How Do I Cap CAM (Common Area Maintenance) Charges?
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How Do I Cap CAM (Common Area Maintenance) Charges?
Direct Answer
Cap your controllable CAM at 3% to 5% per year, cumulative and compounding — and exclude capital costs entirely. CAM is the pile of "shared" building costs the landlord passes through pro-rata: landscaping, parking lot maintenance, common-area cleaning, security, and management.
Unchecked, CAM can balloon 8% to 15% in a single year when a landlord decides to repave the lot or replace the roof and bills it as "maintenance." The money move: get a cap on the controllable portion in writing, force the landlord to amortize true capital expenses over their useful life instead of dumping them in one year, and demand audit rights with a refund remedy.
A typical CAM load runs $3 to $12/sq ft in office and retail; capping it can save a mid-size tenant $10,000 to $50,000+ over a lease term.
The most important word in any CAM cap is "cumulative." A 5% cap that resets each year is far weaker than a 5% cumulative, compounding cap, which lets unused increases carry forward but never lets any single year spike. Always negotiate cumulative.
Controllable vs. Uncontrollable CAM — Know the Difference
Landlords will tell you most CAM is "uncontrollable" so they don't have to cap it. Don't accept the broad version.
- Controllable CAM (must be capped): landscaping, parking lot sweeping/striping, common-area janitorial, security, management fees, administrative fees, supplies, non-emergency repairs. This is where landlords pad.
- Uncontrollable CAM (usually exempt from caps): property taxes, building insurance, snow removal, and utilities for common areas. These genuinely fluctuate.
The trap: landlords try to classify everything as uncontrollable. Negotiate a tight, written definition — "uncontrollable" should be limited to taxes, insurance, snow/ice removal, and utilities, and nothing else. Management and admin fees are absolutely controllable.
The Cap Structures That Actually Hold
There are three ways to cap, ranked weakest to strongest:
- Annual non-cumulative cap (weakest): controllable CAM can rise up to, say, 5% each year, and the cap resets. A landlord can hit 5% every year. Avoid if you can.
- Cumulative cap (better): unused cap "room" carries forward. If CAM rises 2% one year, the next year can rise up to 8% (5% + 3% carryforward). Smooths spikes.
- Cumulative and compounding cap (strongest): the cap base compounds, but no single year can spike beyond the formula. This is what you want. Target 3% to 5% cumulative compounding on controllable CAM.
Exclude Capital Costs — The Biggest Single Save
This is where tenants lose the most money. A landlord repaves the parking lot for $200,000, replaces a roof for $400,000, or installs a new HVAC plant for $500,000 — and bills it to tenants as CAM in one year. Your pro-rata share could be a five-figure surprise.
- Exclude capital expenditures from CAM outright, OR
- If the landlord insists, amortize capital over the IRS-recognized useful life (a roof over 15 to 20 years, paving over 10 to 15 years), so you pay only the slice that corresponds to your occupancy.
- Require that capital spending must reduce operating costs to be passed through at all (e.g., an energy-saving system) — and then only up to the actual savings.
Also exclude: the landlord's financing and debt service, leasing commissions and marketing, costs reimbursed by warranty or insurance, capital reserves, costs to fix the landlord's own code violations, and any cost specific to another tenant. Put this exclusions list in the lease verbatim.
Cap the Fees Hidden Inside CAM
CAM isn't just real costs — landlords layer margin on top.
- Management fee: typically 3% to 5% of operating costs. Cap it at 3% and tie it to a percentage of gross rents or actual costs, not an inflated base.
- Administrative fee: a 10% to 15% markup some landlords stack on top of CAM for "overhead." Strike it, or cap the combined management + admin at 3% to 4%.
- Double-dipping: make sure the management fee isn't charged on taxes and insurance (it shouldn't be — those aren't managed costs).
Audit Rights — Your Enforcement Teeth
A cap is worthless if you can't verify the numbers. Negotiate audit rights into the lease:
- Right to inspect the landlord's books within 90 to 120 days of the annual reconciliation statement.
- If the audit finds an overcharge of more than 3% to 5%, the landlord pays for the audit and refunds the overage with interest.
- A time limit on landlord billing — the landlord must deliver reconciliations within a set number of months after year-end, or forfeit the right to bill for that year.
- Gross-up consistency — if the building isn't full, the landlord may "gross up" variable CAM to 95%-100% occupancy; require the same method every year so they can't game it.
Pro-Rata Share — Don't Pay for Empty Space
Your CAM share is your square footage divided by the building's. Two traps:
- Denominator games: the landlord uses leased square footage instead of total rentable, shrinking the denominator and raising your share. Demand the denominator be total rentable area of the building, occupied or not.
- Phantom space: make sure you're not paying CAM on areas that don't serve you (a separate retail pad, a structured garage you don't use). Negotiate carve-outs.
FAQ
What is a reasonable CAM cap? 3% to 5% per year on controllable CAM, cumulative and compounding. Uncontrollable items (taxes, insurance, snow, utilities) are usually uncapped, but everything else — including management fees — should be bounded.
Can a landlord pass a new roof or parking lot through CAM? Only if your lease lets them. Exclude capital costs or require them to be amortized over useful life (roof 15-20 years, paving 10-15 years), so a $400,000 roof doesn't hit you in a single year.
What's the difference between controllable and uncontrollable CAM? Controllable costs are within the landlord's management (landscaping, security, repairs, fees) and should be capped. Uncontrollable costs (property taxes, insurance, snow removal, utilities) genuinely fluctuate and are typically exempt — but the definition must be tightly written.
How do I verify my CAM charges are accurate? Negotiate audit rights: inspect the books within 90-120 days of reconciliation, with the landlord paying for the audit and refunding overages if the audit finds an overcharge above a 3%-5% threshold.
Should I cap the management fee inside CAM? Yes. The standard 3% to 5% management fee is controllable. Cap it at 3%, strike any separate admin fee, and ensure it's not charged on taxes and insurance.
Sources
- BOMA International — CAM definitions, gross-up standards, and operating-expense classification.
- IREM (Institute of Real Estate Management) — CAM reconciliation and controllable/uncontrollable norms.
- CBRE — Occupier guidance on CAM caps and expense exclusions.
- JLL — CAM Reconciliation and Operating Expense audit best practices.
- Cushman & Wakefield — pro-rata share and capital expenditure pass-through guidance.
- NAIOP — Commercial Real Estate Development Association, net lease and CAM research.
- BOMA Experience Exchange Report (EER) — building operating-cost benchmarks.
