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What Is a Tenant Improvement Loan and Should I Use One?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 1200 340" role="img" aria-label="What Is a Tenant Improvement Loan and Should I Use One? — PULSE Buildouts"><rect width="1200" height="340" fill="#EBE9DE"/><rect width="14" height="340" fill="#C0531F"/><text x="58" y="116" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="32" font-weight="800" letter-spacing="3" fill="#C0531F">PULSE BUILDOUTS · COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE</text><text x="56" y="198" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="60" font-weight="800" fill="#2b2b2b">Save money.

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 &amp; 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>

What Is a Tenant Improvement Loan and Should I Use One?

Direct Answer

A tenant improvement (TI) loan is financing you take out to pay for build-out costs that your landlord won't cover — demising walls, HVAC, electrical, plumbing, finishes, the works. Before you borrow a dollar, the real money move is to make the landlord pay first. In most US markets a landlord will hand over a tenant improvement allowance of $30 to $90 per square foot on a multi-year deal, and on a hot second-generation space they'll go higher.

On a 3,000 SF space at $50/SF, that's $150,000 of someone else's money. You borrow only for the gap above the allowance.

When you do borrow, the cheapest capital wins. A SBA 504 or SBA 7(a) loan runs roughly prime + 2.25% to 4.75% (call it 9% to 11.5% in a high-rate environment) with terms up to 10 years for leasehold improvements. A bank equipment or leasehold-improvement term loan is similar.

The expensive trap is landlord-funded TI amortized into rent: the landlord fronts the extra build-out and bakes it back into your rent at 8% to 12% interest, often disguised so you never see the rate. That "free" money is frequently the most expensive loan in the deal.

So the order of operations: (1) maximize the free TI allowance, (2) get free rent abatement to cover soft costs, (3) finance the remaining gap with an SBA or bank loan at a real, disclosed rate, and (4) refuse landlord-amortized TI unless the implied rate beats your bank. Use a TI loan only for the gap, only when the lease term is long enough to amortize it, and never sign a personal guarantee on build-out debt you could have made the landlord eat.

How a Tenant Improvement Allowance Actually Works

The TI allowance is a per-square-foot dollar figure the landlord contributes toward turning a raw or second-generation space into your space. It is the single biggest concession you'll negotiate, and most first-time tenants leave 20% to 40% of it on the table.

The cheapest TI dollar is the one the landlord gives you. Exhaust it before any loan.

flowchart TD A[Total build-out cost] --> B{Landlord TI allowance covers it?} B -->|Yes| C[Zero borrowing - negotiate unused balance to rent credit] B -->|No, gap remains| D{Free rent abatement available?} D -->|Yes| E[Apply abatement to soft costs / cash flow] D -->|Still a gap| F{Compare financing options} F --> G[SBA 504/7a 9-11.5%] F --> H[Bank leasehold term loan] F --> I[Landlord-amortized TI 8-12% - verify implied rate] G --> J[Pick lowest disclosed rate, term <= lease term] H --> J I --> J

When a TI Loan Makes Sense — and When It Doesn't

Borrow when the math and the lease term line up. Skip it when you're financing someone else's asset on a short fuse.

A clean test: if the improvement still pays you back assuming you leave at the earliest termination date, finance it. If it only pencils by assuming you renew, you're gambling.

TI Loan Options Ranked by True Cost

The same $200,000 of build-out money costs wildly different amounts depending on the source. Ranked cheapest to most expensive in a typical environment:

flowchart LR Free[Free: TI allowance + rent abatement] --> SBA[SBA 504/7a 9-11%] SBA --> Bank[Bank leasehold loan 8-12%] Bank --> Equip[Equipment finance 7-14%] Equip --> LL[Landlord-amortized 8-12% if disclosed] LL --> MCA[Merchant cash advance 30-80% - AVOID] style Free fill:#bff5c0 style MCA fill:#f7b3b3

How Not to Get Screwed on TI

The landlord controls the build process by default, and that's where the overcharges live. Take back control with lease language.

The tenant who reads the work letter as carefully as the rent clause keeps tens of thousands of dollars.

FAQ

What's a typical tenant improvement allowance per square foot? Office runs $30–$100/SF depending on market and whether it's first- or second-generation space; retail and restaurant shells often see $15–$50/SF because tenants invest more. On a long lease in a soft market, push for the high end and ask for unused allowance as a rent credit.

Is landlord-amortized TI a good deal? Sometimes — but it's a loan in disguise at typically 8–12% interest baked into rent. Always ask the landlord to disclose the implied interest rate, then compare it to an SBA 7(a) or bank loan at 9–11.5%. If the landlord's rate is higher, finance it yourself.

Will a TI loan require a personal guarantee? Almost always. SBA loans require a personal guarantee from any 20%+ owner, and bank leasehold loans typically do too. Negotiate a burn-down or release tied to performance, and never stack a personal guarantee on debt the landlord could have funded as free allowance.

How long should my TI loan term be? No longer than your lease term, including the earliest date you could be forced or choose to leave. Financing a 7-year loan against a 5-year lease means paying for improvements in a space you no longer occupy.

Can I use rent abatement instead of borrowing? Yes, and you should stack both. Two to six months of free rent offsets soft costs and early cash burn at zero interest, reducing how much TI loan you actually need. Free rent plus a fat allowance can eliminate borrowing entirely.

Sources

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