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How Do I Negotiate a Dollar Cap on My Personal Guarantee?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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How Do I Negotiate a Dollar Cap on My Personal Guarantee?

Direct Answer

Never sign an unlimited, full-term personal guarantee. Convert it into a capped guarantee with a hard ceiling — the cleanest version is a "good-guy guarantee" capped at 6 to 12 months of rent, meaning your personal exposure is limited to roughly $60,000 to $120,000 on a $10,000/month lease instead of the $600,000+ an unlimited full-term guarantee would expose.

The cap is the single most valuable concession you can win, because it puts a known, survivable number on the worst day of your business life.

The money moves stack three ways, and you should ask for all three. First, a dollar cap: "My guarantee is limited to $X, period," tied to 6 to 12 months of base rent. Second, a burn-down (burn-off) schedule: the cap shrinks over time if you pay on time — for example, the guarantee drops 20% to 25% per year and disappears entirely after year 3 or 4, or steps down from 12 months to 6 to 3 to 0. Third, good-guy terms: your guarantee is waived entirely if you give proper notice (commonly 3 to 6 months), vacate broom-clean, and return the keys current on rent — you guarantee only that you'll leave cleanly, not the whole term.

Before you negotiate, read the guaranty document separately from the lease — it's often a standalone exhibit with its own brutal terms (joint-and-several, spousal signature, continuing guaranty, waiver of defenses). Your leverage is credit, deposit, and term: offer a larger security deposit, a letter of credit, or prepaid rent to buy down the guarantee, and trade a longer lease commitment for a lower cap. A landlord wants occupancy and security; give them security in a form that isn't your house.

Step 1: Understand What You're Actually Signing

A personal guarantee makes you, individually, liable when the business can't pay. The terms decide how badly.

Step 2: Anchor the Cap at 6 to 12 Months

The dollar cap is the headline number. Anchor it low and tie it to rent.

Step 3: Add a Burn-Down So It Shrinks and Disappears

A static cap is good; a burn-down is better — it rewards you for paying and eventually frees you completely.

flowchart TD A[Landlord demands personal guarantee] --> B[Read guaranty as a separate document] B --> C{Unlimited full-term?} C -->|Yes| D[Refuse - convert to capped] D --> E[Cap at 6-12 months base rent] E --> F[Add burn-down: 12 to 9 to 6 to 3 to 0 over 3-4 yrs] F --> G[Add good-guy: waived if you give notice + leave clean] G --> H{Need to lower cap further?} H -->|Yes| I[Trade bigger deposit, letter of credit, prepaid rent] H -->|No| J[Sign capped, burning, good-guy guarantee] I --> J

Step 4: Layer In Good-Guy Terms

The good-guy guarantee is the gold standard for small tenants. You guarantee a clean exit, not the whole term.

Step 5: Buy Down the Cap and Lock the Exits

Use your other levers to push the number even lower and close the traps.

graph LR A[Personal guarantee levers] --> B[Dollar cap: 6-12 months rent] A --> C[Burn-down: shrinks to zero over 3-4 yrs] A --> D[Good-guy: waived if you exit clean] A --> E[Buy-down: bigger deposit / LOC / prepaid rent] B --> F[Worst-case is known and survivable] C --> F D --> F E --> F

FAQ

What's a reasonable cap on a personal guarantee? For a small-business lease, aim for a cap of 6 to 12 months of base rent. On a $10,000/month lease that's $60,000 to $120,000 of maximum personal exposure — a known, survivable number — versus the $600,000+ you'd risk under an unlimited full-term guarantee.

What is a burn-down (burn-off) guarantee? A guarantee whose cap shrinks over time if you pay on time — for example, stepping from 12 months to 9 to 6 to 3 to 0 over the first 3 to 4 years, or reducing 20% to 25% per year. Tie the trigger to "no uncured monetary default" so one fixed late payment doesn't reset it.

What's a good-guy guarantee? A limited guarantee where you're released from future rent if you give proper notice (commonly 3 to 6 months), vacate broom-clean, and return the keys current on rent. You guarantee a clean, on-time exit — not years of remaining lease — which is why it's the favorite structure for small tenants.

How do I get the landlord to lower the guarantee? Trade security for exposure: offer a larger deposit, a letter of credit, or prepaid rent, all of which protect the landlord without putting your home at risk. You can also trade a longer lease term for a lower cap, since term reduces the landlord's re-leasing risk.

Does the personal guarantee end if I sell my business? Only if you negotiate it to. Make the guarantee terminate on assignment so that when the lease transfers to the buyer, your personal liability ends. Otherwise you can sell the company and still be personally on the hook for its lease — the worst outcome.

Sources

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