeds the 1% threshold, then all 
amounts received or accrued by us with respect to the property will not qualify as rents from real property, even if we only 
provide the impermissible services to some, but not all, of the tenants of the property. 
The term "interest" generally does not include any amount received or accrued, directly or indirectly, if the determination 
of that amount depends in whole or in part on the income or profits of any person. However, an amount received or accrued 
generally will not be excluded from the term "interest" solely because it is based on a fixed percentage or percentages of 
receipts or sales. 
From time to time, we may enter into hedging transactions with respect to one or more of our assets or liabilities. Our 
hedging activities may include entering into interest rate swaps, caps and floors, options to purchase these items, and 
futures and forward contracts. Except to the extent provided by Treasury regulations, any income we derive from a hedging 
transaction that is clearly identified as such as specified in the Code, including gain from the sale or disposition of such a 
transaction, will not constitute gross income for purposes of the 75% or 95% gross income tests, and therefore will be 
excluded for purposes of these tests, but only to the extent that the transaction hedges indebtedness incurred or to be 
incurred by us to acquire or carry real estate. The term "hedging transaction," as used above, generally means any 
transaction we enter into in the normal course of our business primarily to manage risk of interest rate or price changes or 
currency fluctuations with respect to borrowings made or to be made, or ordinary obligations incurred or to be incurred, 
by us. "Hedging transaction" also includes any transaction entered into primarily to manage the risk of currency 
fluctuations with respect to any item of income or gain that would be qualifying income under the 75% or 95% gross 
income test (or any property which generates such income or gain), including gain from the termination of such a 
transaction. Gross income also excludes income from clearly identified hedging transactions that are entered into with 
respect to previously acquired hedging transactions that a REIT entered into to manage interest rate or currency fluctuation 
risks when the previously hedged indebtedness is extinguished or property is disposed of. We intend to structure any 
hedging transactions in a manner that does not jeopardize our status as a REIT. 
Interest income and gain from the sale of a debt instrument not secured by real property or an interest in real property, 
including "nonqualified" debt instruments issued by a "publicly offered REIT," are not treated as qualifying income for 
purposes of the 75% gross income test (even though such instruments are treated as "real estate assets," as discussed below) 
but are treated as qualifying income for purposes of the 95% gross income test. A "publicly offered REIT" means a REIT 
that is required to file annual and periodic reports with the SEC under the Exchange Act. 
As a general matter, certain foreign currency gains will be excluded from gross income for purposes of one or both of the 
gross income tests, as follows. 
"Real estate foreign exchange gain" will be excluded from gross income for purposes of both the 75% and 95% gross 
income test. Real estate foreign exchange gain generally includes foreign currency gain attributable to any item of income 
or gain that is qualifying income for purposes of the 75% gross income test, foreign currency gain attributable to the 

120 
acquisition or ownership of (or becoming or being the obligor under) obligations secured by mortgage loans on real 
property or on interests in real property and certain foreign currency gain attributable to certain qualified business units of 
a REIT. 
"Passive foreign exchange gain" will be excluded from gross income for purposes of the 95% gross income test. Passive 
foreign exchange gain generally includes real estate foreign exchange gain as described above, and also includes foreign 
currency gain attributable to any item of income or gain that is qualifying income for purposes of the 95% gross income 
test and foreign currency gain attributable to the acquisition or ownership of (or becoming or being the obligor under) 
obligations that would not fall within the scope of the definition of real estate foreign exchange gain. 
If we fail to satisfy one or both of the 75% or 95% gross income tests for any taxable year, we may nevertheless qualify 
as a REIT for that year if we satisfy the requirements of other provisions of the Code that allow relief from disqualification 
as a REIT. These relief provisions will generally be available if: 
• 
Our failure to meet the income tests was due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect; and 
• 
We file a schedule of each item of income in excess of the limitations described above in accordance with 
regulations to be prescribed by the IRS. 
We might not be entitled to the benefit of these relief provisions, however, and, even if these relief provisions apply, we 
would have to pay a tax on the excess income. The tax will be a 100% tax on an amount equal to (a) the gross income 
attributable to the greater of (i) 75% of our gross income over the amount of gross income that is qualifying income for 
purposes of the 75% test, and (ii) 95% of our gross income over the amount of gross income that is qualifying income for 
purposes of the 95% test, multiplied by (b) a fraction intended to reflect our profitability. 
Asset Tests 
At the close of each quarter of our taxable year, we must also satisfy four tests relating to the nature of our assets. 
• 
First, at least 75% of the value of our total assets must be represented by real estate assets, including (a) real estate 
assets held by our QRSs, our allocable share of real estate assets held by partnerships in which we own an interest 
and stock issued by another REIT, (b) for a period of one year from the date of our receipt of proceeds of an 
offering of our shares of beneficial interest or publicly offered debt with a term of at least five years, stock or debt 
instruments purchased with these proceeds, (c) cash, cash items and government securities, and (d) certain debt 
instruments of "publicly offered REITs" (as defined above), interests in real property or interests in mortgage 
loans on real property (including a mortgage secured by both real property and personal property, provided that 
the fair market value of the personal property does not exceed 15% of the total fair market value of all property 
securing such mortgage), and personal property to the extent that rents attributable to the property are treated as 
rents from real property under the applicable Code section. 
• 
Second, not more than 25% of our total assets may be represented by securities other than those in the 75% asset 
class (except that not more than 25% of the REIT's total assets may be represented by "nonqualified" debt 
instruments issued by publicly offered REITs). For this purpose, a "nonqualified" debt instrument issued by a 
publicly offered REIT is any real estate asset that would cease to be a real estate asset if the definition of a real 
estate asset was applied without regard to the reference to debt instruments issued by publicly offered REITs. 
• 
Third, not more than 20% of our total assets may constitute securities issued by TRSs and, of the investments 
included in the 25% asset class, the value of any one issuer's securities, other than equity securities issued by 
another REIT or securities issued by a TRS, owned by us may not exceed 5% of the value of our total assets. 
• 
Fourth, we may not own more than 10% of the vote or value of the outstanding securities of any one issuer, except 
for issuers that are REITs, QRSs or TRSs, or certain securities that qualify under a safe harbor provision of the 
Code (such as so-called "straight-debt" securities). 

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Solely for the purposes of the 10% value test described above, the determination of our interest in the assets of any 
partnership or limited liability company in which we own an interest will be based on our capital interest in any securities 
issued by the partnership or limited liability company, excluding for this purpose certain securities described in the Code. 
If the IRS successfully challenges the partnership status of any of the partnerships in which we maintain a more than 10% 
vote or value interest, and the partnership is reclassified as a corporation or a publicly traded partnership taxable as a 
corporation, we could lose our REIT status. In addition, in the case of such a successful challenge, we could lose our REIT 
status if such recharacterization results in us otherwise failing one of the asset tests described above. 
Certain relief provisions may be available to us if we fail to satisfy the asset tests described above after a 30-day cure 
period. Under these provisions, we will be deemed to have met the 5% and 10% REIT asset tests if the value of our 
nonqualifying assets (i) does not exceed the lesser of (a) 1% of the total value of our assets at the end of the applicable 
quarter and (b) $10,000,000, and (ii) we dispose of the nonqualifying assets within (a) six months after the last day of the 
quarter in which the failure to satisfy the asset tests is discovered or (b) the period of time prescribed by Treasury 
regulations to be issued. For violations due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect that are not described in the 
preceding sentence, we may avoid disqualification as a REIT under any of the asset tests, after the 30-day cure period, by 
taking steps including (i) the disposition of the nonqualifying assets to meet the asset test within (a) six months after the 
last day of the quarter in which the failure to satisfy the asset tests is discovered or (b) the period of time prescribed by 
Treasury regulations to be issued, (ii) paying a tax equal to the greater of (a) $50,000 or (b) the highest corporate tax rate 
multiplied by the net income generated by the nonqualifying assets, and (iii) disclosing certain information to the IRS. 
Annual Distribution Requirements. 
To qualify as a REIT, we are required to distribute, on an annual basis, dividends, other than capital gain dividends, to our 
shareholders in an amount at least equal to (1) the sum of (a) 90% of our " REIT taxable income," computed without regard 
to the dividends paid deduction and our net capital gain, and (b) 90% of the net after-tax income, if any, from foreclosure 
property minus (2) the sum of certain items of non-cash income. 
In addition, if we acquire an asset from a C corporation in a carryover basis transaction and dispose of such asset during 
the five-year period beginning on the date on which we acquired that asset, we may be required to distribute at least 90% 
of the after-tax built-in gain, if any, recognized on the disposition of the asset. 
These distributions must be paid in the taxable year to which they relate or may be paid in the following taxable year if 
the distributions are declared before we timely file our tax return for the year to which they relate and are paid on or before 
the first regular dividend payment after the declaration. A special rule applies that permits distributions that are declared 
in October, November or December as of a record date in such month and actually paid in January of the following year 
to be treated as if they were paid on December 31 of the year declared. 
To the extent that we do not distribute all of our net capital gain or distribute at least 90%, but less than 100%, of our REIT 
taxable income, as adjusted, we will have to pay tax on the undistributed amounts at regular ordinary and capital gain 
corporate tax rates. Furthermore, if we fail to distribute during each calendar year at least the sum of (a) 85% of our 
ordinary income for that year, (b) 95% of our capital gain net income for that year, and (c) any undistributed taxable 
income from prior periods, we will have to pay a 4% excise tax on the excess of the required distribution over the sum of 
the amounts actually distributed and retained amounts on which income tax is paid at the corporate level. 
In order for distributions to be counted as satisfying the annual distribution requirement for REITs, and to provide REITs 
with a REIT-level dividends paid deduction, the distributions must not be "preferential dividends." A distribution is not a 
preferential dividend if the distribution is (1) pro rata among all outstanding shares of stock within a particular class and 
(2) in accordance with the preferences among different classes of stock as set forth in the REIT's organizational documents. 
This requirement does not apply to publicly offered REITs, including us, but continues to apply to our subsidiary REITs. 
We intend to satisfy the annual distribution requirements. 

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The calculation of REIT taxable income includes deductions for noncash charges, such as depreciation. Accordingly, we 
anticipate that we generally will have sufficient cash or liquid assets to enable us to satisfy the distribution requirements 
described above. However, from time to time, we may not have sufficient cash or other liquid assets to meet these 
distribution requirements due to timing differences between the actual receipt of income and the actual payment of 
deductible expenses, and the inclusion of income and deduction of expenses for purposes of determining our annual taxable 
income. Further, under Section 451 of the Code, subject to certain exceptions, we must accrue income for U.S. federal 
income tax purposes no later than the time at which such income is taken into account in our consolidated financial 
statements, which could create additional differences between REIT taxable income and the receipt of cash attributable to 
such income. In addition, we may decide to retain our cash, rather than distribute it, to repay debt, acquire assets, or for 
other reasons. If these timing differences occur, we may borrow funds to pay dividends or we may pay dividends through 
the distribution of other property (including our shares) in order to meet the distribution requirements, while preserving 
our cash. Alternatively, subject to certain conditions and limitations, we may declare a taxable dividend payable in cash 
or shares at the election of each shareholder, where the aggregate amount of cash to be distributed with respect to such 
dividend may be subject to limitation. In such case, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, shareholders receiving such 
dividends will be required to include the full amount (both the cash and share component) of the dividend as ordinary 
taxable income to the extent of our current and accumulated earnings and profits. 
Under certain circumstances, we may be able to rectify a failure to meet the distribution requirement for a year by paying 
"deficiency dividends" to shareholders in a later year, which may be included in our deduction for dividends paid for the 
earlier year. Thus, we may be able to avoid being taxed on amounts distributed as deficiency dividends; however, we will 
be required to pay interest based upon the amount of any deduction taken for deficiency dividends. 
Interest Deduction Limitation 
Section 163(j) of the Code limits the deductibility of net interest expense paid or accrued on debt properly allocable to a 
trade or business to 30% of "adjusted taxable income," subject to certain exceptions. Any amount paid or accrued in excess 
of the limitation is carried forward and may be deducted in a subsequent year, again subject to the 30% limitation. Adjusted 
taxable income is determined without regard to certain deductions, including those for net interest expense, and net 
operating loss carryforwards. Beginning with our federal income tax return for the taxable year ended December 31, 2018, 
we made a timely election (which is irrevocable), such that the 30% limitation does not apply. This election is available 
for a trade or business involving real property development, redevelopment, construction, reconstruction, rental, operation, 
acquisition, conversion, disposition, management, leasing or brokerage, within the meaning of Section 469(c)(7)(C) of the 
Code. As a result of this election, depreciable real property (including certain improvements) held by the relevant trade or 
business must be depreciated under the alternative depreciation system under the Code, which generally is less favorable 
than the generally applicable system of depreciation under the Code. If it was subsequently determined that this election 
was not in fact available with respect to all or certain of our business activities, the new interest deduction limitation could 
result in us having more REIT taxable income and, thus, increase the amount of distributions we must make in order to 
comply with the REIT requirements and avoid incurring corporate level income tax. 
Failure to Qualify as a REIT 
If we would otherwise fail to qualify as a REIT because of a violation of one of the requirements described above, our 
qualification as a REIT will not be terminated if the violation is due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect and we 
pay a penalty tax of $50,000 for the violation. The immediately preceding sentence does not apply to a violation of the 
income tests described above or a violation of the asset tests described above, each of which has a specific relief provision 
that is described above. 
If we fail to qualify for taxation as a REIT in any taxable year, and the relief provisions described above do not apply, we 
would be subject to tax on our taxable income at regular corporate tax rates. We cannot deduct distributions to holders of 
our shares in any year in which we are not a REIT, nor would we be required to make distributions in such a year. We 
would possibly also be subject to certain taxes enacted by the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 that are applicable to non-
REIT corporations, including the nondeductible 1% excise tax on certain stock repurchases. As a result, we anticipate that 
our failure to qualify as a REIT would reduce the funds available for distribution by us to our shareholders. In addition, if 
we fail to qualify as a REIT, all distributions to our shareholders will be taxable as regular corporate dividends to such 

123 
shareholders to the extent of current and accumulated earnings and profits (as determined for U.S. federal income tax 
purposes). Such dividends paid to U.S. holders of our shares that are individuals, trusts and estates may be taxable at the 
preferential income tax rates (i.e., the 23.8% maximum U.S. federal rate for capital gain, which rate takes into account the 
maximum capital gain rate of 20% and the 3.8% Medicare tax on net investment income, described below under "-Net 
Investment Income Tax") for qualified dividends. Such dividends, however, would not be eligible for the 20% deduction 
on "qualified" REIT dividends allowed by Section 199A of the Code generally available to U.S. holders of our shares that 
are individuals, trusts or estates for taxable years beginning before January 1, 2026. In addition, in a case where we did 
not qualify to be taxed as a REIT, corporate distributees may be eligible for the dividends received deduction, subject to 
the limitations of the Code. Unless we are entitled to relief under specific statutory provisions, we also will be disqualified 
from re-electing to be taxed as a REIT for the four taxable years following the year during which we lose our qualification. 
It is not possible to state whether, in all circumstances, we will be entitled to this statutory relief. 
In connection with the distribution of JBG SMITH by Vornado and the combination, we received an opinion of Sullivan & 
Cromwell LLP and an opinion of Hogan Lovells US LLP to the effect that we were organized in conformity with the 
requirements for qualification and taxation as a REIT under the Code, and that our proposed method of operation enabled 
us to meet the requirements for qualification and taxation as a REIT commencing with our taxable year ended 
December 31, 2017. In addition, we received an opinion of Hogan Lovells US LLP with respect to each REIT that was 
contributed to JBG SMITH LP by JBG in the combination, and we and JBG received an opinion of Sullivan & 
Cromwell LLP with respect to each REIT that was contributed by VRLP to JBG SMITH LP, in each case to the effect that 
each such REIT had been organized and had operated in conformity with the requirements for qualification and taxation 
as a REIT under the Code, and that its actual method of operation enabled such REIT to meet up to the date of the 
distribution, and its proposed method of operation would enable such REIT to continue to meet following the date of the 
distribution, the requirements for qualification and taxation as a REIT under the Code. 
Taxation of U.S. Shareholders 
Taxation of Taxable U.S. Shareholders 
As used in this section, the term "U.S. shareholder" means a holder of our shares who, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, 
is: 
• 
a citizen or resident of the United States; 
• 
a domestic corporation; 
• 
an estate whose income is subject to U.S. federal income taxation regardless of its source; or 
• 
a trust if a United States court can exercise primary supervision over the trust's administration and one or more 
United States persons have authority to control all substantial decisions of the trust. 
Taxation of Dividends. 
As long as we qualify as a REIT, distributions made by us out of our current or accumulated earnings and profits, and not 
designated by us as capital gain dividends, will constitute dividends that are taxable to our taxable U.S. shareholders as 
ordinary income. 
Noncorporate U.S. shareholders will generally not be entitled to the preferential tax rate (currently 23.8%, inclusive of the 
3.8% net investment income tax) applicable to certain types of dividends that give rise to "qualified dividend income," 
except with respect to the portion of any distribution (a) that represents income from dividends we received from a 
corporation in which we own shares to the extent that such dividends would be eligible for the lower rate on dividends if 
paid by the corporation to its individual shareholders, (b) that is equal to the sum of our REIT taxable income (taking into 
account the dividends paid deduction available to us) and certain net built-in gain with respect to property acquired from 
a C corporation in certain transactions in which we must adopt the basis of the asset in the hands of the C corporation for 
our previous taxable year and less any taxes paid by us during our previous taxable year, or (c) that represents earnings 
and profits that were accumulated by us in a prior non-REIT taxable year, in each case, provided that certain holding period 

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and other requirements are satisfied at both the REIT and individual shareholder level. For taxable years prior to January 1, 
2026, our U.S. shareholders that are individuals, trusts or estates may deduct 20% of the aggregate amount of ordinary 
dividends distributed by us, subject to certain limitations, pursuant to the temporary 20% deduction allowed by 
Section 199A of the Code. Such noncorporate U.S. shareholders should consult their tax advisors to determine the impact 
of tax rates on dividends received from us. 
Our distributions will not be eligible for the dividends received deduction in the case of U.S. shareholders that are 
corporations. Our distributions that we properly designate as capital gain dividends will be taxable to U.S. shareholders as 
gain from the sale of a capital asset held for more than one year, to the extent that they do not exceed our actual net capital 
gain for the taxable year, without regard to the period for which a U.S. shareholder has held its shares. Thus, with certain 
limitations, capital gain dividends received by an individual U.S. shareholder may be eligible for preferential rates of 
taxation. U.S. shareholders that are corporations may, however, be required to treat up to 20% of certain capital gain 
dividends as ordinary income. The maximum amount of dividends that may be designated by us as capital gain dividends 
and as "qualified dividend income" with respect to any taxable year may not exceed the dividends paid by us with respect 
to such year, including dividends paid by us in the succeeding taxable year that relate back to the prior taxable year for 
purposes of determining our dividends paid deduction. Capital gains attributable to the sale of depreciable real property 
held for more than twelve months are subject to a 25% maximum U.S. federal income tax rate for taxpayers who are taxed 
as individuals, to the extent of previously claimed depreciation deductions. In addition, the IRS has been granted authority 
to prescribe regulations or other guidance requiring the proportionality of the designation for particular types of dividends 
(for example, capital gain dividends) among REIT shares. 
To the extent that we make ordinary distributions in excess of our current and accumulated earnings and profits, these 
distributions will be treated first as a tax-free return of capital to each U.S. shareholder. Thus, these distributions will 
reduce the adjusted basis which the U.S. shareholder has in its shares for tax purposes by the amount of the distribution, 
but not below zero. Distributions in excess of a U.S. shareholder's adjusted basis in its shares will be taxable as capital 
gain, provided that the shares have been held as a capital asset. For purposes of determining the portion of distributions on 
separate classes of shares that will be treated as dividends for federal income tax purposes, current and accumulated 
earnings and profits will be allocated first to distributions attributable to the priority rights of preferred shares before being 
allocated to other distributions. 
Dividends authorized by us in October, November or December of any year and payable to a shareholder of record on a 
specified date in any of those months will be treated as both paid by us and received by the shareholder on December 31 
of that year, provided that we actually pay the dividend on or before January 31 of the following calendar year but only to 
the extent of earnings and profits in that year. Shareholders may not include in their own income tax returns any of our net 
operating losses or capital losses. 
We may make distributions to our shareholders that are paid in shares. These distributions would be intended to be treated 
as dividends for U.S. federal income tax purposes and a U.S. shareholder would, therefore, generally have taxable income 
with respect to such distributions of shares and may have a tax liability on account of such distribution in excess of the 
cash (if any) that is received. 
U.S. shareholders holding shares at the close of our taxable year will be required to include, in computing their long-term 
capital gains for the taxable year in which the last day of our taxable year falls, the amount of our undistributed net capital 
gain that we designate in a written notice distributed to our shareholders. We may not designate amounts in excess of our 
undistributed net capital gain for the taxable year. Each U.S. shareholder required to include the designated amount in 
determining the shareholder's long-term capital gains will be deemed to have paid, in the taxable year of the inclusion, the 
tax paid by us in respect of the undistributed net capital gains. U.S. shareholders to whom these rules apply will be allowed 
a credit or a refund, as the case may be, for the tax they are deemed to have paid. U.S. shareholders will increase their 
basis in their shares by the difference between the amount of the includible gains and the tax deemed paid by the 
shareholder in respect of these gains. 
Distributions made by us and gain arising from a U.S. shareholder's sale or exchange of shares will not be treated as passive 
activity income. As a result, U.S. shareholders generally will not be able to apply any passive losses against that income 
or gain. 

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Distributions to Holders of Depositary Shares. Owners of depositary shares will be treated for U.S. federal income tax 
purposes as if they were owners of the underlying preferred shares represented by such depositary shares. Accordingly, 
such owners will be entitled to take into account, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, income and deductions to which 
they would be entitled if they were direct holders of underlying preferred shares. In addition, (i) no gain or loss will be 
recognized for U.S. federal income tax purposes upon the withdrawal of certificates evidencing the underlying preferred 
shares in exchange for depositary receipts, (ii) the tax basis of each share of the underlying preferred shares to an 
exchanging owner of depositary shares will, upon such exchange, be the same as the aggregate tax basis of the depositary 
shares exchanged therefor, and (iii) the holding period for the underlying preferred shares in the hands of an exchanging 
owner of depositary shares will include the period during which such person owned such depositary shares. 
Sale or Exchange of Shares 
When a U.S. shareholder sells or otherwise disposes of shares, the shareholder will recognize gain or loss for U.S. federal 
income tax purposes in an amount equal to the difference between (a) the amount of cash and the fair market value of any 
property received on the sale or other disposition, and (b) the holder's adjusted basis in the shares for tax purposes. This 
gain or loss will be capital gain or loss if the U.S. shareholder has held the shares as a capital asset. The gain or loss will 
be long-term gain or loss if the U.S. shareholder has held the shares for more than one year. Long-term capital gain of an 
individual U.S. shareholder is generally taxed at preferential rates. In general, any loss recognized by a U.S. shareholder 
when the shareholder sells or otherwise disposes of our shares that the shareholder has held for nine months or less, after 
applying certain holding period rules, will be treated as a long-term capital loss, to the extent of distributions received by 
the shareholder from us which were required to be treated as long-term capital gains. 
The IRS has the authority to prescribe, but has not yet prescribed, Treasury Regulations that would apply a capital gain 
tax rate of 25% (which is higher than the long-term capital gain tax rate for noncorporate U.S. shareholders) to all or a 
portion of capital gain realized by a noncorporate U.S. shareholder on the sale of shares of our shares that would correspond 
to the U.S. shareholder's share of our "unrecaptured Section 1250 gain." U.S. shareholders should consult with their tax 
advisors with respect to their capital gain tax liability. 
Redemption of Preferred Shares and Depositary Shares. 
We do not currently have any preferred shares outstanding, but if we were to issue preferred shares in the future, the 
following would apply to a redemption of those preferred shares. 
Whenever we redeem any preferred shares held by the depositary, the depositary will redeem as of the same redemption 
date the number of depositary shares representing the preferred shares so redeemed. The treatment accorded to any 
redemption by us for cash (as distinguished from a sale, exchange or other disposition) of our preferred shares to a holder 
of such preferred shares can only be determined on the basis of the particular facts as to each holder at the time of 
redemption. In general, a holder of our preferred shares will recognize capital gain or loss measured by the difference 
between the amount received by the holder of such shares upon the redemption and such holder's adjusted tax basis in the 
preferred shares redeemed (provided the preferred shares are held as a capital asset) if such redemption (i) is "not 
essentially equivalent to a dividend" with respect to the holder of the preferred shares under Section 302(b)(1) of the Code, 
(ii) is a "substantially disproportionate" redemption with respect to the shareholder under Section 302(b)(2) of the Code, 
or (iii) results in a "complete termination" of the holder's interest in all classes of our shares under Section 302(b)(3) of the 
Code. In applying these tests, there must be taken into account not only any series or class of the preferred shares being 
redeemed, but also such holder's ownership of other classes of our shares and any options (including stock purchase rights) 
to acquire any of the foregoing. The holder of our preferred shares also must take into account any such securities 
(including options) which are considered to be owned by such holder by reason of the constructive ownership rules set 
forth in Sections 318 and 302(c) of the Code. 
If the holder of preferred shares owns (actually or constructively) none of our voting shares, or owns an insubstantial 
amount of our voting shares, based upon current law, it is probable that the redemption of preferred shares from such a 
holder would be considered to be "not essentially equivalent to a dividend." However, whether a distribution is "not 
essentially equivalent to a dividend" depends on all of the facts and circumstances, and a holder of our preferred shares 

126 
intending to rely on any of these tests at the time of redemption should consult its tax advisor to determine their application 
to its particular situation. 
Satisfaction of the "substantially disproportionate" and "complete termination" exceptions is dependent upon compliance 
with the respective objective tests set forth in Section 302(b)(2) and Section 302(b)(3) of the Code. A distribution to a 
holder of preferred shares will be "substantially disproportionate" if the percentage of our outstanding voting shares 
actually and constructively owned by the shareholder immediately following the redemption of preferred shares (treating 
preferred shares redeemed as not outstanding) is less than 80% of the percentage of our outstanding voting shares actually 
and constructively owned by the shareholder immediately before the redemption, and immediately following the 
redemption the shareholder actually and constructively owns less than 50% of the total combined voting power of the 
Company. Because the Company's preferred shares are nonvoting shares, a shareholder would have to reduce such holder's 
holdings (if any) in our classes of voting shares to satisfy this test. 
If the redemption does not meet any of the tests under Section 302 of the Code, then the redemption proceeds received 
from our preferred shares will be treated as a distribution on our shares as described under "-Taxation of U.S. Shareholders-
Taxation of Taxable U.S. Shareholders-Taxation of Dividends.," and "-Taxation of Non-U.S. Shareholders." If the 
redemption of a holder's preferred shares is taxed as a dividend, the adjusted basis of such holder's redeemed preferred 
shares will be transferred to any other shares held by the holder. If the holder owns no other shares, under certain 
circumstances, such basis may be transferred to a related person, or it may be lost entirely. 
Backup Withholding and Information Reporting 
In general, information reporting requirements will apply to payments of dividends on and payments of the proceeds of 
the sale of our shares held by U.S. shareholders, unless an exception applies. The applicable withholding agent is required 
to withhold tax on such payments if (i) the payee fails to furnish a TIN to the payor or to establish an exemption from 
backup withholding, or (ii) the IRS notifies the payor that the TIN furnished by the payee is incorrect. In addition, the 
applicable withholding agent with respect to the dividends on our shares is required to withhold tax if (i) there has been a 
notified payee under-reporting with respect to interest, dividends or original issue discount described in Section 3406(c) of 
the Code, or (ii) there has been a failure of the payee to certify under the penalty of perjury that the payee is not subject to 
backup withholding under the Code. A U.S. shareholder that does not provide the applicable withholding agent with a 
correct TIN may also be subject to penalties imposed by the IRS. In addition, we may be required to withhold a portion of 
capital gain distributions to any U.S. shareholders who fail to certify their U.S. status to us. 
Some U.S. shareholders, including corporations, may be exempt from backup withholding. Any amounts withheld under 
the backup withholding rules from a payment to a U.S. shareholder will be allowed as a credit against the U.S. shareholder's 
U.S. federal income tax and may entitle the shareholder to a refund, provided that the required information is furnished to 
the IRS. The applicable withholding agent will be required to furnish annually to the IRS and to U.S. shareholders of our 
shares information relating to the amount of dividends paid on our shares, and that information reporting may also apply 
to payments of proceeds from the sale of our shares. Some U.S. shareholders, including corporations, financial institutions 
and certain tax-exempt organizations, are generally not subject to information reporting. 
Net Investment Income Tax 
A U.S. shareholder that is an individual or estate, or a trust that does not fall into a special class of trusts that is exempt 
from such tax, is subject to a 3.8% tax on the lesser of (1) the U.S. shareholder's "net investment income" (or "undistributed 
net investment income" in the case of an estate or trust) for the relevant taxable year and (2) the excess of the U.S. 
shareholder's modified adjusted gross income for the taxable year over a certain threshold (which in the case of individuals 
is between $125,000 and $250,000, depending on the individual's circumstances). A holder's net investment income 
generally includes its dividend income and its net gains from the disposition of REIT shares, unless such dividends or net 
gains are derived in the ordinary course of the conduct of a trade or business (other than a trade or business that consists 
of certain passive or trading activities). The temporary 20% deduction allowed by Section 199A of the Code with respect 
to ordinary REIT dividends received by noncorporate taxpayers is allowed only for purposes of Chapter 1 of the Code 
and, thus, apparently is not allowed as a deduction allocable to such dividends for purposes of determining the amount of 
net investment income subject to the 3.8% Medicare tax, which is imposed under Chapter 2A of the Code. If you are a 

127 
U.S. shareholder that is an individual, estate or trust, you are urged to consult your tax advisors regarding the applicability 
of the Medicare tax to your income and gains in respect of your investment in our shares. 
Taxation of Tax-Exempt Shareholders 
The IRS has ruled that amounts distributed as dividends by a REIT generally do not constitute unrelated business taxable 
income when received by a tax-exempt entity. Based on that ruling, provided that a tax-exempt shareholder is not one of 
the types of entity described below and has not held its shares as "debt financed property" within the meaning of the Code, 
the dividend income from shares will not be unrelated business taxable income to a tax-exempt shareholder. Similarly, 
income from the sale of shares will not constitute unrelated business taxable income unless the tax-exempt shareholder 
has held the shares as "debt financed property" within the meaning of the Code or has used the shares in a trade or business. 
Notwithstanding the above paragraph, tax-exempt shareholders will be required to treat as unrelated business taxable 
income any dividends paid by us that are allocable to our "excess inclusion" income, if any. 
Income from an investment in our shares will constitute unrelated business taxable income for tax-exempt shareholders 
that are social clubs, voluntary employee benefit associations, supplemental unemployment benefit trusts, and qualified 
group legal services plans exempt from U.S. federal income taxation under the applicable subsections of Section 501(c) of 
the Code, unless the organization is able to properly deduct amounts set aside or placed in reserve for certain purposes so 
as to offset the income generated by its shares. Prospective investors of the types described in the preceding sentence 
should consult their tax advisors concerning these "set aside" and reserve requirements. 
Notwithstanding the foregoing, however, a portion of the dividends paid by a "pension-held REIT" will be treated as 
unrelated business taxable income to any trust which: 
• 
is described in Section 401(a) of the Code; 
• 
is tax-exempt under Section 501(a) of the Code; and 
• 
holds more than 10% (by value) of the equity interests in the REIT. 
Tax-exempt pension, profit-sharing and stock bonus funds that are described in Section 401(a) of the Code are referred to 
below as "qualified trusts." A REIT is a "pension-held REIT" if: 
• 
it would not have qualified as a REIT but for the fact that Section 856(h)(3) of the Code provides that stock owned 
by qualified trusts will be treated, for purposes of the "not closely held" requirement, as owned by the beneficiaries 
of the trust (rather than by the trust itself); and 
• 
either (a) at least one qualified trust holds more than 25% by value of the interests in the REIT or (b) one or more 
qualified trusts, each of which owns more than 10% by value of the interests in the REIT, hold in the aggregate 
more than 50% by value of the interests in the REIT. 
The percentage of any REIT dividend treated as unrelated business taxable income to a qualifying trust is equal to the ratio 
of (a) the gross income of the REIT from unrelated trades or businesses, determined as though the REIT were a qualified 
trust, less direct expenses related to this gross income, to (b) the total gross income of the REIT, less direct expenses related 
to the total gross income. A de minimis exception applies where this percentage is less than 5% for any year. We are not 
and do not expect to be classified as a pension-held REIT. 
The rules described above under the heading "U.S. Shareholders" concerning the inclusion of our designated undistributed 
net capital gains in the income of its shareholders will apply to tax-exempt entities. Thus, tax-exempt entities will be 
allowed a credit or refund of the tax deemed paid by these entities in respect of the includible gains. 

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Taxation of Non-U.S. Shareholders 
The rules governing U.S. federal income taxation of nonresident alien individuals, foreign corporations, foreign 
partnerships and estates or trusts that in either case are not subject to U.S. federal income tax on a net income basis who 
own shares, which we call "non-U.S. shareholders," are complex. The following discussion is only a limited summary of 
these rules. Prospective non-U.S. shareholders should consult with their tax advisors to determine the impact of U.S. 
federal, state and local income tax laws with regard to an investment in our shares, including any reporting requirements. 
Ordinary Dividends 
Distributions, other than distributions that are treated as attributable to gain from sales or exchanges by us of U.S. real 
property interests, as discussed below, and other than distributions designated by us as capital gain dividends, will be 
treated as ordinary income to the extent that they are made out of our current or accumulated earnings and profits. A 
withholding tax equal to 30% of the gross amount of the distribution will ordinarily apply to distributions of this kind to 
non-U.S. shareholders, unless an applicable tax treaty reduces that tax. However, if income from the investment in the 
shares is (i) treated as effectively connected with the non-U.S. shareholder's conduct of a U.S. trade or business or is 
(ii) attributable to a permanent establishment that the non-U.S. shareholder maintains in the United States if that is required 
by an applicable income tax treaty as a condition for subjecting the non-U.S. shareholder to U.S. taxation on a net income 
basis, tax at graduated rates will generally apply to the non-U.S. shareholder in the same manner as U.S. shareholders are 
taxed with respect to dividends, and the 30% branch profits tax may also apply if the shareholder is a foreign corporation. 
We expect to withhold U.S. tax at the rate of 30% on the gross amount of any dividends, other than dividends treated as 
attributable to gain from sales or exchanges of U.S. real property interests and capital gain dividends, paid to a non-U.S. 
shareholder, unless (a) a lower treaty rate applies and the required form evidencing eligibility for that reduced rate is filed 
with us or the appropriate withholding agent or (b) the non-U.S. shareholder files an IRS Form W-8 ECI or a successor 
form with us or the appropriate withholding agent claiming that the distributions are effectively connected with the non-
U.S. shareholder's conduct of a U.S. trade or business and in either case other applicable requirements were met. 
Distributions to a non-U.S. shareholder that are designated by us at the time of distribution as capital gain dividends that 
are not attributable to, or treated as not attributable to, the disposition by us of a U.S. real property interest generally will 
not be subject to U.S. federal income taxation, except as described below. 
If a non-U.S. shareholder receives an allocation of "excess inclusion income" with respect to a REMIC residual interest or 
an interest in a TMP owned by us, the non-U.S. shareholder will be subject to U.S. federal income tax withholding at the 
maximum rate of 30% with respect to such allocation, without reduction pursuant to any otherwise applicable income tax 
treaty. 
Return of Capital 
Distributions in excess of our current and accumulated earnings and profits that are not treated as attributable to the gain 
from our disposition of a U.S. real property interest, will not be taxable to a non-U.S. shareholder to the extent that they 
do not exceed the adjusted basis of the non-U.S. shareholder's shares. Distributions of this kind will instead reduce the 
adjusted basis of the shares. To the extent that distributions of this kind exceed the adjusted basis of a non-U.S. 
shareholder's shares, they will give rise to tax liability if the non-U.S. shareholder otherwise would have to pay tax on any 
gain from the sale or disposition of its shares, as described below. If it cannot be determined at the time a distribution is 
made whether the distribution will be in excess of current and accumulated earnings and profits, withholding will apply to 
the distribution at the rate applicable to dividends. However, the non-U.S. shareholder may seek a refund of these amounts 
from the IRS if it is subsequently determined that the distribution was, in fact, in excess of our current accumulated earnings 
and profits. 
Also, we could potentially be required to withhold at least 15% of any distribution in excess of our current and accumulated 
earnings and profits, even if the non-U.S. shareholder is not liable for U.S. tax on the receipt of that distribution. However, 
a non-U.S. shareholder may seek a refund of these amounts from the IRS if the non-U.S. shareholder's tax liability with 
respect to the distribution is less than the amount withheld. Such withholding should generally not be required if a non-

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U.S. shareholder would not be taxed under the FIRPTA, upon a sale or exchange of shares. See the discussion below under 
"-Sales of Shares." 
Capital Gain Dividends 
Distributions that are attributable to gain from sales or exchanges by us of U.S. real property interests that are paid with 
respect to any class of stock that is regularly traded on an established securities market located in the United States and 
held by a non-U.S. shareholder who does not own more than 10% of such class of stock at any time during the one-year 
period ending on the date of distribution will be treated as a normal distribution by us, and such distributions will be taxed 
as described above in "-Ordinary Dividends." 
Distributions that are not described in the preceding paragraph and are attributable to gain from sales or exchanges by us 
of U.S. real property interests will be taxed to a non-U.S. shareholder under the provisions of FIRPTA. Under this statute, 
these distributions are taxed to a non-U.S. shareholder as if the gain were effectively connected with a U.S. business. Thus, 
non-U.S. shareholders will be taxed on the distributions at the normal capital gain rates applicable to U.S. shareholders, 
subject to any applicable alternative minimum tax. We are required by applicable Treasury regulations under this statute 
to withhold 21% of any distribution that we could designate as a capital gain dividend. However, if we designate as a 
capital gain dividend a distribution made before the day we actually effect the designation, then, although the distribution 
may be taxable to a non-U.S. shareholder, withholding does not apply to the distribution under this statute. Rather, we 
must effectuate the 21% withholding from distributions made on and after the date of the designation, until the distributions 
so withheld equal the amount of the prior distribution designated as a capital gain dividend. The non-U.S. shareholder may 
credit the amount withheld against its U.S. tax liability. 
Share Distributions 
We may make distributions to our shareholders that are paid in shares. These distributions will be intended to be treated 
as dividends for U.S. federal income tax purposes and, accordingly, will be treated in a manner consistent with the 
discussion above in "-Ordinary Dividends" and "Capital Gain Dividends." If we are required to withhold an amount in 
excess of any cash distributed along with the shares, we will retain and sell some of the shares that would otherwise be 
distributed in order to satisfy our withholding obligations. 
Sales of Shares 
Gain recognized by a non-U.S. shareholder upon a sale or exchange of our shares generally will not be taxed under FIRPTA 
if we are a "domestically controlled REIT," defined generally as a REIT less than 50% in value of whose stock is and was 
held directly or indirectly by foreign persons at all times during a specified testing period (for this purpose, if any class of 
a REIT's stock is regularly traded on an established securities market in the United States, a person holding less than 5% 
of such class during the testing period is presumed not to be a foreign person, unless we have actual knowledge otherwise). 
We believe that we are a domestically controlled REIT, but because our common shares are publicly traded, there can be 
no assurance that we in fact will qualify as a domestically-controlled REIT. Assuming that we continue to be a domestically 
controlled REIT, taxation under FIRPTA generally will not apply to the sale of shares. However, gain to which the FIRPTA 
rules do not apply still will be taxable to a non-U.S. shareholder if investment in the shares is treated as effectively 
connected with the non-U.S. shareholder's U.S. trade or business or is attributable to a permanent establishment that the 
non-U.S. shareholder maintains in the United States if that is required by an applicable income tax treaty as a condition 
for subjecting the non-U.S. shareholder to U.S. taxation on a net income basis. In this case, the same treatment will apply 
to the non-U.S. shareholder as to U.S. shareholders with respect to the gain. In addition, gain to which FIRPTA does not 
apply will be taxable to a non-U.S. shareholder if the non-U.S. shareholder is a nonresident alien individual who was 
present in the United States for 183 days or more during the taxable year and has a "tax home" in the United States, or 
maintains an office or a fixed place of business in the United States to which the gain is attributable. In this case, a 30% 
tax will apply to the nonresident alien individual's capital gains. A similar rule will apply to capital gain dividends to which 
FIRPTA does not apply. 
If we do not qualify as a domestically controlled REIT, the tax consequences of a sale of shares by a non-U.S. shareholder 
will depend upon whether such shares are regularly traded on an established securities market and the amount of such 

130 
shares that are held by the non-U.S. shareholder. Specifically, a non-U.S. shareholder that holds a class of shares that is 
traded on an established securities market will only be subject to FIRPTA in respect of a sale of such shares if the 
shareholder owned more than 10% of the shares of such class at any time during a specified period. A non-U.S. shareholder 
that holds a class of our shares that is not traded on an established securities market will only be subject to FIRPTA in 
respect of a sale of such shares if, on the date the shares were acquired by the shareholder, the shares had a fair market 
value greater than the fair market value on that date of 5% of the regularly traded class of our outstanding shares with the 
lowest fair market value. If a non-U.S. shareholder holds a class of our shares that is not regularly traded on an established 
securities market, and subsequently acquires additional interests of the same class, then all such interests must be 
aggregated and valued as of the date of the subsequent acquisition for purposes of the 5% test that is described in the 
preceding sentence. If tax under FIRPTA applies to the gain on the sale of shares, the same treatment would apply to the 
non-U.S. shareholder as to U.S. shareholders with respect to the gain, subject to any applicable alternative minimum tax. 
For purposes of determining the amount of shares owned by a shareholder, complex constructive ownership rules apply. 
You should consult your tax advisors regarding such rules in order to determine your ownership in the relevant period. 
Qualified Shareholders and Qualified Foreign Pension Funds 
Stock of a REIT will not be treated as a U.S. real property interest subject to FIRPTA if the stock is held directly (or 
indirectly through one or more partnerships) by a "qualified shareholder" or "qualified foreign pension fund." Similarly, 
any distribution made to a "qualified shareholder" or "qualified foreign pension fund" with respect to REIT stock will not 
be treated as gain from the sale or exchange of a U.S. real property interest to the extent the stock of the REIT held by 
such qualified shareholder or qualified foreign pension fund is not treated as a U.S. real property interest. 
A "qualified shareholder" generally means a foreign person which (i) (x) is eligible for certain income tax treaty benefits 
and the principal class of interests of which is listed and regularly traded on at least one recognized stock exchange or (y) a 
foreign limited partnership that has an agreement with the United States for the exchange of information with respect to 
taxes, has a class of limited partnership units that is regularly traded on the NYSE or the Nasdaq Stock Market, and such 
units' value is greater than 50% of the value of all the partnership's units; (ii) is a "qualified collective investment vehicle;" 
and (iii) maintains certain records with respect to certain of its owners. A "qualified collective investment vehicle" is a 
foreign person which (i) is entitled, under a comprehensive income tax treaty, to certain reduced withholding rates with 
respect to ordinary dividends paid by a REIT even if such person holds more than 10% of the stock of the REIT; (ii) (x) is 
a publicly traded partnership that is not treated as a corporation, (y) is a withholding foreign partnership for purposes of 
chapters 3, 4 and 61 of the Code, and (z) if the foreign partnership were a United States corporation, it would be a United 
States real property holding corporation, at any time during the five-year period ending on the date of disposition of, or 
distribution with respect to, such partnership's interest in a REIT; or (iii) is designated as a qualified collective investment 
vehicle by the Secretary of the Treasury and is either fiscally transparent within the meaning of Section 894 of the Code 
or is required to include dividends in its gross income, but is entitled to a deduction for distribution to a person holding 
interests (other than interests solely as a creditor) in such foreign person. 
Notwithstanding the foregoing, if a foreign investor in a qualified shareholder directly or indirectly, whether or not by 
reason of such investor's ownership interest in the qualified shareholder, holds more than 10% of the stock of the REIT, 
then a portion of the REIT stock held by the qualified shareholder (based on the foreign investor's percentage ownership 
of the qualified shareholder) will be treated as a U.S. real property interest in the hands of the qualified shareholder and 
will be subject to FIRPTA. 
A "qualified foreign pension fund" is any trust, corporation, or other organization or arrangement (A) which is created or 
organized under the law of a country other than the United States, (B) which is established (i) by such country (or one or 
more political subdivisions thereof) to provide retirement or pension benefits to participants or beneficiaries that are current 
or former employees (including self-employed individuals) or persons designated by such employees, as a result of services 
rendered by such employees to their employers or (ii) by one or more employers to provide retirement or pension benefits 
to participants or beneficiaries that are current or former employees (including self-employed individuals) or persons 
designated by such employees in consideration for services rendered by such employees to such employers, (C) which 
does not have a single participant or beneficiary with a right to more than 5% of its assets or income, (D) which is subject 
to government regulation and with respect to which annual information about its beneficiaries is provided, or is otherwise 
available, to the relevant tax authorities in the country in which it is established or operates, and (E) with respect to which, 

131 
under the laws of the country in which it is established or operates, (i) contributions to such organization or arrangement 
that would otherwise be subject to tax under such laws are deductible or excluded from the gross income of such entity or 
arrangement or taxed at a reduced rate, or (ii) taxation of any investment income of such organization or arrangement is 
deferred or such income is excluded from the gross income of such entity or arrangement or is taxed at a reduced rate. 
Federal Estate Taxes 
Shares held by a non-U.S. shareholder at the time of death will be included in the shareholder's gross estate for U.S. federal 
estate tax purposes unless an applicable estate tax treaty provides otherwise. 
Backup Withholding and Information Reporting 
Generally, information reporting will apply to payments of interest and dividends on our shares, and backup withholding 
described above for a U.S. shareholder will apply, unless the payee certifies that it is not a U.S. person or otherwise 
establishes an exemption. 
The payment of the proceeds from the disposition of our shares to or through the U.S. office of a U.S. or foreign broker 
will be subject to information reporting and backup withholding as described above for U.S. shareholders unless the non-
U.S. shareholder satisfies the requirements necessary to be an exempt non-U.S. shareholder or otherwise qualifies for an 
exemption. The proceeds of a disposition by a non-U.S. shareholder of our shares to or through a foreign office of a broker 
generally will not be subject to information reporting or backup withholding. However, if the broker is a U.S. person, a 
controlled foreign corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes, a foreign person 50% or more of whose gross income 
from all sources for specified periods is from activities that are effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business, a 
foreign partnership if partners who hold more than 50% of the interest in the partnership are U.S. persons, or a foreign 
partnership that is engaged in the conduct of a trade or business in the U.S., then information reporting generally will apply 
as though the payment was made through a U.S. office of a U.S. or foreign broker. 
Taxation of Holders of Our Warrants and Rights 
We do not currently have any warrants or rights outstanding, but if we were in the future, the follow treatment would apply 
to the holders of those warrants or rights. 
Warrants. Holders of our warrants will not generally recognize gain or loss upon the exercise of a warrant. A holder's basis 
in the common shares, preferred shares, or depositary shares representing preferred shares, as the case may be, received 
upon the exercise of the warrant will be equal to the sum of the holder's adjusted tax basis in the warrant and the exercise 
price paid. A holder's holding period in the common shares, preferred shares, or depositary shares representing preferred 
shares, as the case may be, received upon the exercise of the warrant will not include the period during which the warrant 
was held by the holder. Upon the expiration of a warrant, the holder will recognize a capital loss in an amount equal to the 
holder's adjusted tax basis in the warrant. Upon the sale or exchange of a warrant to a person other than us, a holder will 
recognize gain or loss in an amount equal to the difference between the amount realized on the sale or exchange and the 
holder's adjusted tax basis in the warrant. Such gain or loss will be capital gain or loss and will be long-term capital gain 
or loss if the warrant was held for more than one year. Upon the sale of the warrant to us, the IRS may argue that the holder 
should recognize ordinary income on the sale. Prospective holders of our warrants should consult their own tax advisors 
as to the consequences of a sale of a warrant to us. 
Rights. In the event of a rights offering, the tax consequences of the receipt, expiration, and exercise of the rights we issue 
will be addressed in detail in a prospectus supplement. Prospective holders of our rights should review the applicable 
prospectus supplement in connection with the ownership of any rights, and consult their own tax advisors as to the 
consequences of investing in the rights. 

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Dividend Reinvestment and Share Purchase Plan 
General 
We offer shareholders and prospective shareholders the opportunity to participate in our Dividend Reinvestment and Share 
Purchase Plan, which is referred to herein as the "DRIP." 
Although we do not currently offer any discount in connection with the DRIP, nor do we plan to offer such a discount at 
present, we reserve the right to offer in the future a discount on shares purchased, not to exceed 5%, with reinvested 
dividends or cash distributions and shares purchased through the optional cash investment feature. This discussion assumes 
that we do not offer a discount in connection with the DRIP. If we were to offer a discount in connection with the DRIP 
the tax considerations described below would materially differ. In the event that we offer a discount in connection with 
the DRIP, shareholders are urged to consult with their tax advisors regarding the tax treatment to them of receiving a 
discount. 
Amounts Treated as a Distribution 
Generally, a DRIP participant will be treated as having received a distribution with respect to our shares for U.S. federal 
income tax purposes in an amount determined as described below. 
• 
A shareholder who participates in the dividend reinvestment feature of the DRIP and whose dividends are 
reinvested in our shares purchased from us will generally be treated for U.S. federal income tax purposes as 
having received the gross amount of any cash distributions which would have been paid by us to such a 
shareholder had they not elected to participate. The amount of the distribution deemed received will be reported 
on the Form 1099-DIV received by the shareholder. 
• 
A shareholder who participates in the dividend reinvestment feature of the DRIP and whose dividends are 
reinvested in our shares purchased in the open market, will generally be treated for U.S. federal income tax 
purposes as having received (and will receive a Form 1099-DIV reporting) the gross amount of any cash 
distributions which would have been paid by us to such a shareholder had they not elected to participate (plus 
any brokerage fees and any other expenses deducted from the amount of the distribution reinvested) on the date 
the dividends are reinvested. 
We will pay the annual maintenance cost for each shareholder's DRIP account. Consistent with the conclusion reached by 
the IRS in a private letter ruling issued to another REIT, we intend to take the position that the administrative costs do not 
constitute a distribution which is either taxable to a shareholder or which would reduce the shareholder's basis in their 
common shares. However, because the private letter ruling was not issued to us, we have no legal right to rely on its 
conclusions. Thus, it is possible that the IRS might view the shareholder's share of the administrative costs as constituting 
a taxable distribution to them and/or a distribution which reduces the basis in their shares. For this and other reasons, we 
may in the future take a different position with respect to these costs. 
In the situations described above, a shareholder will be treated as receiving a distribution from us even though no cash 
distribution is actually received. These distributions will be taxable in the same manner as all other distributions paid by 
us, as described above under "-Taxation of U.S. Shareholders-Taxation of Taxable U.S. Shareholders," "-Taxation of U.S. 
Shareholders -Taxation of Tax-Exempt Shareholders," or "-Taxation of Non-U.S. Shareholders," as applicable. 
Basis and Holding Period in Shares Acquired Pursuant to the DRIP. The tax basis for our shares acquired by reinvesting 
cash distributions through the DRIP generally will equal the fair market value of our shares on the date of distribution 
(plus the amount of any brokerage fees paid by the shareholder). The holding period for our shares acquired by reinvesting 
cash distributions will begin on the day following the date of distribution. 
The tax basis in our shares acquired through an optional cash investment generally will equal the cost paid by the 
participant in acquiring our shares, including any brokerage fees paid by the shareholder. The holding period for our shares 

133 
purchased through the optional cash investment feature of the DRIP generally will begin on the day our shares are 
purchased for the participant's account. 
Withdrawal of Shares from the DRIP. When a participant withdraws stock from the DRIP and receives whole shares, the 
participant will not realize any taxable income. However, if the participant receives cash for a fractional share, the 
participant will be required to recognize gain or loss with respect to that fractional share. 
Effect of Withholding Requirements. Withholding requirements generally applicable to distributions from us will apply to 
all amounts treated as distributions pursuant to the DRIP. See "-Backup Withholding and Information Reporting" for 
discussion of the withholding requirements that apply to other distributions that we pay. All withholding amounts will be 
withheld from distributions before the distributions are reinvested under the DRIP. Therefore, if a U.S. shareholder is 
subject to withholding, distributions which would otherwise be available for reinvestment under the DRIP will be reduced 
by the withholding amount. 
Withholdable Payments to Foreign Financial Entities and Other Foreign Entities 
Pursuant to Sections 1471 through 1474 of the Code, commonly known as FATCA, a 30% FATCA withholding may be 
imposed on U.S.-source dividends paid to you or to certain foreign financial institutions, investment funds and other non-
U.S. persons receiving payments on your behalf if you or such persons fail to comply with information reporting 
requirements. Payments of dividends that you receive in respect of our shares could be affected by this withholding if you 
are subject to the FATCA information reporting requirements and fail to comply with them or if you hold shares through 
a non-U.S. person (e.g., a foreign bank or broker) that fails to comply with these requirements (even if payments to you 
would not otherwise have been subject to FATCA withholding). An intergovernmental agreement between the United 
States and an applicable non-U.S. government may modify these rules. You should consult your tax advisors regarding 
the relevant U.S. law and other official guidance on FATCA withholding. 
Other Tax Consequences 
State and Local Taxes 
State or local taxation may apply to us and our shareholders in various state or local jurisdictions, including those in which 
we or they transact business or reside. The state and local tax treatment of us and our shareholders may not conform to the 
U.S. federal income tax consequences discussed above. Consequently, prospective shareholders should consult their tax 
advisors regarding the effect of state and local tax laws on an investment in us. 
Legislative or Other Actions Affecting REITs 
The rules dealing with U.S. federal income taxation are constantly under review by persons involved in the legislative 
process and by the IRS and the U.S. Treasury Department. We cannot assure you that a change in law, including the 
possibility of major tax legislation, possibly with retroactive application, will not significantly alter the tax considerations 
(including applicable tax rates) on REITs or their shareholders that we describe herein, which could adversely affect an 
investment in our shares. Taxpayers should consult with their tax advisors regarding the effect of any future legislation on 
their particular circumstances. 
 
Tax Consequences of Exercising the OP Unit Redemption Right 
If you are a holder of OP Units, other than a holder to which special provisions of the U.S. federal income tax laws apply, 
as enumerated above, and you exercise your redemption right under the JBG SMITH LP partnership agreement, we may 
elect to exercise our right to acquire some or all of such OP Units in exchange for cash or our common shares (rather than 
having JBG SMITH LP satisfy your redemption right). However, we are under no obligation to exercise this right. If we 
do elect to acquire your OP Units in exchange for cash or our common shares, the transaction will be treated as a fully 
taxable sale of your OP Units to us. Your amount realized, taxable gain and the tax consequences of that gain are described 
under "- Disposition of OP Units" below. If we do not elect to acquire some or all of your OP Units in exchange for our 
common shares, JBG SMITH LP is required to redeem those OP Units for cash. Your amount realized, taxable gain and 

134 
the tax consequences of that gain are described under "- Redemption of OP Units" below. In addition, you will need to 
take into account the state and local tax consequences that would apply to you on exercise of your redemption right. 
Redemption of OP Units 
If JBG SMITH LP redeems OP Units for cash contributed by us in order to effect the redemption, the redemption likely 
will be treated as a sale of the OP Units to us in a fully taxable transaction, with your taxable gain and the tax consequences 
of that gain determined as described under "- Disposition of OP Units" below. 
If your OP Units are redeemed for cash that is not contributed by us to effect the redemption, your tax treatment will 
depend upon whether or not the redemption results in a disposition of all of your OP Units. If all of your OP Units are 
redeemed, your taxable gain and the tax consequences of that gain will be determined as described under "- Disposition of 
OP Units" below. However, if less than all of your OP Units are redeemed, you will recognize taxable gain only if and to 
the extent that your amount realized, calculated as described below, on the redemption exceeds your adjusted tax basis in 
all of your OP Units immediately before the redemption (rather than just your adjusted tax basis in the OP Units redeemed), 
and you will not be allowed to recognize loss on the redemption. 
Disposition of OP Units 
If you sell, exchange or otherwise dispose of OP Units (including through the exercise of the OP Unit redemption right 
where the disposition is treated as a sale, as discussed above in "-Redemption of OP Units"), gain or loss from the 
disposition will be based on the difference between the amount realized on the disposition and the adjusted tax basis of 
the OP Units. The amount realized on the disposition of OP Units generally will equal the sum of: any cash received, the 
fair market value of any other property received (including the fair market value of any of our common shares received 
pursuant to the redemption) received, and the amount of liabilities of JBGS SMITH LP allocated to the OP Units. 
You will recognize gain on the disposition of OP Units to the extent that this amount realized exceeds your adjusted tax 
basis in the OP Units. Because the amount realized includes any amount attributable to the relief from liabilities of JBG 
SMITH LP attributable to the OP Units, you could have taxable income, or perhaps even a tax liability, in excess of the 
amount of cash and value of the property received upon the disposition of the OP Units. 
Generally, gain recognized on the disposition of OP Units will be capital gain. However, any portion of your amount 
realized that is attributable to "unrealized receivables" of JBG SMITH LP (as defined in Section 751 of the Code) will 
give rise to ordinary income. The amount of ordinary income recognized would be equal to the amount by which your 
share of "unrealized receivables" of JBG SMITH LP exceeds the portion of your adjusted tax basis that is attributable to 
those assets. Unrealized receivables include, to the extent not previously included in JBG SMITH LP's income, your 
allocable share of any rights held by JBG SMITH LP to payment for services rendered or to be rendered. Unrealized 
receivables also include amounts that would be subject to recapture as ordinary income if JBG SMITH LP were to sell its 
assets at their fair market value at the time of the sale of OP Units. In addition, a portion of the capital gain recognized on 
a sale or other disposition of OP Units may be subject to tax at a maximum rate of 25% to the extent attributable to 
accumulated depreciation on our "section 1250 property," or depreciable real property. 
If you are considering disposing of your OP Units (including through exercise of your redemption right), you should 
consult with your personal tax advisor regarding the tax consequences to you of the disposition in light of your particular 
circumstances, particularly if any of your OP Units were converted from LTIP Units. If you are a holder of OP Units and 
you exercise your redemption right under the JBG SMITH LP partnership agreement, you will be required to reimburse 
the JBG SMITH LP for certain quarterly nonresident partner state income tax payments made on your behalf. 
ITEM 9C. DISCLOSURE REGARDING FOREIGN JURISDICTIONS THAT PREVENT INSPECTIONS 
Not Applicable. 
 
 

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PART III 
ITEM 10. DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 
The information required by Item 10 is incorporated herein by reference from our definitive Proxy Statement to be filed 
pursuant to Regulation 14A of the Exchange Act for our 2025 Annual Meeting of Shareholders to be held on April 24, 
2025 (the "2025 Proxy Statement"). The 2025 Proxy Statement will be filed within 120 days after the end of our fiscal year 
ended December 31, 2024. 
 
ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION 
The information required by Item 11 is incorporated herein by reference from our 2025 Proxy Statement. The 2025 Proxy 
Statement will be filed within 120 days after the end of our fiscal year ended December 31, 2024. 
 
ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT AND 
RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS 
The information required by Item 12 is incorporated herein by reference from our 2025 Proxy Statement. The 2025 Proxy 
Statement will be filed within 120 days after the end of our fiscal year ended December 31, 2024. 
 
ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS, AND DIRECTOR 
INDEPENDENCE 
The information required by Item 13 is incorporated herein by reference from our 2025 Proxy Statement. The 2025 Proxy 
Statement will be filed within 120 days after the end of our fiscal year ended December 31, 2024. 
 
ITEM 14. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTING FEES AND SERVICES 
The information required by Item 14 is incorporated herein by reference from our 2025 Proxy Statement. The 2025 Proxy 
Statement will be filed within 120 days after the end of our fiscal year ended December 31, 2024. 
 
 

136 
PART IV 
ITEM 15. EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES 
(a) The following consolidated information is included in this Form 10-K: 
(1) Consolidated Financial Statements 
 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm 
Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2024 and 2023 
Consolidated Statements of Operations for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022 
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022  
Consolidated Statements of Equity for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022 
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 
 
These consolidated financial statements are set forth in Item 8 of this report and are hereby incorporated by reference. 
(2) Financial Statement Schedules 
9 
 
 
 
     
Page 
Schedule III - Real Estate Investments and Accumulated Depreciation 
 
137 
 
Schedules other than the one listed above are omitted because they are not applicable or the information required is 
included in the consolidated financial statements or the notes thereto. 
 
 

137 
SCHEDULE III 
JBG SMITH PROPERTIES 
REAL ESTATE AND ACCUMULATED DEPRECIATION 
December 31, 2024 
(Dollars in thousands) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
 
     
 
     
 
    
Costs  
     
 
     
 
     
 
     
 
    
 
    
 
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
 
Capitalized  
Gross Amounts at Which Carried 
 Accumulated  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
Initial Cost to Company 
 
 Subsequent   
 at Close of Period 
 
Depreciation  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
Land and 
 Buildings and  
to  
 
Land and 
 Buildings and   
 
 
 and 
 
Date of  
 
Date  
Description 
 Encumbrances(1)  Improvements Improvements Acquisition(2)  Improvements (3) Improvements 
Total 
  Amortization Construction(4) 
Acquired 
Multifamily Operating Assets 
   
   
   
   
   
   
     
  
 
  
 
WestEnd25 
 $ 
 97,500  $ 
 67,049  $ 
 5,039  $ 
 116,329  $ 
 69,232  $ 
 119,185  $  188,417  $ 
 47,525  
2009  
 
2007  
F1RST Residences 
  
 77,512   
 31,064   
 133,256   
 2,108   
 31,091   
 135,337   
 166,428   
 25,961  
2017  
 
2019  
1221 Van Street 
  
 87,253   
 27,386   
 63,775   
 28,998   
 28,300   
 91,859   
 120,159   
 28,210  
2018  
 
2017  
RiverHouse 
Apartments 
  
 307,710   
 118,421   
 125,078   
 105,270   
 139,440   
 209,329   
 348,769   
 106,580  
1960  
 
2007  
The Bartlett 
  
 217,453   
 41,687   
 —   
 229,600   
 42,018   
 229,269   
 271,287   
 52,462  
2016  
 
2007  
220 20th Street 
  
 80,240   
 8,434   
 19,340   
 104,456   
 9,044   
 123,186   
 132,230   
 52,846  
2009  
 
2017  
West Half 
   
 —    
 45,668    
 17,902    
 166,379    
 49,130    
 180,819    
 229,949    
 53,498   
2019  
  
2017  
The Wren 
   
 110,045    
 14,306    
 —    
 141,480    
 17,780    
 138,006    
 155,786    
 29,850   
2020  
  
2017  
900 W Street 
   
 —    
 21,685    
 5,162    
 39,256    
 22,182    
 43,921    
 66,103    
 10,932   
2020  
  
2017  
901 W Street 
   
 —    
 25,992    
 8,790    
 66,244    
 26,956    
 74,070    
 101,026    
 17,317   
2020  
  
2017  
The Batley 
   
 —    
 44,315    
 158,408    
 834    
 44,421    
 159,136    
 203,557    
 17,979   
2019  
  
2021  
2221 S. Clark-
Residential  
   
 —    
 6,185    
 16,981    
 37,288    
 6,545    
 53,909    
 60,454    
 18,848   
1964  
  
2002  
Atlantic Plumbing 
   
 —    
 50,287    
 105,483    
 938    
 50,345    
 106,363    
 156,708    
 11,328   
2016  
  
2022  
The Grace 
  
 136,536   
 7,989   
 25,276   
 180,976   
 11,823   
 202,418   
 214,241   
 8,253  
2023  
 
2002  
Reva 
  
 137,084   
 8,822   
 27,911   
 177,762   
 13,053   
 201,442   
 214,495   
 7,461  
2024  
 
2002  
Commercial Operating Assets 
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
  
  
2121 Crystal Drive 
   
 —    
 21,503    
 87,329    
 67,691    
 24,697    
 151,826     176,523    
 70,046   
1985 
  
2002  
2345 Crystal Drive 
   
 —    
 23,126    
 93,918    
 62,235    
 24,287    
 154,992     179,279    
 87,768   
1988 
  
2002  
2231 Crystal Drive 
   
 —    
 20,611    
 83,705    
 35,060    
 22,062    
 117,314     139,376    
 67,476   
1987 
  
2002  
1550 Crystal Drive 
   
 —    
 22,182    
 70,525    
 190,420    
 42,796    
 240,331     283,127    
 78,387   
1980, 2020   
2002  
2011 Crystal Drive 
   
 —    
 18,940    
 76,921    
 63,490    
 19,976    
 139,375     159,351    
 71,716   
1984 
  
2002  
2451 Crystal Drive 
   
 —    
 11,669    
 68,047    
 53,547    
 12,594    
 120,669     133,263    
 64,550   
1990 
  
2002  
1235 S. Clark Street 
   
 75,140    
 15,826    
 56,090    
 31,131    
 16,753    
 86,294     103,047    
 50,889   
1981 
  
2002  
241 18th Street S. 
   
 —    
 13,867    
 54,169    
 66,124    
 24,076    
 110,084     134,160    
 62,564   
1977 
  
2002  
251 18th Street S. 
   
 —    
 12,305    
 49,360    
 63,663    
 15,589    
 109,739     125,328    
 62,899   
1975 
  
2002  
1215 S. Clark Street 
   
 105,000    
 13,636    
 48,380    
 56,057    
 14,419    
 103,654     118,073    
 59,848   
1983 
  
2002  
201 12th Street S. 
   
 —    
 8,432    
 52,750    
 31,370    
 9,126    
 83,426    
 92,552    
 50,136   
1987 
  
2002  
800 North Glebe Road    
 —    
 28,168    
 140,983    
 6,538    
 28,168    
 147,521     175,689    
 37,432   
2012 
  
2017  
1225 S. Clark Street 
   
 85,000    
 11,176    
 43,495    
 39,790    
 11,825    
 82,636    
 94,461    
 43,984   
1982 
  
2002  
1901 South Bell Street    
 —    
 —    
 36,918    
 (30,382)   
 85    
 6,451    
 6,536    
 506   
1968 
  
2002  
200 12th Street S. 
   
 —    
 8,016    
 30,552    
 15,911    
 8,483    
 45,996    
 54,479    
 28,648   
1985 
  
2002  
Crystal Drive Retail 
   
 —    
 9,300    
 29,774    
 (7,300)   
 8,325    
 23,449    
 31,774    
 16,579   
2003 
  
2004  
One Democracy Plaza    
 —    
 —    
 33,628    
 (27,064)   
 71    
 6,493    
 6,564    
 3,138   
1987 
  
2002  
1770 Crystal Drive 
   
 —    
 10,771    
 44,276    
 72,945    
 14,416    
 113,576     127,992    
 19,183   
1980, 2020   
2002  
Ground Leases 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1700 M Street 
   
 —    
 34,178    
 46,938    
 (26,130)   
 54,986    
 —    
 54,986    
 —   
2024  
 2002, 2006
1831/1861 Wiehle 
Avenue 
  
 —   
 39,529   
 —   
 3,677   
 43,206   
 —   
 43,206   
 —  
1984  
 
2017 
Under-Construction Assets 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
2000/2001 South Bell 
Street (5) 
  
 167,301   
 7,300   
 8,805   
 301,810   
 4,716   
 313,199   
 317,915   
 937  
2024  
 
2002 
Development Pipeline   
 —   
 183,303   
 97,533   
 46,277   
 147,156   
 179,957   
 327,113   
 48,400  
 
 
various 
Corporate 
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
Corporate 
  
 805,000    
 —    
 —    
 17,039    
 —    
 17,039    
 17,039    
 5,847   
 
 
2017 
 
    
   
     
     
     
     
     
   
    
 
 
 
 
   
 2,488,774    
 1,033,128    
 1,966,497    
 2,531,817    
 1,109,172    
 4,422,270     5,531,442    
 1,419,983   
 
 
Held for sale 
      
   
     
     
     
     
     
     
    
    
  
8001 Woodmont 
   
 99,959    
 28,621    
 180,775    
 (18,833)   
 28,158    
 162,405    
 190,563    
 765   
2021  
  
2022  
 
 $ 
 2,588,733  $ 
 1,061,749  $ 
 2,147,272  $  2,512,984  $ 
 1,137,330  $ 
 4,584,675  $ 5,722,005  $  1,420,748   
  
 
 
Note:  Depreciation of the buildings and improvements is calculated over lives ranging from the life of the lease to 40 years. The net basis of our assets and liabilities for tax 
reporting purposes is approximately $657.3 million higher than the amounts reported in our consolidated balance sheet as of December 31, 2024. 
(1) 
Represents the contractual debt obligations. 
(2) 
Includes asset impairments recognized, amounts written off in connection with redevelopment activities and partial sale of assets. 
(3) 
Land associated with buildings under construction was included in construction in progress which is reflected in the Building and Improvements column. 
(4) 
Date of original construction, many assets have had substantial renovation or additional construction. See "Costs Capitalized Subsequent to Acquisition" column. 
(5) 
In November 2024, a portion of 2000/2001 South Bell Street was placed into service. 

138 
The following is a reconciliation of real estate and accumulated depreciation: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year Ended December 31,  
 
     
2024 
     
2023 
     
2022 
Real Estate: (1) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Balance at beginning of the year 
 
$ 
 5,875,162  
$ 
 6,158,082  
$ 
 6,310,361 
Acquisitions 
 
  
 —  
  
 —  
  
 365,166 
Additions 
 
  
 202,602  
  
 347,757  
  
 352,034 
Assets sold or written‑off 
 
  
 (249,016) 
  
 (444,480) 
  
 (869,479)
Real estate impaired (2) 
 
 
 (106,743) 
 
 (186,197) 
 
 — 
Balance at end of the year 
 
$ 
 5,722,005  
$ 
 5,875,162  
$ 
 6,158,082 
Accumulated Depreciation: 
 
  
   
  
   
  
  
Balance at beginning of the year 
 
$ 
 1,338,403  
$ 
 1,335,000  
$ 
 1,368,012 
Depreciation expense 
 
  
 191,020  
  
 187,988  
  
 184,678 
Accumulated depreciation on assets sold or written‑off 
 
  
 (57,359) 
  
 (88,614) 
  
 (217,690)
Accumulated depreciation on real estate impaired (2) 
 
 
 (51,316) 
 
 (95,971) 
 
 — 
Balance at end of the year 
 
$ 
 1,420,748  
$ 
 1,338,403  
$ 
 1,335,000 
 
(1) 
Includes assets held for sale. 
(2) 
In 2024, we determined that 1901 South Bell Street, 2101 L Street, 8001 Woodmont and two development parcels were impaired and recorded an impairment loss 
totaling $55.4 million. In 2023, we determined that 2101 L Street, 2100 Crystal Drive, 2200 Crystal Drive and a development parcel were impaired and recorded an 
impairment loss totaling $90.2 million. See Note 19 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information. 2100 Crystal Drive and 2200 Crystal were taken 
out of service and subsequently reported in the development pipeline in 2024. 
 
 
 

139 
(3) Exhibit Index 
Exhibits 
     
Description 
 
 
 
3.1 
 
Declaration of Trust of JBG SMITH Properties, as amended and restated (incorporated by reference to 
Exhibit 3.1 to our Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on July 21, 2017). 
 
 
 
3.2 
 
Articles Supplementary to Declaration of Trust of JBG SMITH Properties (incorporated by reference to 
Exhibit 3.1 to our Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on March 6, 2018). 
 
 
 
3.3 
 
Articles of Amendment to Declaration of Trust of JBG SMITH Properties (incorporated by reference to 
Exhibit 3.1 to our current report on Form 8-K, filed on May 3, 2018). 
 
 
 
3.4 
 
Second Amended and Restated Bylaws of JBG SMITH Properties, effective August 3, 2023 
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.4 in our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed on August 8, 2023). 
 
 
 
4.1 
 
Description of Securities Registered Pursuant to Section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as 
amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on 
February 20, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.1 
 
Second Amended and Restated Limited Partnership Agreement of JBG SMITH Properties LP, dated as 
of December 17, 2020 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to our Current Report on Form 8-K, 
filed on December 17, 2020). 
 
 
 
10.2 
 
Amendment No. 1 to Second Amended and Restated Limited Partnership Agreement of JBG SMITH 
Properties LP, dated as of April 29, 2021 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to our Registration 
Statement on Form S-3, filed on June 30, 2021). 
 
 
 
10.3 
 
Credit Agreement, dated as of January 14, 2022 by and among JBG SMITH Properties LP, as Borrower, 
the financial institutions party thereto as lenders, and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as 
Administrative Agent (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to our Current Report on Form 8-K, 
filed on January 14, 2022). 
 
 
 
10.4 
 
First Amendment to Credit Agreement, dated as of July 29, 2022, by and among JBG SMITH 
Properties LP, as Borrower, the financial institutions party thereto as lenders, and Wells Fargo Bank, 
National Association, as Administrative Agent (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to our Quarterly 
Report on Form 10-Q, filed on August 2, 2022). 
 
 
 
10.5 
 
Second Amendment to Credit Agreement, dated as of July 24, 2023, by and among JBG SMITH 
Properties LP, as Borrower, the financial institutions party thereto as lenders, and Wells Fargo Bank, 
National Association, as Administrative Agent (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to our Current 
Report on Form 8-K, filed on July 28, 2023). 
 
 
 
10.6 
 
Credit Agreement, dated as of July 29, 2022, by and among JBG SMITH Properties LP, as Borrower, the 
financial institutions party thereto as lenders, and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as 
Administrative Agent (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, 
filed on August 2, 2022). 
 
 
 
10.7 
 
First Amendment to Credit Agreement, dated as of July 24, 2023, by and among JBG SMITH Properties 
LP, as Borrower, the financial institutions party thereto as lenders, and Wells Fargo Bank, National 
Association, as Administrative Agent (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to our Current Report 
on Form - K, filed on July 28, 2023). 
 
 
 

140 
Exhibits 
     
Description 
 
 
 
10.8 
 
Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated as of June 29, 2023, by and among JBG SMITH 
Properties LP, as Borrower, the financial institutions party thereto as lenders, and Bank of America, N.A., 
as administrative agent (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to our Current Report on Form 8-K, 
filed on June 29, 2023). 
 
 
 
10.9† 
 
Form of JBG SMITH Properties Unit Issuance Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.7 to 
our Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on July 21, 2017). 
 
 
 
10.10† 
 
JBG SMITH Properties Non-Employee Trustee Unit Issuance Agreement, dated July 18, 2017, by and 
among, JBG SMITH Properties, JBG SMITH Properties LP, Michael J. Glosserman and Glosserman 
Family JBG Operating, L.L.C. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.8 to our Current Report on 
Form 8-K, filed on July 21, 2017). 
 
 
 
 10.11† 
 
Separation Agreement, dated as of July 31, 2020, by and between JBG SMITH Properties and Robert A. 
Stewart (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to our Current Report on Form 10-Q, filed on 
November 3, 2020). 
 
 
 
10.12† 
 
Form of Indemnification Agreement between JBG SMITH Properties and each of its trustees and 
executive officers (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.12 to our Current Report on Form 8-K, filed 
on July 21, 2017). 
 
 
 
10.13† 
 
JBG SMITH Properties 2017 Employee Share Purchase Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.9 
to our Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on July 21, 2017). 
 
 
 
10.14† 
 
Amendment No. 1 to the JBG SMITH Properties 2017 Employee Share Purchase Plan, effective 
January 1, 2018 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.20 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed 
on March 12, 2018). 
 
 
 
10.15† 
 
JBG SMITH Properties 2017 Omnibus Share Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.5 to our 
Form S-8, filed on April 30, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.16† 
 
Form of JBG SMITH Properties Formation Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.18 
to our Registration Statement on Form 10, filed on June 12, 2017). 
 
 
 
10.17† 
 
Form of JBG SMITH Properties Formation Unit Agreement for Non-Employee Trustees (incorporated 
by reference to Exhibit 10.19 to our Registration Statement on Form 10, filed on June 12, 2017). 
 
 
 
10.18† 
 
Form of JBG SMITH Properties Restricted LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to 
Exhibit 10.20 to our Registration Statement on Form 10, filed on June 12, 2017). 
 
 
 
10.19† 
 
Form of JBG SMITH Properties Performance LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to 
Exhibit 10.21 to our Registration Statement on Form 10, filed on June 12, 2017). 
 
 
 
10.20† 
 
Form of Second Amended and Restated 2017 JBG SMITH Properties Performance LTIP Unit Agreement 
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to our Current Report on Form 10-Q, filed on August 4, 2020). 
 
 
 
10.21† 
 
Form of 2018 Performance LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.26 to our 
Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on March 12, 2018). 
 
 
 
10.22† 
 
Form of July 2021 Performance LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to our 
Current Report on Form 10-Q, filed on August 3, 2021). 

141 
Exhibits 
     
Description 
 
 
 
 
 
 
10.23† 
 
Amended Form of July 2021 Performance LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 
10.2 to our Current Report on Form 10-Q, filed on November 2, 2021). 
 
 
 
10.24† 
 
Form of JBG SMITH Properties Non-Employee Trustee Restricted LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated 
by reference to Exhibit 10.22 to our Registration Statement on Form 10, filed on June 21, 2017). 
 
 
 
10.25† 
 
Form of JBG SMITH Properties Non-Employee Trustee Restricted Stock Agreement (incorporated by 
reference to Exhibit 10.23 to our Registration Statement on Form 10, filed on June 21, 2017). 
 
 
 
10.26† 
 
Form of JBG SMITH Properties Non-Employee Trustee Unit Issuance Agreement (incorporated by 
reference to Exhibit 10.24 to our Registration Statement on Form 10, filed on June 21, 2017). 
 
 
 
10.27† 
 
Amendment No. 1 to the JBG SMITH Properties 2017 Omnibus Share Plan, effective February 18, 2020 
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.6 to our Form S-8, filed on April 30, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.28† 
 
Amendment No. 2 to the JBG SMITH Properties 2017 Employee Share Purchase Plan, effective May 1, 
2019 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.31 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on March 5, 
2020). 
 
 
 
10.29† 
 
Amendment No. 3 to the 2017 Employee Share Purchase Plan, effective July 20, 2020 (incorporated by 
reference to Exhibit 10.2 to our Current Report on Form 10-Q, filed on November 3, 2020). 
 
 
 
10.30† 
 
Amendment No. 4 to the 2017 Employee Share Purchase Plan, effective October 30, 2023 (incorporated 
by reference to Exhibit 10.34 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 20, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.31† 
 
Form of 2020 JBG SMITH Properties Restricted LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to 
Exhibit 10.32 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on March 5, 2020). 
 
 
 
10.32† 
 
Form of 2020 JBG SMITH Properties Performance LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to 
Exhibit 10.33 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on March 5, 2020). 
 
 
 
10.33† 
 
Form of Amended and Restated 2018 Performance LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to 
Exhibit 10.30 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on March 5, 2020). 
 
 
 
10.34† 
 
Second Amended and Restated Employment Agreement, dated as of February 18, 2021, by and between 
JBG SMITH Properties and W. Matthew Kelly (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.32 to our Annual
Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 23, 2021). 
 
 
 
10.35† 
 
Second Amended and Restated Employment Agreement, dated as of February 18, 2021, by and between 
JBG SMITH Properties and Kevin P. Reynolds (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.34 to our Annual 
Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 23, 2021). 
 
 
 
10.36† 
 
Amended and Restated Employment Agreement, dated as of February 18, 2021, by and between JBG 
SMITH Properties and Madhumita Moina Banerjee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.35 to our 
Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 23, 2021). 
 
 
 
10.37† 
 
Amended and Restated Employment Agreement, dated as of February 18, 2021, by and between JBG 
SMITH Properties and Steven A. Museles (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.37 to our Annual 
Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 23, 2021). 
 
 
 

142 
Exhibits 
     
Description 
 
 
 
10.38† 
 
Employment Agreement, dated as of February 18, 2021, by and between JBG SMITH Properties and 
George Xanders (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.38 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed 
on February 23, 2021). 
 
 
 
10.39† 
 
Amendment No. 2 to the JBG SMITH Properties 2017 Omnibus Share Plan, effective December 1, 2020 
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.7 to our Form S-8, filed on April 30, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.40† 
 
Amendment No. 3 to the JBG SMITH Properties 2017 Omnibus Share Plan (incorporated by reference 
to Exhibit 4.8 to our Form S-8, filed on April 30, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.41† 
 
Amendment No. 4 to the JBG SMITH Properties 2017 Omnibus Share Plan, effective April 25, 2024 
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.9 to our Form S-8, filed on April 30, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.42† 
 
Form of JBG SMITH Properties Restricted Share Unit Award Agreement for Employees (incorporated 
by reference to Exhibit 10.40 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 23, 2021). 
 
 
 
10.43† 
 
Form of JBG SMITH Properties Restricted Share Unit Award Agreement for Consultants (incorporated 
by reference to Exhibit 10.41 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 23, 2021). 
 
 
 
10.44† 
 
Form of July 2021 Restricted LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 to our 
Current Report on Form 10-Q, filed on August 3, 2021). 
 
 
 
10.45† 
 
Form of July 2021 Restricted LTIP Unit Agreement (Special Termination & Vesting Provisions) 
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 to our Current Report on Form 10-Q, filed on August 3, 2021). 
 
 
 
10.46† 
 
Form of JBG SMITH Properties Performance Share Unit Award Agreement (incorporated by reference 
to Exhibit 10.42 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 23, 2021). 
 
 
 
10.47† 
 
Form of 2021 JBG SMITH Properties Performance LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to 
Exhibit 10.43 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 23, 2021). 
 
 
 
10.48† 
 
Form of AO LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to our Current Report on 
Form 8-K, filed on January 5, 2022).  
 
 
 
10.49† 
 
Form of 2024 AO LTIP Unit Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.52 to our Annual 
Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 20, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.50† 
 
Form of Agreement Equity Award in Lieu of Annual Cash Bonus (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 
10.53 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 20, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.51† 
 
First Amendment to Second Amended and Restated Employment Agreement, dated as of February 14, 
2024, by and between JBG SMITH Properties and Kevin P. Reynolds (incorporated by reference to 
Exhibit 10.54 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 20, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.52† 
 
Employment Agreement, dated as of February 14, 2024, by and between JBG SMITH Properties and 
Evan Regan-Levine (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.55 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, 
filed on February 20, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.53† 
 
Employment Agreement, dated as of February 14, 2024, by and between JBG SMITH Properties and 
David Ritchey (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.56 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on 
February 20, 2024). 
 
 
 

143 
Exhibits 
     
Description 
 
 
 
10.54† 
 
First Amendment to Amended and Restated Employment Agreement, dated as of February 14, 2024, by 
and between JBG SMITH Properties and Madhumita Moina Banerjee (incorporated by reference to 
Exhibit 10.57 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 20, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.55† 
 
First Amendment to Amended and Restated Employment Agreement, dated as of February 14, 2024, by 
and between JBG SMITH Properties and Steven A. Museles (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.58 
to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 20, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.56† 
 
First Amendment to Employment Agreement, dated as of February 14, 2024, by and between JBG 
SMITH Properties and George Xanders (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.59 to our Annual Report 
on Form 10-K, filed on February 20, 2024). 
 
 
 
10.57† 
 
Retirement and Consulting Agreement, dated as of October 24, 2024, by and between JBG SMITH 
Properties and Kevin Reynolds (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 in our Current Report on 
Form 10-Q, filed on October 29, 2024). 
 
 
 
19.1** 
 
Policy on Inside Information and Insider Trading. 
 
 
 
21.1** 
 
List of Subsidiaries of the Registrant. 
 
 
 
23.1** 
 
Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm. 
 
 
 
31.1** 
 
Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a) under the Securities Exchange Act 
of 1934, as amended and Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. 
 
 
 
31.2** 
 
Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a) under the Securities Exchange Act of 
1934, as amended and Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. 
 
 
 
32.1** 
 
Certification of Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(b) under 
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended and 18 U.S.C 1350, as created by Section 906 of the 
Sarbanes- Oxley Act of 2002. 
 
 
 
97.1† 
 
JBG SMITH Properties Incentive Compensation Recovery Policy (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 
97.1 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed on February 20, 2024). 
 
 
 
101.INS  
Inline XBRL Instance Document - the instance document does not appear in the Interactive Data File 
because its XBRL tags are embedded within the Inline XBRL document. 
 
 
 
101.SCH  
Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema 
 
 
 
101.CAL  
Inline XBRL Extension Calculation Linkbase 
 
 
 
101.LAB  
Inline XBRL Extension Labels Linkbase 
 
 
 
101.PRE  
Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase 
 
 
 
101.DEF  
Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase 
 
 
 
104 
 
Cover Page Interactive Data File (formatted as Inline XBRL and contained in Exhibit 101) 
 
 
**    Filed herewith. 

144 
†      Denotes a management contract or compensatory plan, contract or arrangement. 
 
ITEM 16. FORM 10-K SUMMARY 
None. 
 
 

145 
SIGNATURES 
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the Registrant has duly caused this 
report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized. 
 
 
 
 
 
     JBG SMITH Properties 
 
 
 
Date:   February 18, 2025 
 /s/ M. Moina Banerjee 
 
 M. Moina Banerjee 
 
 Chief Financial Officer 
 
 (Principal Financial Officer) 
 
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, this report has been signed below by 
the following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated: 
NAME 
 
TITLE 
 
DATE 
 
 
 
  
/s/ Robert A. Stewart 
 
Chairman of the Board 
 
February 18, 2025 
Robert Stewart 
  
  
 
 
 
  
/s/ W. Matthew Kelly 
 
Chief Executive Officer and Trustee 
 
February 18, 2025 
W. Matthew Kelly 
 
(Principal Executive Officer) 
  
 
 
 
  
/s/ M. Moina Banerjee 
 
Chief Financial Officer 
 
February 18, 2025 
M. Moina Banerjee 
 
(Principal Financial Officer) 
  
 
 
 
  
/s/ Angela Valdes 
 
Chief Accounting Officer 
 
February 18, 2025 
Angela Valdes 
 
(Principal Accounting Officer) 
  
 
 
 
  
/s/ Phyllis R. Caldwell 
 
Trustee 
 
February 18, 2025 
Phyllis R. Caldwell 
  
  
 
 
 
  
/s/ Scott A. Estes 
 
Trustee 
 
February 18, 2025 
Scott A. Estes 
  
  
 
 
 
  
/s/ Alan S. Forman 
 
Trustee 
 
February 18, 2025 
Alan S. Forman 
  
  
 
 
 
  
/s/ Michael J. Glosserman 
 
Trustee 
 
February 18, 2025 
Michael J. Glosserman 
  
  
 
 
 
  
/s/ Alisa M. Mall 
 
Trustee 
 
February 18, 2025 
Alisa M. Mall 
  
  
 
  
  
/s/ Carol A. Melton 
 
Trustee 
 
February 18, 2025 
Carol A. Melton 
  
  
 
 
 
  
/s/ William J. Mulrow 
 
Trustee 
 
February 18, 2025 
William J. Mulrow 
  
  
 
 
 
  
/s/ D. Ellen Shuman 
 
Trustee 
 
February 18, 2025 
D. Ellen Shuman 
  
  
 
 
 
  
 

Exhibit 31.1 
CERTIFICATION OF CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER 
I, W. Matthew Kelly, certify that: 
1. I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-K of JBG SMITH Properties; 
2. Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a 
material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements 
were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report; 
3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly 
present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, 
and for, the periods presented in this report; 
4. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls 
and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial 
reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have: 
a. 
Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be 
designed under our supervision to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its 
consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period 
in which this report is being prepared; 
b. Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial 
reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of 
financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with 
generally accepted accounting principles; 
c. 
Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report 
our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period 
covered by this report based on such evaluation; and 
d. Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred 
during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual 
report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control 
over financial reporting; and 
5. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal 
control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of 
directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions): 
a. 
All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over 
financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, 
summarize and report financial information; and 
b. Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant 
role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting. 
 
 
 
February 18, 2025 
    /s/ W. Matthew Kelly 
 
 W. Matthew Kelly 
 
 Chief Executive Officer 
 
 (Principal Executive Officer) 
 

Exhibit 31.2 
CERTIFICATION OF CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER 
I, M. Moina Banerjee, certify that: 
1. I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-K of JBG SMITH Properties; 
2. Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a 
material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements 
were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report; 
3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly 
present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, 
and for, the periods presented in this report; 
4. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls 
and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial 
reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have: 
a. 
Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be 
designed under our supervision to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its 
consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period 
in which this report is being prepared; 
b. Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial 
reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of 
financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with 
generally accepted accounting principles; 
c. 
Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report 
our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period 
covered by this report based on such evaluation; and 
d. Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred 
during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual 
report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control 
over financial reporting; and 
5. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal 
control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of 
directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions): 
a. 
All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over 
financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, 
summarize and report financial information; and 
b. Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant 
role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting. 
 
 
 
February 18, 2025 
    /s/ M. Moina Banerjee 
  
 M. Moina Banerjee 
 
 Chief Financial Officer 
  
 (Principal Financial Officer) 
 

Exhibit 32.1 
 
CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO 18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350, AS ADOPTED 
PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 OF THE 
SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002 
In connection with the Annual Report of JBG SMITH Properties (the “Company”) on Form 10-K for the period 
ended December 31, 2024 as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on the date hereof (the 
“Report”), I, W. Matthew Kelly, Chief Executive Officer of the Company, and I, M. Moina Banerjee, Chief Financial 
Officer of the Company, certify, to our knowledge, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 
of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that: 
1) the Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 
as amended; and 
2) the information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results 
of operations of the Company. 
 
 
February 18, 2025 
    /s/ W. Matthew Kelly 
  
  W. Matthew Kelly 
  
  Chief Executive Officer 
  
   
  
   
February 18, 2025 
  /s/ M. Moina Banerjee 
  
  M. Moina Banerjee 
  
  Chief Financial Officer 
 

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4747 Bethesda Avenue, Suite 200 
Bethesda, MD 20814
JBGSMITH.com | 240.333.3600 | NYSE: JBGS
Board of Trustees
Robert A. Stewart 
Independent Chairman 
of the Board of Trustees
W. Matthew Kelly 
Chief Executive Officer and
Trustee
Phyllis R. Caldwell  
Independent Trustee
Scott A. Estes 
Independent Trustee
Alan S. Forman 
Independent Trustee
Michael J. Glosserman  
Independent Trustee
Alisa M. Mall  
Independent Trustee
Carol A. Melton 
Independent Trustee
William J. Mulrow 
Independent Trustee
 
D. Ellen Shuman  
Independent Trustee
Executive Officers
W. Matthew Kelly 
Chief Executive Officer 
and Trustee 
M. Moina Banerjee 
Chief Financial Officer
George L. Xanders
Chief Investment Officer
Evan Regan-Levine 
Chief Strategy Officer
 
Steven A. Museles 
Chief Legal Officer