Who Pays for Code-Required Upgrades in a 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>
Who Pays for Code-Required Upgrades in a Buildout?
Direct Answer
Whoever has the weaker lease language pays — so make sure that is not you. The money move: separate base-building code upgrades (the landlord's problem) from upgrades your specific use triggers (arguably yours), and force the landlord to deliver the shell code-compliant before your work starts.
When a city building department reviews your permit, it can require upgrades far beyond what you are actually building: a fire sprinkler retrofit at $4 to $10 per square foot, a fire alarm system at $2 to $5 per square foot, seismic or structural upgrades that can run $20 to $80+ per square foot in earthquake zones, electrical service upsizing at $10,000 to $75,000, energy-code (Title 24 / ASHRAE 90.1) HVAC and lighting upgrades, and accessible-route work.
The standard lease makes the tenant "comply with all laws and code requirements applicable to the Premises," which a landlord will stretch to mean *you* pay for the sprinkler system the city is forcing on the whole floor. The single biggest screw-job: a tenant pulls a permit for a simple office buildout and the city triggers a $60,000 sprinkler retrofit for the base building, and the lease quietly puts it on the tenant.
Fix it before signing: get a landlord delivery representation that the shell complies with current code, carve your obligation down to upgrades triggered solely by your specific use or alterations, and put base-building and "first-generation" code work on the landlord in writing.
Base-Building vs. Tenant-Triggered Code Work
The whole fight comes down to one distinction, and landlords blur it on purpose.
Base-building (shell) code compliance covers the bones of the building as it exists for any tenant: the structure, the roof, the main electrical service, the core fire/life-safety systems, the elevators, the exterior, and the shared corridors and restrooms. If the city would require the upgrade regardless of who leases the space or what they do with it, that is base-building work — and it belongs to the landlord. A building that lacks sprinklers needed sprinklers before you walked in the door.
Tenant-triggered code work is the upgrade the city requires because of what you specifically are building or doing. Adding a commercial kitchen triggers a Type I hood, grease interceptor, and fire suppression. Increasing occupant load triggers more exits or wider doors. Cutting the floor for new plumbing triggers structural review.
Those flow from your use and are reasonably yours.
The lease should say it in exactly those words: the landlord is responsible for code compliance of the base building and shell as delivered; the tenant is responsible only for code upgrades triggered by the tenant's specific use or alterations. Without that sentence, the generic "comply with all laws" clause defaults the whole mess to you.
The Upgrades That Blow Up Pro Formas
These are the ones that turn a tidy buildout budget into a fire drill:
- Fire sprinkler retrofit. An older building with no sprinklers can be forced to add them when you pull a tenant-improvement permit, especially with any occupancy increase. Budget $4 to $10 per square foot — on a 5,000-square-foot suite that is $20,000 to $50,000.
- Fire alarm and life-safety. Notification devices, pull stations, monitoring: $2 to $5 per square foot.
- Seismic / structural. In California and other high-seismic zones, certain alterations trigger voluntary-to-mandatory structural upgrades. These are the budget killers, from $20 to over $80 per square foot.
- Electrical service upsizing. If your equipment load exceeds the existing panel, you may need a new service, transformer, or main switchgear: $10,000 to $75,000+.
- Energy code (Title 24 in California, ASHRAE 90.1 / IECC elsewhere). Renovations trigger high-efficiency HVAC, lighting controls, and envelope requirements that can add $3 to $8 per square foot.
- Accessibility / path of travel. Covered in detail elsewhere, but code review will pull this in too.
Any one of these can exceed your entire tenant-improvement allowance. That is precisely why the cost allocation has to be settled in the lease, not discovered at plan check.
How to Pin It on the Landlord — Before You Sign
- Demand a delivery representation. The lease should state the landlord delivers the premises and base building in compliance with all applicable codes and laws as of the delivery date, and that the landlord cures any non-compliance at its cost.
- Add a "compliance upgrade" carve-out. Tenant pays only for code upgrades triggered solely by Tenant's specific use or alterations, and not for upgrades that (a) apply to the base building, (b) would be required regardless of use, or (c) are triggered because the base building was already non-compliant.
- Cap your exposure. Negotiate that any base-building code upgrade triggered during your buildout is the landlord's cost or, at minimum, amortized into rent rather than paid by you up front.
- Get a pre-lease code/feasibility review. Have your architect or a code consultant assess the space for likely triggers before you sign. A few thousand dollars of due diligence beats a surprise $60,000 at permit.
- Increase the TI allowance to absorb known risk. If sprinklers are likely, fold that cost into a bigger tenant improvement allowance so the landlord effectively funds it.
- Watch "as-is" delivery. Reject blanket "as-is, where-is" delivery for anything but the most turnkey space — it hands you every latent code defect in the building.
The "Grandfather" Trap
Many tenants assume an older building is "grandfathered" and exempt from current code. That is only half true. A building can lawfully exist in its current state, but the moment you pull a permit for alterations, the city can require parts of it to be brought up to current code — sometimes the whole floor, sometimes the whole building, depending on the value of your work relative to the building (often a 50% of building value threshold under the International Existing Building Code triggers full compliance).
The act of improving the space is what voids the grandfather. This is why a landlord who tells you "don't worry, it's grandfathered" is not protecting you — your permit is what wakes the code up, and your lease is what decides who pays for it. Get the answer in writing before the architect submits anything.
FAQ
What is the difference between base-building and tenant code upgrades? Base-building (shell) upgrades are required by the bones of the building regardless of tenant or use — structure, main electrical, core fire-life-safety — and belong to the landlord. Tenant-triggered upgrades flow from your specific use or alterations (a kitchen hood, an occupancy increase) and are reasonably the tenant's.
Spell the split out in the lease.
Can the city make me pay for sprinklers the whole building needs? Only if your lease lets the cost fall on you. A sprinkler retrofit forced during your permit is base-building work that benefits every tenant. Negotiate a landlord delivery representation and a carve-out so base-building code upgrades are the landlord's cost or amortized into rent, not paid by you.
How much do code-required upgrades typically cost? It depends on the trigger: sprinklers $4 to $10 per square foot, fire alarm $2 to $5 per square foot, electrical service upsizing $10,000 to $75,000+, energy code $3 to $8 per square foot, and seismic/structural $20 to over $80 per square foot in high-seismic zones.
Isn't an old building grandfathered and exempt from current code? The building can exist as-is, but pulling an alterations permit can force current-code compliance, sometimes building-wide once your work exceeds a value threshold (often around 50% of building value under the International Existing Building Code).
The permit is what voids the grandfather, so settle who pays beforehand.
How do I protect myself before signing? Get a pre-lease code/feasibility review from your architect, a landlord delivery representation that the shell complies with code, a carve-out limiting your obligation to use-triggered upgrades, and a bigger TI allowance to absorb any known risk like sprinklers.
Reject blanket "as-is" delivery.
Sources
- ICC (International Code Council) — International Building Code and International Existing Building Code alteration triggers.
- CBRE — Tenant improvement cost and base-building delivery research.
- JLL — Occupier buildout, code-compliance, and delivery-condition advisory.
- Cushman & Wakefield — Lease structuring and tenant-improvement cost allocation.
- NAIOP (Commercial Real Estate Development Association) — Buildout and delivery-condition research.
- BOMA International — Building systems, life-safety, and base-building standards.
- California Energy Commission — Title 24 energy-code compliance for commercial alterations.
- Tenant-rep brokerage practice guides on code-upgrade cost allocation in buildouts.
