Between May 2022 and May 2024, available net lease properties grew from $9.05 billion to $24.3 billion. This is a 168% increase in just 2 years.[1]
The 3 Types of Commercial Net Leases
- Triple Net Lease (NNN): This is the most common type of lease. The tenant pays for the property taxes, insurance, and maintenance in addition to the base rent.
- Double Net Lease (NN): The tenant pays property taxes and insurance, and the landlord pays the maintenance costs.
- Single Net Lease (N): The tenant pays property taxes, while the landlord is responsible for insurance and maintenance.
Key Things to Know About Commercial Net Lease Agreements
- Fixed Monthly Rent: The tenant pays a set base rate that may be lower than a commercial gross lease agreement
- Property Costs: The lessee is responsible for paying additional net expense(s), as defined by the net lease agreement type.
- Fluctuating Expenses: The renter is exposed to unexpected expenses, such as rising taxes or maintenance.
- Landlord Obligations: The property owner transfers property expenses that reduce their financial risk.
Total Monthly Rent = Base Rent + Net Expense Estimate
At year-end, if the actual expense differs from the estimates, the landlord reconciles and adjusts payments accordingly.
What is Common Area Maintenance (CAM)?
CAM charges cover the costs of maintaining shared spaces within a property, such as:
- Parking lots
- landscpaping and groundskeeping
- elevators and lobbies
- Security
- Snow removal and trash collection
- lighting and utilities in share spaces
Tenants may request a cap on annual increases in CAM charges, such as a fixed percentage (e.g. 3-5%) or a specific dollar amount.
How is CAM Calculated for Multi-Tenant Properties?
CAM expenses are divided equally among tenants based on their pro-rata, or proportion of space the tenant occupies, in the building.
Sample
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