How Do I Negotiate a Build-to-Suit Lease Rate (Cost x Cap)?
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How Do I Negotiate a Build-to-Suit Lease Rate (Cost x Cap)?
Direct Answer
A build-to-suit (BTS) rent is not a market number you haggle over — it is a *formula you control input by input*, so attack the inputs, not the rate. The formula is annual rent = total project cost × cap rate. If the developer's all-in cost lands at $220 per square foot and they want a 7.75% return, your rent floor is $17.05 per square foot before profit margin and financing spread.
That means every dollar you shave off the cost stack, and every basis point you knock off the cap rate, drops straight to your rent for the entire 10–20 year term. The two biggest money moves: first, demand an open-book, guaranteed-maximum-price (GMP) construction contract so cost savings flow back to *you* instead of padding the developer's pocket — that alone can swing rent $1–$3 per square foot.
Second, negotiate the cap rate down 25–75 basis points; on a $220/sq ft project, dropping the cap from 7.75% to 7.25% cuts your rent about $1.10 per square foot, which on 80,000 sq ft is $88,000 a year, every year. Cap the developer fee at 3–5%, strip soft-cost markups, and tie the final rent to *audited actual cost*, not the developer's early budget.
Get a purchase option at a pre-agreed cap rate so you can buy the building and stop renting forever. The tenant who treats BTS rent as a fixed quote overpays by six or seven figures; the tenant who treats it as a cost-plus equation they audit wins.
Understand The Formula Before You Negotiate
You cannot negotiate what you do not understand. BTS rent is built from a stack, and each layer is a lever:
- Land cost — the dirt, often the developer's or one you control.
- Hard costs — actual construction, typically $120–$300 per square foot depending on building type and market.
- Soft costs — design, engineering, permits, legal, financing fees, usually 15–25% of hard costs.
- Developer fee — the developer's profit for running the project, normally 3–5% of total cost.
- Carry and contingency — interest during construction plus a 5–10% contingency.
Sum those, multiply by the cap rate (the developer's required yield, usually 6.75–9% depending on credit and market), and you get annual rent. The principle: rent is a derivative of cost, and you have the right to see and challenge every number that feeds it. If a developer refuses to open the book, that is your signal they are hiding margin.
Drive Down The Cost Stack
The cost side is where the biggest dollars hide because a markup buried in soft costs compounds across the whole term at the cap rate.
- Insist on an open-book GMP contract. A guaranteed maximum price with shared savings means under-budget construction lowers *your* rent. Without it, the developer keeps every dollar saved.
- Cap the developer fee. Fees above 5% are negotiable; on a $20 million project, dropping the fee from 5% to 3.5% removes $300,000 of cost — about $0.30/sq ft of rent on 75,000 sq ft, forever.
- Competitively bid the trades. Demand at least three subcontractor bids per major trade and the right to review them. Sole-sourced trades hide markup.
- Scrutinize soft costs. Design and engineering fees, lender points, and "developer overhead" line items are frequently padded. Cap soft costs as a percentage and require backup invoices.
- Right-size the contingency. A 10% contingency on a simple box is fat; 5% is reasonable. Unused contingency should reduce final cost, not convert to developer profit.
Negotiate The Cap Rate
The cap rate is the developer's required return, and it is more negotiable than tenants realize because *your credit* is the developer's collateral. A strong tenant on a long lease is a low-risk bond — price it like one.
- Lead with your credit. A national or investment-grade tenant on a 15–20 year lease justifies a cap rate 50–100 basis points below a weak-credit deal. Make the developer price your reliability.
- Benchmark the market. Pull recent BTS and net-lease cap rates from CBRE and JLL net-lease reports. If single-tenant net-lease deals are trading at 6.5–7%, do not accept 8.5%.
- Separate the cap rate from the financing spread. Some developers bury an extra 50–100 bps as a "financing spread" on top of the cap. Make them itemize and justify it.
- Trade term for rate. Offering a longer initial term or earlier rent commencement can buy you a lower cap rate. Quantify the trade before you give it away.
- Do the math out loud. On a $220/sq ft, 80,000 sq ft building, every 25 bps of cap rate is roughly $0.55/sq ft — about $44,000 a year, or $880,000 over a 20-year term. Say that number in the room.
Protect Yourself Past Signing
Even a great formula can be gamed after the LOI. Lock the protections that keep the deal honest through construction and beyond.
- Tie final rent to audited actual cost. The rent must reset to *real* cost when the building is done, with your third-party audit right — not the developer's optimistic pro forma. A rent locked to budget invites overspending on your dime.
- Control change orders. Spec creep is a profit center. Lock the scope and unit prices in an exhibit, require your sign-off on changes over a threshold, and bar markup on owner-requested changes beyond a fixed percentage.
- Get a purchase option. Negotiate the right to buy the building at a pre-agreed cap rate or fixed price at defined windows. This converts rent into equity and is the ultimate landlord-leverage neutralizer.
- Cap operating-expense pass-throughs. Even in a single-tenant net lease, define what is a capital expense (landlord's) versus operating (yours), and cap controllable increases.
- Secure non-disturbance. A BTS often carries new construction debt; insist on an SNDA with non-disturbance so a lender foreclosure cannot terminate your lease.
A Quick Playbook
- Memorize the formula — rent = total cost × cap rate — and make the developer prove every input.
- Demand an open-book GMP with shared savings so cost cuts lower your rent.
- Cap the developer fee at 3–5% and bid every major trade.
- Push the cap rate down 25–75 bps using your credit and market comps.
- Tie final rent to audited actual cost and bolt on a purchase option so you can stop renting.
FAQ
What cap rate should I expect on a build-to-suit lease? It depends on your credit and the term. Strong, investment-grade tenants on long 15–20 year leases command cap rates near current single-tenant net-lease pricing — often 6.5–7.5% — while weaker credit or shorter terms push toward 8–9%.
Always benchmark against recent net-lease transactions in CBRE and JLL reports, separate any "financing spread" the developer adds, and remember that every 25 basis points is real money compounded over the entire term.
Why does an open-book GMP contract matter so much? Because without it, the developer keeps every dollar saved during construction while your rent stays locked to an inflated budget. A guaranteed maximum price with shared savings means under-budget construction flows back to you as lower cost — and therefore lower rent for 10–20 years.
It also lets you audit actual spending, competitively bid trades, and stop padded soft costs from compounding against you at the cap rate. It is the single highest-leverage term in a BTS.
Can I really negotiate the developer fee? Yes. Developer fees of 3–5% are standard, and anything above that is squarely negotiable, especially on a large, low-risk, strong-credit project. On a $20 million build, trimming the fee from 5% to 3.5% removes $300,000 of cost that would otherwise be multiplied by the cap rate into your rent.
Ask the developer to justify the fee against the actual work and risk they carry, and tie part of it to on-time, on-budget delivery.
Should I get a purchase option in a build-to-suit? Almost always. A purchase option at a pre-agreed cap rate or fixed price converts your rent from a permanent expense into a path to ownership and neutralizes the landlord's long-term leverage. Negotiate defined windows — say, at years 5, 10, and lease end — and a transparent pricing formula.
Even if you never exercise it, the option caps your downside and gives you a credible alternative every time the landlord pushes on renewal or operating-expense terms.
Sources
- CBRE — Net-lease and build-to-suit cap rate research and construction cost trends.
- JLL — Construction Outlook, single-tenant net-lease, and BTS advisory reports.
- Cushman & Wakefield — Build-to-Suit and Development Services advisory briefs.
- NAIOP (Commercial Real Estate Development Association) — Development pro forma and BTS structuring research.
- RSMeans (Gordian) — Commercial construction unit cost data for cost-stack benchmarking.
- BOMA International — Operating-expense classification and capital-vs-operating standards.
- IREM (Institute of Real Estate Management) — Net-lease administration and audit-right best practices.
