How Do I Budget a Warehouse or Industrial Buildout?
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Don’t get screwed.</text><text x="58" y="258" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="30" font-weight="600" fill="#6b5b4d">Leases, TI, NNN & buildouts — negotiated in your favor</text><g transform="translate(1010,86)" fill="none" stroke="#C0531F" stroke-width="9" stroke-linejoin="round"><rect x="20" y="40" width="150" height="130"/><line x1="20" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><line x1="170" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><rect x="50" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="104" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="74" y="128" width="42" height="42"/></g></svg>
How Do I Budget a Warehouse or Industrial Buildout?
Budget a warehouse or industrial buildout at $20–$60 per square foot for the warehouse/shell portion, while the office build-out inside the warehouse runs $50–$150/sq ft — far more than the open storage area. For a 20,000 sq ft industrial space that's mostly racking and floor with a 2,000 sq ft office, you're realistically looking at $400,000–$1,200,000 depending on how much you upgrade power, HVAC, dock equipment, and clear height.
The biggest money lever is negotiating a Tenant Improvement (TI) allowance of $5–$30/sq ft — industrial TI is lower than retail or medical because the base box is already usable, but on 20,000 sq ft at $15/sq ft that's still $300,000 the landlord funds. Even more important: confirm clear height, power capacity, dock doors, and floor load before signing, because adding 3-phase power, dock levelers, or HVAC to a space that lacks them is where industrial budgets blow up.
Where the Money Goes in an Industrial Build
Industrial buildouts split sharply between the cheap open box and the expensive office/specialty zones:
- Office build-out inside the warehouse: 25–40% of budget. At $50–$150/sq ft, the finished office, breakroom, and restrooms cost far more per square foot than the warehouse floor. Keep the office footprint disciplined.
- Electrical and power: 15–25%. Upgrading to 3-phase power, adding capacity for machinery, EV charging, or a server room. A service upgrade or new transformer can run $25,000–$150,000.
- HVAC and climate control: 10–25%. Warehouse heating/cooling, or full climate control for cold storage or sensitive inventory, which dramatically raises cost. Standard warehouses may need only unit heaters and ventilation.
- Loading and dock equipment: 5–15%. Dock levelers ($5,000–$15,000 each), seals, bumpers, and adding dock doors if the building is short on them.
- Racking, lighting, life safety: 10–20%. Storage racking, LED high-bay lighting, ESFR fire sprinklers (required for high-pile storage), and security.
- Floor and slab work: variable. Sealing, leveling, or thickening the slab for heavy equipment or forklifts.
- Soft costs and contingency: 15–25%. Engineering, permits, and a 10–15% contingency.
Site Selection: The Specs Decide the Budget
In industrial, the building's physical specs drive cost more than finishes. Getting these right before signing is the whole game.
- Clear height. Modern logistics wants 32–40 ft clear; older buildings offer 18–24 ft. You can't add clear height, so buy the cubic capacity you need up front. NAIOP tracks clear height as the top industrial-demand driver.
- Power capacity. Confirm available amperage and 3-phase service in writing. Discovering you need a $100,000 transformer upgrade after signing is the classic industrial budget killer.
- Dock doors and truck court. Count the dock-high doors, drive-in ramps, and truck-court depth (130+ ft for modern trailers). Adding a dock door means cutting the building envelope — expensive and slow.
- Floor load and slab thickness. Heavy equipment and high racking need a thicker, level slab. Slab work after move-in is hugely disruptive.
- Fire suppression. High-pile storage triggers ESFR sprinkler requirements. A building without adequate suppression may need a $2–$5/sq ft sprinkler upgrade — $40,000–$100,000 on 20,000 sq ft.
The TI Allowance and Lease Levers
Industrial TI runs lower than other property types because the box is already functional — but there's still money on the table, and the lease structure matters.
- TI allowance: $5–$30/sq ft. Lower than retail/medical, but on a big footprint it adds up. On 20,000 sq ft at $15/sq ft, that's $300,000 the landlord funds. Strong-credit, long-term tenants get more.
- Free rent during build. Industrial buildouts run 2–5 months; negotiate rent abatement so you don't pay for an unusable space — easily $20,000–$80,000 saved.
- Watch NNN (triple net) charges. Industrial leases are usually NNN: you pay taxes, insurance, and CAM (common area maintenance) on top of base rent. Audit the CAM estimate — uncapped CAM can surprise you. Negotiate a CAM cap on controllable expenses.
- Negotiate who owns the improvements. Clarify whether racking, dock equipment, and your power upgrades revert to the landlord or come with you at lease end. CBRE and Cushman & Wakefield industrial teams flag this routinely.
- Use an industrial tenant rep. Spec-reading (clear height, power, docks) is specialized; a tenant rep paid from the commission pool earns their keep here.
Control the Build
- Minimize the office footprint. The office is your most expensive square footage at $50–$150/sq ft. Every extra office square foot costs 2–3x a warehouse square foot.
- Get a fixed-price GC contract from an industrial-experienced contractor; bid it to 3+ GCs.
- Value-engineer the warehouse, splurge on the systems. Save on warehouse finishes; never skimp on power capacity, ESFR sprinklers, or HVAC sized for your operation.
- Phase the racking and equipment. Install what you need now; pre-wire and pre-plumb for future expansion to avoid re-opening the slab and walls.
- Carry 10–15% contingency. Older industrial buildings hide slab, power, and code surprises.
Don't Get Screwed: The Traps
- Power and clear-height surprises. You can't easily add either. Verify both in writing before signing or face $50,000–$150,000 upgrades.
- Uncapped CAM in the NNN lease. Controllable CAM should be capped; uncontrollable (taxes, insurance) can't be, but you should still see the estimate and history.
- Improvements reverting to landlord. Your $100,000 power upgrade or racking may legally become the landlord's at lease end. Negotiate ownership and removal rights.
- ESFR and high-pile storage permits. Storing above certain heights triggers fire-code review and sprinkler upgrades. Confirm the building's rating before committing to your storage plan.
FAQ
How much does a warehouse or industrial buildout cost per square foot? The warehouse/shell portion runs $20–$60/sq ft, while the office build-out inside runs $50–$150/sq ft. A 20,000 sq ft space with a 2,000 sq ft office typically totals $400,000–$1,200,000, driven mostly by how much you upgrade power, HVAC, dock equipment, and racking.
How much TI allowance can I get for an industrial space? Industrial TI is lower than retail or medical — typically $5–$30/sq ft — because the base box is already usable. On 20,000 sq ft at $15/sq ft, that's $300,000 the landlord funds. Strong-credit, long-term tenants negotiate more, plus 2–5 months of free rent during construction.
What building specs should I confirm before signing an industrial lease? Verify clear height (32–40 ft for modern logistics, you can't add it), power capacity and 3-phase service, dock doors and truck-court depth, floor load/slab thickness, and fire suppression (ESFR for high-pile storage) — all in writing.
Discovering a building lacks these after signing can add $50,000–$150,000 in unplanned upgrades.
What is NNN and how does it affect my industrial budget? NNN (triple net) means you pay property taxes, insurance, and CAM (common area maintenance) on top of base rent — standard in industrial leasing. These can add 20–40% to your occupancy cost. Audit the CAM estimate, request a history, and negotiate a cap on controllable CAM expenses so the bill doesn't balloon.
