How Do I Assign My Lease When I Sell My Business?
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How Do I Assign My Lease When I Sell My Business?
Direct Answer
When you sell your business, the lease usually has to go with it — and the mechanism is a lease assignment: you transfer the entire lease to the buyer, who becomes the new tenant. The money move: get the landlord's written consent on terms that fully release you, and choose assignment over sublease when you're exiting for good. An assignment transfers the whole lease to a new tenant; a sublease keeps you as the prime tenant on the hook to the landlord while the subtenant pays you.
When you sell and leave, you want an assignment with a release, not a sublease that keeps your name on the master lease.
Almost every commercial lease requires landlord consent to assign, typically with the standard that consent "shall not be unreasonably withheld, conditioned, or delayed." Landlords will still try to extract money. Watch for the profit-sharing clause that lets the landlord grab 50% of any "excess rent" or transfer premium, and the recapture clause that lets the landlord cancel the lease and take the space back instead of consenting — which can blow up your sale.
Push to strike or limit both.
Expect to pay the landlord's reasonable review costs — usually $1,500 to $5,000 in legal/admin fees — but refuse open-ended "consent fees." The clean assignment checklist: (1) written landlord consent, (2) full release of you and your guarantee, (3) no recapture exercised, (4) no profit-sharing grab, (5) buyer-friendly transfer, and (6) an estoppel confirming the lease is current. Nail those and you walk away clean.
Miss the release and you're back to being personally liable for a tenant you don't control.
Assignment vs. Sublease — Pick the Right Tool
These two get confused constantly, and the wrong choice keeps you tethered to a business you sold.
- Assignment: transfers the entire remaining lease to the buyer, who becomes the direct tenant with the landlord. This is what you want when exiting permanently — paired with a release, you're fully out.
- Sublease: you stay the prime tenant and re-let the space to a subtenant. You remain liable to the landlord for rent and performance. Right for temporary situations or partial space — wrong for a full business sale.
- The exit test: if you're gone for good, assign and get released. If you're coming back or only offloading part of the space, sublease.
- Why landlords sometimes prefer sublease: it keeps you on the hook as a guarantor of last resort. That's exactly why, as a seller, you should insist on assignment with release.
Choosing sublease when you mean assignment is how sellers stay personally liable for years after the closing check clears.
Get Landlord Consent Without Getting Gouged
Consent is the gate, and landlords use it to extract concessions. Know the rules.
- "Not unreasonably withheld" is your friend. Most leases say consent shall not be unreasonably withheld, conditioned, or delayed. A landlord generally can reject for poor buyer creditworthiness or a use change, but cannot reject just to renegotiate rent or grab money.
- Set a consent deadline. Require the landlord to respond within 15–30 days, with silence deemed approval if you can negotiate it. Open-ended consent timelines can stall and kill your sale.
- Cap the fees. Agree to pay the landlord's reasonable, documented review costs — typically $1,500–$5,000 — and refuse arbitrary "transfer" or "consent" fees beyond actual legal/admin expense.
- Provide a clean buyer package upfront. Buyer's financials, tax returns, business plan, and intended use. The faster the landlord can underwrite the buyer, the less room to stall.
- Document everything. Get consent as a written assignment-and-consent agreement signed by landlord, you, and buyer — not an email "okay."
A prepared seller with a strong buyer package gets consent in weeks. An unprepared one gives the landlord excuses to delay and extract.
Kill the Recapture and Profit-Sharing Traps
Two clauses can wreck a business sale. Find them before you sign anything — ideally before you sign the original lease.
- Recapture / termination right. Many leases let the landlord, instead of consenting, terminate the lease and take the space back. If your buyer needs the location, recapture can destroy the sale. Negotiate to strike recapture or limit it to whole-floor or whole-premises assignments only, with a tenant right to rescind the assignment request if the landlord moves to recapture.
- Profit-sharing / excess rent. Landlords claim 50% (sometimes 100%) of any "transfer premium" — rent or consideration above your current rent. In a business sale, landlords sometimes try to characterize part of the purchase price as excess rent. Push to exclude business-sale consideration (goodwill, equipment, inventory) from any profit-sharing and strike the clause for an outright business sale.
- Permitted-transfer carve-out. Negotiate that an assignment as part of a bona fide sale of all or substantially all of the business is a permitted transfer requiring notice, not consent — the cleanest protection of all.
- Continuing-liability language. Even with consent, leases often say the assignor stays liable. Pair every assignment with an express release (see the guarantee-release playbook).
The seller who negotiated a permitted-transfer clause in the original lease sails through the sale. The one who didn't fights recapture and profit-sharing at the worst possible moment.
The Closing Checklist That Keeps You Clean
Assignment done wrong leaves loose ends. Tie them off at closing.
- Written assignment and assumption agreement. Buyer expressly assumes all lease obligations from the assignment date forward.
- Full release of assignor and guarantor. The landlord releases you and your personal guarantee effective at closing — the single most important term. Without it, you sold the business but kept the liability.
- Landlord estoppel certificate. Confirms the lease is current, not in default, the assignment is consented to, security deposit balance, and your release is effective.
- Security deposit handling. Decide whether your deposit is returned to you and the buyer posts a new one, or it transfers — get it in writing so you're not financing the buyer's deposit.
- Buyer indemnification in the purchase agreement. Buyer indemnifies you for post-closing lease obligations as a backstop.
- Confirm permitted use and renewal/option rights transfer. Make sure the buyer inherits your renewal options, expansion rights, and exclusives so the location keeps its value you sold them.
Every item is a place a sloppy deal leaves you exposed. Close clean.
FAQ
What's the difference between assigning and subleasing my lease? An assignment transfers the entire lease to the buyer, who becomes the direct tenant — the right tool when you're exiting permanently. A sublease keeps you as the prime tenant still liable to the landlord while a subtenant pays you.
For a full business sale, assign and get released, don't sublease.
Can my landlord refuse to let me assign the lease? Usually only reasonably. Most leases say consent shall not be unreasonably withheld — the landlord can reject a financially weak buyer or a problematic use change, but generally cannot refuse just to renegotiate rent.
A recapture clause, however, may let them terminate instead of consenting, so check for it.
What is a profit-sharing or excess-rent clause? It lets the landlord claim a share — often 50% to 100% — of any rent or consideration above your current rent on a transfer. In a business sale, landlords sometimes try to grab part of the purchase price. Negotiate to exclude business-sale consideration and strike the clause for an outright sale.
How much does it cost to assign a commercial lease? Expect to reimburse the landlord's reasonable review costs — typically $1,500 to $5,000 in legal and administrative fees. Refuse arbitrary "consent" or "transfer" fees above documented actual expense, and cap fees in the lease if you can.
How do I make sure I'm off the lease after the sale? Pair the assignment with a full written release of you and your personal guarantee, get a landlord estoppel certificate confirming the release and that the lease is current, require the buyer to assume and indemnify you in the purchase agreement, and document it all in a signed assignment-and-consent agreement at closing.
Sources
- International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC) — assignment, sublease, recapture, and profit-sharing clause standards
- CBRE — Tenant Representation guidance on lease assignment and disposition
- JLL — Occupier Services: assignment vs. Sublease and landlord-consent benchmarks
- Cushman & Wakefield — lease disposition, recapture, and excess-rent negotiation practices
- BOMA International — landlord consent, estoppel, and assignment provisions
- NAIOP — commercial lease transfer and recapture research
- American Bar Association — Commercial Leasing: assignment, sublease, and release provisions
