How Do I Negotiate the Landlord's Construction-Management Fee Down?
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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 Negotiate the Landlord's Construction-Management Fee Down?
Direct Answer
The landlord's construction-management (CM) fee is one of the most negotiable, most padded numbers in any buildout — and on a tenant-managed job it's often pure profit for work you're already paying someone else to do. Standard CM fees run 3%–5% of hard construction costs; landlords routinely open at 5% or higher, and a sharp tenant pushes it to 1%–3%, a flat capped dollar amount, or zero on self-managed jobs.
On a $400,000 buildout, the difference between a 5% fee and a 2% fee is $12,000 — and between 5% and zero, $20,000. The single biggest money move: insist the fee apply to hard costs only, not soft costs or the TI allowance, and that it be capped at a fixed dollar amount so it can't balloon with change orders.
Then ask the killer question — "what does the landlord actually do for this fee?" If you're managing the GC, the design, and the schedule, the answer is "almost nothing," and that's your leverage to strike it. Always get the CM fee defined in the work letter, not buried in the lease boilerplate, and make sure it is deducted from, not added on top of, the TI allowance so it doesn't quietly shrink your build budget.
What The CM Fee Actually Covers
A construction-management fee is supposed to compensate the landlord for overseeing the buildout — reviewing plans, coordinating with the GC, processing draws, and protecting the building during construction. On a true landlord-managed turnkey, some fee is fair. The problem is *unbundling*:
- On a turnkey job, the landlord genuinely runs the construction, so a modest fee is defensible.
- On a tenant-managed (allowance) job, you hire and manage the GC and architect yourself — the landlord's "management" may be a single staffer reviewing draws. Paying 5% for that is a giveaway.
- The fee often duplicates the GC's general conditions and fee. Your GC already charges 3%–6% to manage the job. Paying the landlord another 5% on top means you're paying twice for management.
Always ask, in writing, what specific tasks the CM fee buys. The vaguer the answer, the more you cut.
The Numbers You're Negotiating Against
Know the market so you can anchor:
- Typical CM fee range: 3%–5% of hard construction costs. That's the published norm.
- Aggressive landlord open: 5%–7%, sometimes on *total* project cost including soft costs and the allowance. Reject the broader base immediately.
- Achievable tenant outcome: 1%–3%, a flat cap, or zero on self-managed jobs in a soft market.
- The dollar stakes: on a $400,000 buildout, each percentage point is $4,000. On a $1,000,000 buildout, each point is $10,000.
- Coordination fee variant: some landlords rename it a "coordination" or "supervision" fee. Same money, same negotiation.
The Levers That Move The Fee
Attack the fee from multiple angles, not just the percentage:
- Narrow the base. Apply the fee to hard costs only — never to soft costs, FF&E, the design fee, or the allowance itself.
- Cap it in dollars. A percentage with no cap grows with every change order. A fixed dollar cap freezes your exposure.
- Cut the rate. Push 5% to 2%–3% on managed deals, lower on self-managed ones.
- Tie it to actual scope. If the landlord does little, the fee should be little. Trade fee reduction for taking management tasks off their plate.
- Bundle it into the broader negotiation. Trade a slightly higher rent or longer term for a struck CM fee — landlords often value headline rent over a one-time fee.
Where The Fee Hides — And How It Grows
The fee does the most damage when it's poorly defined:
- Applied to the wrong base. A 5% fee on *total project cost* including soft costs and allowance can be 40%–60% larger than the same rate on hard costs alone.
- Uncapped against change orders. Every change order grows the construction cost and the fee with it. Without a cap, a budget creep becomes a fee creep.
- Added on top of the allowance instead of deducted from it. If the fee is *added*, it raises your out-of-pocket. If it's *deducted* from the allowance, it shrinks your build budget. Either way it costs you — make sure you know which and price it.
- Buried in lease boilerplate. A fee tucked into the lease rather than spelled out in the work letter / TI exhibit is easy to miss and hard to challenge later.
- Stacked with a "coordination" or "supervision" fee. Two names for the same charge. Read for duplicates.
How Not To Get Screwed By The Landlord
Beyond the fee percentage, protect the whole construction relationship:
- Get an open-book budget. You can't police a percentage fee on costs you can't see. Demand a line-item budget.
- Refuse the captive-GC tie. Some landlords waive a low CM fee but force their own GC, then mark up the construction. The fee you "saved" reappears in inflated bids. Keep the right to competitively bid.
- Pin down draw timing. A landlord who controls draws can slow-pay your GC and create lien risk. Negotiate a clear disbursement schedule.
- Separate base-building from TI. Don't let the landlord charge a CM fee on structural or shell repairs that are *their* responsibility, reclassified as your improvements.
- Document everything in the work letter. Fee rate, base, cap, and what it covers all belong in the TI work letter, signed before construction starts.
A Quick Decision Framework
- Ask what the fee actually buys. On a self-managed job the honest answer is "very little" — that's your leverage.
- Narrow the base to hard costs only and reject any fee on soft costs or the allowance.
- Cap it in dollars so change orders can't grow it.
- Push 5% toward 2%–3% or zero, trading rent or term if needed.
- Put it in the work letter, deducted from the allowance, never buried in the lease.
FAQ
What is a normal construction-management fee? Standard CM fees run 3%–5% of hard construction costs. Landlords often open at 5%–7%, sometimes on total project cost including soft costs, which you should reject. On self-managed jobs, 1%–3%, a flat cap, or zero is achievable.
Why am I paying the landlord a CM fee if I manage the buildout? Often you shouldn't be. On a tenant-managed job your own GC already charges 3%–6% to run the work, so a landlord CM fee duplicates that management. Ask exactly what the landlord does for the fee; if it's just reviewing draws, push to strike it.
Should the CM fee apply to soft costs and the allowance? No. Limit it to hard construction costs only. A fee applied to total project cost — soft costs, FF&E, and the allowance included — can be 40%–60% larger for the same percentage rate.
How much can I save by negotiating the CM fee? On a $400,000 buildout, cutting a 5% fee to 2% saves $12,000, and striking it entirely saves $20,000. Each percentage point is $4,000 on that job and $10,000 on a $1,000,000 buildout.
Where should the CM fee be documented? In the TI work letter (the construction exhibit to the lease), with the rate, base, dollar cap, and covered scope spelled out — not buried in lease boilerplate where it's easy to miss and hard to challenge later. Confirm whether it's deducted from or added to the allowance.
Sources
- CBRE — Tenant build-out economics and TI work-letter market reports.
- JLL — Construction-management and fit-out fee guides.
- Cushman & Wakefield — Tenant advisory on construction-management fees and work letters.
- NAIOP (Commercial Real Estate Development Association) — Lease economics and TI research.
- BOMA International — Construction oversight and base-building standards.
- AGC (Associated General Contractors of America) — General conditions, fee, and CM practice guidance.
- RSMeans (Gordian) — Commercial construction unit cost data.
- The Appraisal Institute — Hard vs. Soft cost classification methodology.
