How Do I Get Out of a Personal Guarantee When I Sell My Business?
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How Do I Get Out of a Personal Guarantee When I Sell My Business?
Direct Answer
When you sell your business, the buyer takes the lease — but unless you actively kill it, your personal guarantee follows you out the door. A landlord has no reason to release you, so the release has to be negotiated and put in writing as a condition of the assignment. The move: make the landlord's consent to the lease assignment contingent on your full, written release from the personal guarantee, effective at closing.
The strongest leverage is a good-quality buyer. Landlords release a departing guarantor when the new tenant is equal or stronger in net worth, credit, and operating track record. Come to the table with the buyer's financials, two years of tax returns, and a personal financial statement showing net worth and liquidity that meet or beat yours.
If the buyer is solid, a clean release is reasonable to demand.
If the landlord won't grant a full release, fight for a fallback: (1) a burn-off — your guarantee terminates after the buyer pays on time for 12 to 24 months; (2) a cap — your remaining exposure shrinks to a fixed dollar amount or the equivalent of 6–12 months' rent rather than the whole remaining term; or (3) a sunset tied to a date.
The worst outcome — and the default if you do nothing — is staying on the hook for the entire remaining term, which on a 7-year lease at $8,000/mo is $672,000 of personal liability for a business you no longer own. Build the release into the purchase agreement and the assignment consent before you close.
After closing, your leverage is gone.
Why the Guarantee Doesn't Just Disappear
Selling the business and assigning the lease are not the same as escaping the guarantee. Three documents are in play, and they don't move together.
- The lease is the obligation of the tenant entity. When you assign it, the buyer becomes the tenant — but the original tenant entity (and you, as guarantor) often remain secondarily liable unless released.
- The personal guarantee is a separate contract between you and the landlord. Selling the company does nothing to it. Only the landlord can release it, in writing.
- The assignment transfers the lease to the buyer — but most leases say the assignor and its guarantor remain liable even after assignment, unless the consent expressly releases them.
- The default outcome: you sell, the buyer takes over, and you're still the guarantor. If the buyer defaults two years later, the landlord comes after you personally for the balance of the term.
This is the trap that catches sellers who assume "the buyer took the lease, so I'm done." You're done only when the landlord signs a release.
Use the Sale as Leverage — Before You Close
Your leverage peaks right before closing, when the landlord wants their consent to be the thing that makes the deal happen.
- Condition the deal on the release. Write into the purchase agreement that closing is contingent on the landlord delivering a signed release of the personal guarantee. Now the buyer and seller are aligned in pushing the landlord.
- Present a strong buyer. Hand the landlord the buyer's personal financial statement, two years of business and personal tax returns, credit, and operating experience. A buyer with net worth and liquidity at or above yours removes the landlord's reason to keep you.
- Offer a replacement guarantee. The cleanest swap: the buyer's personal guarantee replaces yours at closing. Landlords accept this when the buyer qualifies.
- Time it with consent. Most leases require landlord consent to assignment that "shall not be unreasonably withheld." Bundle the release request into the consent negotiation — they're approving the buyer anyway.
- Don't close without it. Once the deal closes and money changes hands, you've spent your leverage. The release must be executed at or before closing.
A seller who waits until after closing to ask for a release usually gets nothing.
The Fallback Ladder When a Full Release Isn't Offered
If the landlord won't fully release you, don't accept open-ended liability. Negotiate down the ladder.
- Burn-off / burn-down. Your guarantee terminates automatically once the buyer pays rent on time for 12 to 24 consecutive months with no defaults. This is the most common compromise.
- Dollar cap. Cap your remaining exposure at a fixed amount — often the equivalent of 6 to 12 months' rent — instead of the full remaining term. On a 7-year lease, this can cut exposure from $672,000 to under $100,000.
- Sunset date. Your guarantee expires on a specific date regardless of buyer performance — useful when you want certainty.
- Springing/limited recapture. Limit your liability to only rent (not the full TI repayment, restoration, or consequential damages), and only until the next renewal or expansion the buyer triggers — at which point you're fully off.
- Security swap. Offer the landlord a larger security deposit or letter of credit from the buyer in exchange for releasing you. More cash collateral makes the landlord whole and lets you go.
Rank your asks: full release first, then burn-off, then dollar cap, then sunset. Never sign an assignment that leaves you on the full remaining term.
Protect Yourself in the Sale Documents
Even with a landlord release, your purchase agreement should backstop you.
- Buyer indemnification. The purchase agreement should require the buyer to indemnify and hold you harmless for all post-closing lease obligations — your protection if the landlord refuses to release and you stay on the guarantee.
- Escrow holdback. If a full release isn't obtained by closing, negotiate an escrow holdback from the sale proceeds to cover potential guarantee exposure until a burn-off completes.
- Get the release recorded properly. The release should be a signed, written instrument referencing the specific guarantee, lease, and date — not a verbal "you're good." Have your attorney draft or review it.
- Confirm no cross-default or other guarantees. Check for other personal guarantees (SBA loans, equipment leases, vendor lines) that the sale doesn't address. Each is its own release.
- Estoppel certificate. Get a landlord estoppel confirming the lease is current, the assignment is consented to, and your guarantee is released — closing-clean documentation.
The release lives or dies on paperwork. A handshake protects no one.
FAQ
Does selling my business automatically end my personal guarantee? No. The personal guarantee is a separate contract with the landlord that survives the sale unless the landlord releases you in writing. Selling the company and assigning the lease does not, by itself, get you off the hook — you must negotiate the release as a condition of the deal.
What's the best way to get fully released? Present a buyer who is financially equal or stronger — with a personal financial statement, two years of tax returns, and a track record — and have the buyer's personal guarantee replace yours at closing. A strong replacement guarantor removes the landlord's reason to keep you.
What if the landlord won't grant a full release? Negotiate down the ladder: a burn-off (guarantee ends after 12–24 months of on-time payments), a dollar cap (limited to 6–12 months' rent instead of the full term), or a fixed sunset date. Never accept liability for the entire remaining term.
When do I have the most leverage? Right before closing, when the landlord's consent to assignment is what makes the sale happen. Bundle your release into the consent negotiation and make closing contingent on a signed release. After the deal closes, your leverage is gone.
How do I protect myself if I can't get released? Require the buyer to indemnify you in the purchase agreement, set up an escrow holdback to cover potential exposure, and confirm there are no other personal guarantees (SBA, equipment, vendor) left dangling. Have an attorney draft the release and obtain a landlord estoppel confirming it.
Sources
- International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC) — lease assignment and guarantor release practices
- CBRE — Tenant Representation guidance on lease assignment and guaranty negotiation
- JLL — Occupier Services: assignment, sublease, and personal guaranty release benchmarks
- Cushman & Wakefield — lease disposition and guarantor burn-off/cap structures
- BOMA International — landlord consent, assignment, and estoppel standards
- U.S. Small Business Administration — personal guarantee obligations on business-acquisition financing
- American Bar Association — Commercial Real Estate: guaranty release and assignment provisions
