How Do I Get Rent Relief When My Business Is Struggling?
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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 Get Rent Relief When My Business Is Struggling?
Direct Answer
Ask for rent deferral first, abatement second, and a percentage-rent conversion third — in that order, because that's the order the landlord finds easiest to say yes to. A deferral pushes 3 to 6 months of rent to the back of the lease, repaid over 12 to 24 months, so the landlord loses nothing long-term.
Abatement forgives 1 to 3 months outright — harder to get, but worth asking when the alternative is your default. The clever third option: convert to temporary percentage rent, where you pay a base of $0 to 50% of rent plus 6% to 10% of gross sales for a fixed window, so your rent shrinks when sales shrink.
The money move is to package the ask with something the landlord wants: a term extension, a stronger guarantee on the deferred portion, or giving up a future option in exchange for relief now. A naked "please lower my rent" gets a no; a trade gets a yes. Concretely, offering two extra years of term in exchange for 3 months abated + 3 months deferred is the kind of deal a landlord signs, because keeping a paying tenant beats a vacancy that costs them $30 to $80/sf in new TI, 4% to 6% in broker fees, and 6 to 12 months of empty space.
Before any of this, read your lease for co-tenancy, kick-out, gross-up, and casualty clauses — you may already have a contractual right to lower rent you haven't claimed. And never miss a payment before the relief is signed; missing first triggers acceleration and exposes your personal guarantee. Negotiate from the chair of a paying tenant, not a defaulting one.
Step 1: Find Relief You're Already Owed
Before you negotiate anything, hunt your lease for triggers that automatically cut your rent. This relief is free — you just have to claim it.
- Co-tenancy clause: If a named anchor tenant or a percentage of the center went dark, many leases drop you to reduced rent (often 50%) or "alternative rent" until occupancy recovers. Check the threshold.
- Kick-out clause: If your gross sales fell below a stated floor over a measuring period, you may have the right to terminate or renegotiate.
- Gross-up abuse: In an NNN or modified-gross lease, audit the operating-expense reconciliation — landlords sometimes over-allocate. A successful audit can refund thousands and lower next year's estimate.
- Repair/quiet-enjoyment failures: If the landlord failed to maintain the building, you may have grounds for an offset or abatement. Document with photos and dated emails.
Step 2: Deferral — The Easiest Yes
A deferral is the lowest-friction relief because the landlord eventually collects every dollar.
- The ask: Defer 50% to 100% of base rent for 3 to 6 months.
- The repayment: Spread the deferred balance over 12 to 24 months, interest-free if you can get it (some landlords ask 4% to 6% — push back).
- The math: Deferring $10,000/month for 4 months = $40,000. Repaid over 24 months, that's only ~$1,667/month added later — a survivable tail that buys you four months of breathing room now.
Bring a realistic recovery plan showing why you'll be able to repay. Landlords fund a credible turnaround, not a hope.
Step 3: Abatement and Percentage-Rent Conversion
When deferral isn't enough, escalate.
- Abatement: True forgiveness of 1 to 3 months' rent. Reserve this ask for when you can honestly say default is the alternative. Offer a trade — term extension or option waiver — so it's not a giveaway.
- Percentage-rent conversion: Convert to a temporary structure: reduced or zero base rent plus 6% to 10% of gross sales for 6 to 12 months. Your rent now tracks your revenue, so a bad month costs you less. Cap the conversion window and set a clean snap-back date to normal rent.
- Blend-and-extend: If the problem is the rate, not a temporary cash gap, restructure to a lower rent for a longer term (see bo0121).
Step 4: Build the Case the Landlord Will Fund
Landlords grant relief to credible tenants. Make the file undeniable.
- Show the numbers: Bring 12 months of P&L and bank statements. A documented 25% to 40% sales drop is persuasive; vague "things are tough" is not.
- Show the plan: A one-page recovery plan (cost cuts, new revenue, the runway the relief buys) tells the landlord their money comes back.
- Show the alternative: Quietly remind them what a vacancy costs: 6 to 12 months empty, $30 to $80/sf in re-leasing TI, 4% to 6% broker commission, plus free rent for the next tenant.
- Show optionality: If you have a sublease or assignment prospect lined up, the landlord knows you can walk — which makes them deal.
Step 5: Lock It Down Without New Traps
Relief can hide new risk. Protect yourself in the amendment.
- Don't expand your personal guarantee. Some landlords trade relief for a bigger or longer PG. Hold the line — or cap it (see bo0125).
- Get the default waived and the clock reset. The amendment should erase any prior breach.
- Define the snap-back precisely. Spell out the exact end date, repayment schedule, and interest so there's no surprise bill.
- Get it signed by an authorized party, and confirm it binds successors — so a new building owner can't ignore it.
FAQ
What's the single easiest form of rent relief to get? A deferral. Because the landlord eventually collects every dollar, it's the lowest-risk ask. You typically push 3 to 6 months of rent to the back of the lease and repay it over 12 to 24 months, ideally interest-free.
Can I get my rent permanently reduced because sales are down? Sometimes — through blend-and-extend (lower rent for a longer term) or temporary percentage rent (low base plus a percentage of gross sales). A permanent cut with nothing offered in return is hard; pair the ask with a term extension to make it attractive.
Do I have any rights to lower rent built into my lease already? Often, yes. Check for a co-tenancy clause (rent drops if the anchor leaves), a kick-out clause (terminate/renegotiate if sales fall below a floor), and operating-expense gross-up errors you can audit and recover. Claim those before negotiating new relief.
Will asking for relief put me in default? No — *asking* doesn't. Stopping payment does. Always keep paying until the relief is signed, because missing a payment first triggers acceleration of the remaining rent and activates your personal guarantee.
Should I hire help to negotiate rent relief? A tenant-rep broker brings market leverage (often at no cost to you), and a CRE attorney should review the amendment so it waives the default, doesn't expand your guarantee, and binds future owners. For relief worth tens of thousands of dollars, both pay for themselves.
Sources
- CBRE — market data and lease-restructuring advisory used to justify rent-relief requests.
- JLL — tenant advisory on deferral, abatement, and percentage-rent conversions.
- Cushman & Wakefield — MarketBeat reports and concession benchmarks by sector.
- NAIOP (Commercial Real Estate Development Association) — research on tenant retention and re-leasing cost economics.
- BOMA International — standard operating-expense, co-tenancy, and lease-amendment provisions.
- IREM (Institute of Real Estate Management) — guidance on landlord decision-making for rent concessions.
- Tenant-rep brokerage advisories — deferral, abatement, and percentage-rent benchmarks.
- Commercial real estate counsel — drafting of relief amendments, default waivers, and guarantee protections.
