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What Is a Relocation Clause and Why Is It Dangerous?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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What Is a Relocation Clause and Why Is It Dangerous?

Direct Answer

A relocation clause lets the landlord move your business to a different suite in the building (or sometimes a different building they own) during the lease term — often with as little as 30 to 60 days' notice. The money move: strike it entirely, and if the landlord won't budge, cap it so they can only relocate you once, only to space of equal or greater square footage and equal or better visibility, and only if they pay 100% of the cost — moving, new buildout, new signage, new stationery, IT/phone re-cabling, and lost-revenue downtime.

A forced relocation can run a small retail or office tenant $15,000 to $75,000+ in hard costs, plus weeks of lost sales. Left unchecked, this clause turns your $200,000 buildout into a sunk cost the day the landlord decides your corner suite is worth more to a bigger tenant.

The clause exists for the landlord's benefit, not yours. It is most common in multi-tenant office towers and enclosed malls where the landlord wants flexibility to assemble large contiguous blocks for an anchor or whale tenant. Your job is to make exercising it so expensive and so narrow that they never use it.

Why Landlords Want It — and Why It Hurts You

Landlords insert relocation rights so they can reconfigure floors, land a full-floor tenant willing to pay more, or fill an awkward vacancy. From their seat it is pure optionality. From yours it is a loaded gun pointed at your location-dependent goodwill.

The damage is rarely the rent — it is everything attached to the address:

What to Strike, Cap, or Demand

Treat the landlord's first draft as an opening position. Push for this language, in order of preference:

  1. Delete it. For retail, medical, or any destination/visibility-dependent use, the relocation clause should simply not exist. A good tenant-rep broker will get it removed for restaurants and ground-floor retail roughly half the time.
  2. One-time only, like-for-like. If it stays, limit it to one relocation, to space of equal or greater size, same floor or better, comparable frontage and exposure.
  3. Landlord pays everything. Demand reimbursement of moving, demolition, new buildout to equal or better standard, new signage, reprinting of all materials, cabling/IT, and a downtime credit equal to your average daily revenue or abated rent for the dark period.
  4. Right to terminate instead. Add the right to walk away with no penalty if relocated — sometimes the cleanest protection. If the landlord forces a move, you get 30 days to terminate and recover your unamortized buildout.
  5. No relocation in the first 24 months and last 12 months. Protects your buildout amortization window and your exit.

Never accept "comparable space in the landlord's reasonable discretion." That phrase is worthless. Define comparable with numbers: square footage, floor level, window line, and signage rights.

Numbers That Should Be in the Clause

If you cannot delete the relocation right, anchor it with hard figures so there is nothing to argue about later:

A tenant who negotiates these numbers turns a dangerous clause into a near-dead letter, because the landlord now has to spend $75,000+ to move you — which kills their incentive to do it casually.

How It Connects to the Rest of Your Lease

A relocation clause never lives alone. Cross-check it against:

Brokers at firms like CBRE, JLL, and Cushman & Wakefield all flag relocation language as a top-five lease trap for ground-floor and medical tenants. Treat it as a deal point, not boilerplate.

flowchart TD A[Landlord proposes relocation clause] --> B{Use is visibility-dependent?} B -->|Yes - retail/medical/restaurant| C[Demand full deletion] B -->|No - back-office| D[Accept only with caps] C --> E{Landlord refuses?} E -->|Yes| F[Cap: one-time, like-for-like, landlord pays 100%] E -->|No| G[Clause removed - best outcome] D --> F F --> H[Add 120-180 day notice + downtime credit] H --> I[Add right to terminate with no penalty] I --> J[Signed lease with neutered clause]
flowchart LR A[Forced relocation triggered] --> B[Moving cost] A --> C[New buildout] A --> D[New signage] A --> E[Reprinting + listings] A --> F[IT/cabling] A --> G[Downtime lost revenue] B --> H{Who pays?} C --> H D --> H E --> H F --> H G --> H H -->|Bad lease| I[Tenant eats $15k-$75k] H -->|Negotiated lease| J[Landlord pays 100% + credit]

FAQ

Can a landlord really move my business in the middle of a lease? Yes, if your lease contains a relocation clause and you signed it. Without that clause, the landlord generally cannot force you to move. That is exactly why you fight to delete it before signing — once it is in the executed lease, you are bound by its terms.

What is a fair notice period for a relocation clause? The landlord's first draft often says 30 or 60 days, which is far too short to run a real move. Push for 120 to 180 days. More notice means more time to plan, less downtime, and more leverage to coordinate the landlord-funded buildout.

Should the landlord pay 100% of relocation costs? Yes. Insist the landlord pay moving, new buildout to equal-or-better standard, signage, reprinting, IT/cabling, and a downtime credit. If your share is $0 and the move costs them $75,000+, they are far less likely to exercise the clause at all.

Is a right to terminate better than a relocation clause? For many tenants, yes. A clause that says "if the landlord relocates you, you may instead terminate with no penalty and recover unamortized buildout" gives you a clean exit instead of an unwanted move, and it makes the landlord think twice before triggering it.

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