How Do I Phase Rent to Match My Ramp-Up Revenue?
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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 Phase Rent to Match My Ramp-Up Revenue?
Direct Answer
The money move is to push your rent obligation back to match when revenue actually arrives — not when you sign — using a stack of three tools: free rent, stepped rent, and percentage rent. Start by negotiating abated (free) rent during fit-out and early ramp; 3–6 months free on a 5-year deal and up to 12 months on a 10-year deal is standard and runs higher in soft markets.
Layer in stepped (graduated) rent so your base starts low and climbs as you mature — for example $20 per square foot in year one rising to $28 by year five — instead of a flat rate that crushes you before you've built revenue. If your business has volatile early sales, push for percentage rent: a lower base plus a small share of gross sales above a breakpoint, common in retail at 5–8% over a natural breakpoint, so the landlord shares your ramp risk.
The biggest trap to kill is straight-line GAAP exposure dressed up as "free rent" that you repay later — make sure abated months are *truly* forgiven, not deferred and tacked onto the back end. Get the landlord to fund the buildout via a TI allowance ($30–$100+ per square foot) so you're not burning ramp-stage cash on construction, and time your rent-commencement date to certificate of occupancy plus a fixture period, not lease signing.
Phrased simply: never agree to pay full rent before the space can actually generate the revenue that pays it.
The Three Levers That Match Rent To Revenue
Phasing rent is about shifting the *timing* and *shape* of your payments. Three tools do almost all the work:
- Free / abated rent. Months where you pay $0 base rent (sometimes $0 base plus reduced or full operating expenses). Used to cover buildout and early ramp. Concession norms: roughly one free month per year of term, more in tenant-favorable markets.
- Stepped / graduated rent. A base that escalates on a fixed schedule — flat-dollar bumps ($1–$2 per square foot per year) or fixed percentages (2.5–3.5% annually). Front-loads affordability into your lean years.
- Percentage rent. A reduced base plus a percentage of gross sales above a breakpoint. The "natural breakpoint" equals base rent ÷ the percentage rate. Aligns the landlord's upside with your actual performance.
The art is stacking them: free rent for the fit-out and first ramp months, a low stepped base that grows into your maturity, and — if your revenue is lumpy — a percentage component so a slow year doesn't break you.
Run The Real Numbers
Phasing only helps if the *total* deal economics work, so always compute the net effective rent (NER) — total rent paid across the term, net of concessions, divided by the term and square footage. A headline of $28 per square foot with 6 months free and a $50 per square foot TI allowance can carry a far lower NER than a $24 quote with no concessions.
Landlords negotiate on NER and face rate, so:
- Trade face rate for concessions when you're cash-constrained — free rent and TI preserve early cash even at a slightly higher headline number.
- Model your ramp explicitly. Map projected monthly revenue against the proposed rent schedule and make sure rent never exceeds a sustainable share of sales (a common retail target is rent at or under 8–12% of gross sales).
- Compare NER across competing spaces, not face rates, so you're comparing the real cost.
How Not To Get Screwed By The Landlord
Rent phasing is full of clauses that look like concessions but quietly claw the money back:
- Deferred rent disguised as free rent. "Abated" months that are actually *deferred* and repaid later — or repaid in full if you default — aren't a concession, they're a loan. Insist abated rent is truly forgiven, not added to the back end.
- The recapture-on-default clause. Many leases let the landlord recapture all granted free rent and TI if you ever default. Negotiate to limit recapture to unamortized amounts, not the entire concession.
- Operating expenses during "free" rent. Free *base* rent often still leaves you paying CAM, taxes, and insurance under a NNN structure. Clarify exactly what's abated and try to abate operating costs during fit-out too.
- Breakpoint games in percentage rent. An artificially *low* breakpoint means you hit percentage rent too early. Demand a natural breakpoint (base ÷ percentage rate) and audit the sales-reporting terms.
- Steep escalators that overtake your ramp. A low start with a 5%+ annual step can pass your revenue growth. Cap escalations at 2.5–3.5% or tie them to fixed dollars.
- Rent commencement tied to signing. If rent starts at lease execution instead of CO-plus-fixture, you pay for a space you can't use. Tie commencement to delivery and a fixture period.
Use TI And Commencement Timing As Cash Tools
Two structural levers preserve ramp-stage cash beyond the rent schedule itself. First, the tenant improvement (TI) allowance — push the landlord to fund the buildout at $30–$100+ per square foot depending on use and market, so construction doesn't drain the cash you need for inventory, staff, and marketing during ramp.
Amortizing extra TI into rent is fine when cash is tight; you're effectively financing the buildout at the landlord's cost of capital. Second, the rent-commencement date — anchor it to certificate of occupancy plus a 30–90 day fixture/stocking period, not lease signing, so the meter doesn't start until you can actually open and sell.
Together, a strong TI allowance and a late commencement date can be worth more to a ramping business than a lower face rent.
A Quick Rent-Phasing Checklist
- Negotiate free rent — roughly one month per year of term, more in soft markets.
- Structure stepped rent that starts low and grows into your maturity.
- Add percentage rent with a natural breakpoint if revenue is volatile.
- Confirm free rent is forgiven, not deferred or fully recaptured on default.
- Cap escalators at 2.5–3.5% so they don't overtake your ramp.
- Maximize the TI allowance so buildout doesn't burn ramp cash.
- Tie rent commencement to CO plus a fixture period.
- Compare deals on net effective rent, not face rate.
FAQ
How much free rent should I get on a commercial lease? A useful benchmark is roughly one free month per year of term — about 3–6 months on a 5-year deal and up to 12 months on a 10-year deal — with more available in tenant-favorable markets carrying high vacancy. Confirm the months are truly abated, clarify whether operating expenses are also abated, and make sure the free rent is forgiven rather than deferred.
What is stepped rent and why does it help a ramp-up? Stepped (graduated) rent starts low and escalates on a fixed schedule, so your base is small during lean early years and grows as your revenue matures. For example $20 per square foot in year one rising to $28 by year five matches payments to growth far better than a flat rate that crushes you before you've built sales.
How does percentage rent work? You pay a reduced base rent plus a percentage of gross sales above a breakpoint — common in retail at 5–8% over a natural breakpoint equal to base rent divided by the percentage rate. It shares ramp risk with the landlord: a slow year costs you less, while a strong year gives the landlord upside.
Audit the sales-reporting terms before agreeing.
What's the difference between free rent and deferred rent? Free (abated) rent is permanently forgiven — you never owe it. Deferred rent is merely postponed and repaid later, often in full if you default, which makes it a loan dressed up as a concession. Always confirm in the lease that abated months are forgiven and limit any recapture-on-default to unamortized amounts only.
Should I take a higher TI allowance instead of lower rent? Often yes, when cash is tight during ramp. A strong TI allowance ($30–$100+ per square foot) keeps construction off your books so cash goes to inventory, staff, and marketing. Amortizing extra TI into rent effectively finances the buildout at the landlord's cost of capital, and a late rent-commencement date stretches that cash even further.
Sources
- CBRE — U.S. Office and retail concession and net-effective-rent reports.
- JLL — Lease economics, tenant improvement, and concession trend research.
- Cushman & Wakefield — Occupier lease structuring and concession advisory.
- NAIOP (Commercial Real Estate Development Association) — Lease structure and concession research.
- IREM (Institute of Real Estate Management) — Percentage rent and lease administration guidance.
- BOMA International — Operating expense and lease standards guidance.
- Tenant-rep brokerage practice guides on free rent, stepped rent, and percentage rent.
