How Do I Negotiate My First Commercial Lease as a New Business Owner?
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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 & 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 Negotiate My First Commercial Lease as a New Business Owner?
Direct Answer
The landlord is counting on one thing: that you don't know the asking rent is a starting bid and every term is negotiable. It is. Your money move as a first-timer is to never negotiate alone — use a tenant-rep broker the landlord pays (their commission, typically 4–6% of total lease value, comes out of the landlord's side, so it costs you nothing) and have a real estate attorney review the lease for $500–$1,500 before you sign anything.
With representation, push for the concessions landlords expect to give but won't volunteer: 3–6 months of free rent, a tenant improvement allowance of $20–$60 per square foot, a base rent 10–20% below ask, annual escalations capped at 3%, and a renewal option so you control the space you're about to invest in.
Insist on gross or modified-gross rent if you can, or pin down every triple-net pass-through if it's NNN, because "$25 a foot" can quietly become "$38 all-in" once CAM, taxes, and insurance load on. The two clauses that wreck first-timers: the personal guarantee (your house and savings on the hook — negotiate it to a 6–12 month burn-down or a "good-guy guarantee" capped at a few months' rent) and the lease term (don't lock a 5-year deal on an unproven business — start at 2–3 years with options to extend).
Your single biggest mistake would be signing the landlord's first draft. Nobody does that. The first draft is written 100% for them; your job is to drag it back to the middle.
Get Representation Before You Say A Word
First-timers think hiring help is the expensive move. The opposite is true:
- Tenant-rep broker — paid by the landlord. Commercial brokerage commissions are baked into nearly every deal and split between the listing and tenant sides. If you walk in unrepresented, the landlord's broker keeps the whole fee and works only for the landlord. Bring your own broker and you get an advocate at no cost to you.
- Real estate attorney — $500–$1,500 well spent. A lawyer who reads commercial leases for a living will spot the personal guarantee scope, the holdover penalty, the relocation clause, and the restoration obligation that a first-timer skims past. This is the cheapest insurance you'll ever buy.
- Don't fall in love with one space. Leverage comes from alternatives. Tour at least 3–5 comparable spaces so the landlord knows you can walk. The moment they sense you have no plan B, every concession evaporates.
The Concessions Landlords Expect You To Ask For
These are standard give-backs. Landlords build them into their pro forma and pocket them when a tenant doesn't ask:
- Free rent / abatement: 3–6 months, often more in a soft market — to cover your buildout and ramp before revenue. One month free on 2,500 sq ft at $30/sf is $6,250.
- Tenant improvement (TI) allowance: $20–$60 per square foot the landlord contributes to your buildout. On 2,500 sq ft at $40, that's $100,000.
- Base rent below ask: the listed rate has 10–20% of negotiating room in most markets.
- Capped escalations: hold annual increases to 3% (or a fixed dollar bump), not the 4–5% landlords default to.
- Renewal options: the right (not obligation) to extend at a pre-set or market rate, so you don't lose the space you just spent six figures improving.
- Early-occupancy / fixturing period: free access to build before rent starts.
Understand What You're Actually Paying
The headline rent is not your cost. Pin down the structure:
- Gross lease: one number, landlord pays operating expenses. Best for a first-timer's predictability — push for it.
- Modified gross: you pay some expenses (often utilities/janitorial), landlord covers the rest.
- Triple net (NNN): you pay base rent plus your share of property taxes, insurance, and CAM. A $25/sf NNN base can land at $33–$40/sf all-in. If it's NNN, demand the prior year's actual pass-throughs in writing, cap CAM increases at 3–5%, and exclude capital improvements and the landlord's own structural repairs from your share.
Always get the landlord to quote the all-in cost per square foot including every pass-through, then multiply by your square footage and divide by 12 — that's your real monthly nut.
How Not To Get Screwed By The Landlord
The clauses that take first-timers down:
- The unlimited personal guarantee. Signs your home, savings, and future income to the full lease. Negotiate to a good-guy guarantee (you're off the hook for future rent once you vacate and hand back keys clean) or a burn-down that expires after 6–12 months of on-time payments. Never sign a full-term, unlimited PG on a first lease.
- The 5-year lock on an unproven business. Start at 2–3 years with renewal options. A long term feels like stability but is a trap if the business doesn't work — you owe the full balance.
- The NNN surprise. "Affordable" base rent plus uncapped pass-throughs that balloon. Cap CAM, exclude capital and structural items, demand historical actuals.
- The relocation clause. Lets the landlord move you to inferior space at their convenience after you've built out. Strike it or require the landlord to pay all moving, buildout, and re-signage costs.
- The restoration / surrender clause. Requires you to rip out your own improvements and restore to original condition at move-out — six figures on a heavy buildout. Negotiate it out or cap it.
- The holdover penalty. Rent jumping to 150–200% if you stay past the term. Cap it and define a clean wind-down.
- The auto-renewal you forgot about. Some leases auto-extend for years unless you give notice in a tight window. Know your notice dates.
The Numbers That Actually Move The Deal
- Broker: tenant-rep, paid by the landlord — free advocacy you should never skip.
- Concessions: 3–6 months free rent + $20–$60/sf TI + base 10–20% below ask + 3% escalation cap.
- Term: 2–3 years with renewal options, not a 5-year lock on day one.
- Personal guarantee: convert to good-guy or 6–12 month burn-down, never full-term unlimited.
- All-in cost: get the real cost per square foot including every NNN pass-through before you sign.
FAQ
Do I need a broker for my first commercial lease? Yes, and it's free to you. Tenant-rep broker commissions (typically 4–6% of total lease value) are paid by the landlord and split with the listing side. Walk in unrepresented and the landlord's broker keeps the whole fee while working only for the owner.
Your own broker is an advocate at zero cost — there's no reason to skip one.
How much can I negotiate off the asking rent? Usually 10–20% off the listed base rate, plus a stack of concessions landlords expect but won't volunteer: 3–6 months of free rent, a $20–$60 per square foot tenant improvement allowance, escalations capped at 3%, and renewal options.
The asking rent is a starting bid, not a price tag — never sign the first draft.
Should I sign a personal guarantee as a new business owner? Avoid a full-term, unlimited one. It puts your home and savings on the hook for the entire lease. Negotiate it down to a good-guy guarantee (you're released from future rent once you vacate and return the space clean) or a burn-down that expires after 6–12 months of on-time payments.
Some guarantee is normal for a new business; an unlimited one is a trap.
How long should my first commercial lease be? Start short — 2–3 years with options to renew — not a 5-year lock on an unproven business. A long term feels like stability but means you owe the full remaining balance if the business fails. Renewal options give you the upside of staying without the downside of being trapped.
What does triple net (NNN) actually cost me? On an NNN lease you pay base rent plus your share of property taxes, insurance, and common-area maintenance, so a $25 per square foot base can land at $33–$40 all-in. Always get the landlord to quote the full cost per square foot, demand the prior year's actual pass-throughs in writing, cap CAM increases at 3–5%, and exclude the landlord's capital and structural repairs from your share.
Sources
- CBRE — Tenant representation and commercial leasing market reports.
- JLL — Office and Retail Tenant Guides and lease-concession benchmarks.
- Cushman & Wakefield — Tenant advisory briefs on TI allowances and free rent.
- NAIOP (Commercial Real Estate Development Association) — Lease economics and concession research.
- BOMA International — Operating-expense and CAM pass-through standards.
- SBA (U.S. Small Business Administration) — Guidance on commercial leasing for small businesses.
- ICSC (International Council of Shopping Centers) — Retail lease norms and percentage-rent guidance.
