How Do I Get the Early-Occupancy (Fixturing) Period Free?
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 1200 340" role="img" aria-label="How Do I Get the Early-Occupancy (Fixturing) Period Free? — PULSE Buildouts"><rect width="1200" height="340" fill="#EBE9DE"/><rect width="14" height="340" fill="#C0531F"/><text x="58" y="116" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="32" font-weight="800" letter-spacing="3" fill="#C0531F">PULSE BUILDOUTS · COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE</text><text x="56" y="198" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="60" font-weight="800" fill="#2b2b2b">Save money.
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 & 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 the Early-Occupancy (Fixturing) Period Free?
Direct Answer
You get a free fixturing period by negotiating an "early occupancy" or "fixturing" license that grants you possession 30-90 days before the rent commencement date, with base rent and CAM both waived during that window — and you ask for it as a separate concession on top of your free-rent abatement, not folded into it. The money move: make the lease say rent commencement starts X days after possession or after your buildout is substantially complete (whichever is later), so the landlord's construction delays don't eat your free time.
On a 3,000 sq ft restaurant at $40/sq ft, a 90-day fixturing period free is worth about $30,000 in avoided rent — and you need that runway to install equipment, pass inspections, train staff, and open with revenue already flowing. Landlords expect to give fixturing time in any deal involving meaningful buildout; the trap is letting them count it against your free-rent months or start your rent clock on the day you get keys.
Get the free fixturing period explicitly and separately, tie commencement to your readiness, and make CAM and utilities part of the waiver too.
Why Fixturing Time Is Real Money
The gap between getting keys and opening for business is dead time — you're paying rent on a space generating zero revenue while you install HVAC, plumbing, kitchen equipment, fixtures, POS, and signage and wait on permits and inspections. For a retail or restaurant tenant, that gap runs 30-90 days; for a complex food-service or medical buildout it can stretch to 120 days.
If your rent clock starts the day you take possession, every one of those days is a check to the landlord for an empty store. Per CBRE and JLL leasing practice, a fixturing period (sometimes called an early-occupancy or beneficial-occupancy period) is the standard tool to neutralize that — possession now, rent later.
Free Rent vs. Free Fixturing — Keep Them Separate
This is the distinction that saves you the most money:
- Free rent (abatement) is a concession against your operating life — months after you're open where rent is waived to improve your early cash flow. Typical: 1 month free per year of term in a soft market.
- Free fixturing is time before you open, to build out, with no rent. It is not a gift against your operations; it's compensation for the dead buildout window.
The landlord's favorite move is to collapse the two — "we gave you 3 months free, that covers your buildout." No. Demand them as separate line items: *"Tenant shall have a fixturing period of 90 days prior to the Rent Commencement Date, rent- and CAM-free, in addition to 3 months of base-rent abatement following the Rent Commencement Date."* Per NAIOP deal-structure norms, the two are independently negotiable.
Tie Commencement to YOUR Readiness, Not the Calendar
The biggest trap in fixturing isn't the length — it's the trigger. If the lease says "rent commences 90 days after possession," a landlord delivery delay can shove your buildout into the rent-paying period.
Negotiate rent commencement = the later of (a) a fixed outside date, or (b) substantial completion of Tenant's improvements, with extensions for landlord-caused delays and permitting delays outside your control. Add:
- Landlord delivery standard. Define what condition the space must be in on possession (warm shell, cold shell, or vanilla box) and that the fixturing clock doesn't start until it's delivered in that condition.
- Permit-delay tolling. If the city is slow to issue permits, the fixturing period extends day-for-day. Per Cushman & Wakefield tenant-advisory guidance, permitting routinely adds 30-60 days in major metros.
- Force-majeure tolling for supply-chain and inspection delays.
What Else to Get Waived During Fixturing
Don't let "rent-free" quietly mean "base-rent-free only." Push to waive:
- CAM / operating expenses — these can run $5-$15/sq ft; paying them during a dead buildout is paying for nothing.
- Property tax and insurance pass-throughs during fixturing.
- Percentage rent (you have no sales yet — obvious, but get it in writing).
You will typically still owe utilities you actually consume during buildout (construction power, water), and that's fair — but negotiate the fixed pass-throughs to zero.
Put the Fixturing Terms in Writing — Exactly
A handshake "you'll have time to build out" is worthless. The lease (or a binding side letter) must spell out:
- The fixturing length in days — e.g., "90 days from delivery of possession in vanilla-box condition."
- What's waived — "base rent, CAM, and fixed pass-throughs are abated during the fixturing period."
- The trigger for rent commencement — "the later of the outside date or substantial completion of Tenant's improvements."
- Delay tolling — "the fixturing period extends day-for-day for landlord-caused delays, permitting delays, and force-majeure events."
- Access for contractors — confirm your GC and subs can get in, run construction power, and stage materials during the period.
Per BOMA and NAIOP lease-standard guidance, every one of these should appear in the lease body, not in an email. If it isn't written, assume you'll be billed for it. A clean fixturing clause is short, but each missing line is a place the landlord can start your rent clock early.
Leverage: When You Get the Most
You get the longest free fixturing when:
- The space needs heavy buildout (restaurant, medical, fitness) — the landlord knows it.
- The market is soft and vacancy is high — per CBRE data, concession packages widen in tenant-favorable markets.
- You're a strong credit tenant signing a 5-10 year term — long term justifies generous front-end concessions.
- The space sat vacant — landlords trade fixturing time for filling dead inventory.
FAQ
How long a fixturing period should I ask for? Match it to your buildout: 30-45 days for light retail, 60-90 days for restaurants and heavier fit-outs, up to 120 days for medical or complex food service. Ask for the high end — it's free time.
Can the landlord count fixturing against my free-rent months? Only if you let them. Insist in writing that fixturing is in addition to base-rent abatement. They are separate concessions.
What if the landlord delivers the space late? That's why rent commencement must be tied to substantial completion with delay tolling. A late delivery should push your rent start, not shorten your free buildout window.
Do I pay CAM during fixturing? Negotiate to waive CAM and fixed pass-throughs during fixturing. You'll usually still pay utilities you actually use for construction, which is reasonable.
Sources
- CBRE — Tenant Concessions and leasing-incentive benchmarks
- JLL — Office and Retail leasing concession practice
- Cushman & Wakefield — Tenant Advisory and buildout-timeline guidance
- NAIOP — lease-structure and tenant-improvement research
- BOMA — Commercial Lease Standards and rent-commencement norms
- ICSC — retail buildout and fixturing-period guidance
- Tenant-rep broker guidance on fixturing and early-occupancy clauses
