4 Lease Types In Commercial

     

Commercial Lease Types: Requirements & Risk Allocation

Commercial leases are financial instruments that define who bears the burden of property operating expenses. Understanding each structure is essential for financial planning, risk management, and asset valuation.
1. Full-Service Gross (FSG) Lease
This lease offers maximum convenience for tenants and operational control for landlords and is typically found in high-rise office towers.

Tenant Requirements

The tenant remits a single all-inclusive monthly payment covering base rent and operating costs such as utilities, janitorial services, and taxes.

Landlord Requirements

The landlord manages all facility operations and absorbs the initial risk of rising operating expenses.

Hidden Liability

Most agreements include a Base Year or Expense Stop provision requiring tenants to pay increases above first-year operating expenses.

Standard Market Exclusions

  • Capital expenditures (major structural replacements)
  • Leasing commissions and marketing costs
  • Debt service and financing costs
  • Ground rent
  • Executive salaries
  • Tenant-specific services
⚠️ Split Incentive Problem: Bundled utilities remove incentives for conservation, increasing operating costs and carbon footprint.
2. Modified Gross Lease
A pragmatic middle-ground lease commonly used in suburban office parks and industrial flex spaces.

Typical Structure

  • Tenant pays base rent, utilities, and in-suite janitorial
  • Landlord pays taxes, insurance, CAM, and structural components

Expense Stops vs Base Year

Expense stops are often fixed dollar amounts per square foot, shifting risk depending on how the stop is negotiated.

Audit Rights

Tenants must negotiate inspection rights and caps on controllable expenses to prevent cost over-allocation. 📌 Industrial Gross Variant: Definitions vary widely by region, making a lease matrix essential.
3. Net Lease Structures
  • Single Net (N): Tenant pays rent plus property taxes
  • Double Net (NN): Tenant pays rent, taxes, and insurance
  • Triple Net (NNN): Tenant pays taxes, insurance, and CAM
  • Absolute Net: Tenant assumes all risks, including reconstruction
4. Percentage Lease
Used almost exclusively in retail to align landlord revenue with tenant success.

Key Mechanics

  • Minimum base rent plus a percentage of gross sales
  • Breakpoint defines when percentage rent applies
  • Clear omnichannel sales definitions are critical

Audit & Reporting

Requires certified sales reporting and POS audit rights with penalties for misreporting.

Final Thoughts

Net leases may require corporate or personal guarantees to secure rent payments. Properly structured leases transform real estate into predictable, financeable assets while balancing operational control and risk.