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How Do I Get Out of a Commercial Lease Early Without Paying a Fortune?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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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 &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>

How Do I Get Out of a Commercial Lease Early Without Paying a Fortune?

Direct Answer

The cheapest exit is almost always a sublease or assignment — you keep paying rent on paper but a new occupant covers it, so your out-of-pocket cost can drop to near zero. The fastest clean break is a negotiated buyout (lease termination agreement), where you pay the landlord a lump sum — typically 3 to 9 months' rent — to walk away free and clear.

The riskiest (but sometimes cheapest) route is to default and force the landlord's duty to mitigate, which in most states legally requires the landlord to make reasonable efforts to re-rent and credit that new rent against what you owe.

Before you do anything, read your lease for the assignment/sublet clause, the termination/break clause, the early-termination fee, and the default and remedies section. The money move: never just stop paying and disappear — that triggers acceleration of the full remaining rent plus your personal guarantee (see bo0009).

Instead, pick the exit route with the lowest net cost = (months of remaining rent) minus (rent the space can be re-rented for) plus (buyout or legal costs). Run that math first; it tells you which door to use.

Route 1: Sublease — Keep the Lease, Lose the Cost

A sublease means you bring in a subtenant who pays rent to you, and you keep paying the landlord. You stay on the hook, but if the subtenant covers 100% of your rent, your cash cost goes to zero while you exit the space.

Route 2: Assignment — Hand Off the Whole Lease

An assignment transfers the entire lease to a new tenant who steps into your shoes. Cleaner than a sublease because, done right, you're out. The catch: landlords usually require you to remain secondarily liable unless you negotiate a full release/novation.

flowchart TD A[Need to exit early] --> B[Read lease: assignment, termination, default sections] B --> C{Sublet/assign allowed?} C -->|Yes, consent reasonable| D[Find subtenant or assignee] D --> E{Full release available?} E -->|Yes| F[Assignment + novation — fully out] E -->|No| G[Sublease — cash neutral, still liable] C -->|No / blocked| H{Negotiate buyout?} H -->|Landlord agrees| I[Termination agreement: 3-9 months rent] H -->|No deal| J[Default + force mitigation duty] J --> K[Landlord must re-rent, credit new rent]

Route 3: The Buyout — Pay Once, Walk Away

A lease termination agreement (buyout) is a clean, negotiated exit. You pay the landlord a lump sum and both sides sign a mutual release. This is often the best option when subletting is hard or you need certainty.

What a buyout typically costs: 3 to 9 months of rent, sometimes more on long remaining terms. The landlord's number is driven by:

Negotiate down by reminding the landlord that re-renting your space relieves their loss, and that a quick, clean buyout beats months of vacancy and legal fees. Get the mutual release and PG termination in writing before you pay a dime.

Route 4: Default + the Landlord's Duty to Mitigate

If there's no exit clause and no buyout deal, the law may still protect you. In most U.S. States, a landlord has a duty to mitigate damages — they must make reasonable efforts to re-rent the space, and any rent they collect from a new tenant is credited against what you owe. You're liable for the gap, not the full remaining rent.

Hidden Levers Most Tenants Miss

graph LR A[Lowest-cost exit?] --> B[Sublease: ~$0 if rent covered] A --> C[Assignment + novation: fully released] A --> D[Buyout: 3-9 months rent, certain] A --> E[Default + mitigation: gap only, risky] B --> F[Net cost = remaining rent - re-rent income] C --> F D --> F E --> F F --> G[Pick the lowest net number]

FAQ

Can I just break my commercial lease and walk away? Not safely. Abandoning the space usually triggers acceleration (the whole remaining rent comes due at once) and activates your personal guarantee. Always exit through a sublease, assignment, buyout, or documented default with mitigation — never by disappearing.

How much does it cost to buy out of a commercial lease? Typically 3 to 9 months' rent, depending on the months remaining, the landlord's ability to re-rent quickly, and any unamortized tenant improvements, free rent, and broker commissions the landlord wants recovered.

Low-vacancy markets can mean a smaller buyout because the landlord re-leases fast.

Does my landlord have to try to re-rent the space if I leave? In most states, yes — landlords have a duty to mitigate damages and must make reasonable efforts to re-rent, crediting the new rent against what you owe. It's not universal, so confirm your state's rule before relying on it.

What's the difference between subleasing and assigning? A sublease keeps your name on the master lease — you stay liable and re-rent to a subtenant. An assignment transfers the whole lease to a new tenant; with a novation, you're fully released. Assignment is cleaner if you can get the release.

Will an early exit hurt my personal guarantee? It can. Make sure any assignment, buyout, or termination agreement explicitly terminates your personal guarantee. Otherwise you can be off the lease but still personally on the hook — the worst of both worlds.

Sources

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