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How Do I Get a Right of First Refusal on the Space Next Door?

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 a Right of First Refusal on the Space Next Door?

Direct Answer

Ask for it before you sign the lease, write it into the lease as an expansion right, and make the landlord put the trigger, the timeline, and the price terms in writing. A Right of First Refusal (ROFR) means that before the landlord leases the adjacent suite to anyone else, they must first offer it to you on the same terms a third party agreed to.

The cheaper, stronger cousin is a Right of First Offer (ROFO) — the landlord must come to you *first*, before they ever market the space. Landlords give these away for free during lease negotiation because they cost nothing today; the same right can cost you $5,000–$25,000 in legal and broker fees to bolt on later, if you can get it at all.

Negotiated at signing, a clean ROFR or expansion option is worth 6–18 months of avoided relocation costs — and relocating a built-out office or restaurant runs $50–$200 per square foot all over again.

ROFR vs. ROFO vs. Expansion Option — Know Which You Actually Want

These three get mixed up constantly, and the difference decides whether you control your growth or the landlord does.

Push for an Expansion Option first, settle for a ROFO, accept a ROFR as the floor. A ROFR is better than nothing, but it puts you in a reactive crouch.

flowchart TD A[Landlord wants to lease adjacent suite] --> B{What right do you hold?} B -->|Expansion Option| C[You take space at pre-set price/formula] B -->|ROFO| D[Landlord must offer to you FIRST at FMV] B -->|ROFR| E[Landlord gets 3rd-party offer] E --> F[You must MATCH within notice window] D --> G{Accept?} F --> G C --> H[You control expansion] G -->|Yes| H G -->|No| I[Landlord free to lease elsewhere]

The Five Clauses That Make or Break a ROFR

A ROFR is only as good as its mechanics. Watch these:

  1. The trigger. Does it fire when the landlord *receives* a third-party offer, or only when they *intend to accept* one? Demand the earlier trigger so you see real terms, not a manufactured deal.
  2. The notice window. Landlords offer 3–5 days; insist on 10–15 business days so you can run numbers and line up financing. A short fuse is how landlords let your right quietly expire.
  3. "Same terms" definition. The space should come to you on the economic terms of the third-party deal, but you should not be forced to swallow unrelated junk (the other tenant's signage rights, a 10-year term when you want 5). Negotiate the right to match economics, not the entire foreign lease.
  4. Co-terminus clause. The new space's lease term should run co-terminus with your existing lease — both expiring together. Otherwise you end up managing two leases with two renewal dates.
  5. Survival and recurrence. Does the right die after you decline once, or does it recur for every future offer? Fight for a recurring ROFR so passing today doesn't forfeit the space forever.

Real Numbers: What This Right Is Worth

Tenant-rep brokers at firms like CBRE, JLL, and Cushman & Wakefield routinely value expansion control as a top-five lease term. Here's why in dollars:

flowchart LR A[No expansion right] --> B[Outgrow space] B --> C[Relocate entire buildout] C --> D[$375K rebuild + $50K move] A2[Expansion right secured] --> B2[Outgrow space] B2 --> E[Take adjacent suite] E --> F[New TI allowance $40-80/sf] E --> G[3-6 mo free rent] E --> H[Avoid 4-6% broker fee]

How to Get It Without Paying Extra

The single best lever is timing. Ask during the letter-of-intent (LOI) stage, bundled with your other asks, when the landlord is motivated to close.

Don't Get Screwed: The Traps

FAQ

Is a ROFR or a ROFO better for a tenant? A ROFO is almost always better. You get the space offered to you *first*, on fair-market or pre-set terms, before any competitor bids it up. A ROFR forces you to react to someone else's deal on someone else's clock. Push for ROFO or a flat expansion option; take a ROFR only as a fallback.

Will a landlord charge me for a right of first refusal? At lease signing, usually no — it costs the landlord nothing today, so it's a soft concession brokers extract for free. Trying to add it mid-term can cost $5,000–$25,000 in legal fees and lease-amendment negotiation, and the landlord may demand a rent bump.

What happens to my ROFR if the building is sold? It can disappear unless it's protected. Include a "binding on successors and assigns" clause, and for high-value space, record a memorandum of the right against the property title so any buyer takes the building subject to it. CBRE and tenant-rep brokers flag this as a top oversight.

How long should the notice window be? Negotiate 10–15 business days minimum. Landlords open at 3–5 days specifically because a tight window makes it hard to secure financing and run the numbers, causing the right to lapse. Never accept under 10 business days for a meaningful space.

Sources

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