Negotiating Lower Rent for Your Business Bossier City LA

If you own a small business or franchise then leasing a commercial space can be one of your largest expenses. The good news is, the current economic climate has been very tough on commercial landlords, and this presents an opportunity to negotiate lower rent. The following article provides some tips regarding how commercial tenants can leverage the current economic environment to negotiate lower rent.

Malcolm S. Murchison
318-227-1131
10th Floor Louisiana Tower, 401 Edwards Street
Shreveport, LA
D.W. Haigler Jr.
318-676-3850
401 Edwards St. #700
Shreveport, LA
Tonya Rhodes Jupiter
504-525-5553
612 Gravier St
New Orleans, LA
Thuy Le Phuong Huynh
337-233-6210
1042 Camellia Blvd., Suite 2, The Village of River Ranch
Lafayette, LA
Patrick S. Ottinger
337-232-2606
P.O. Box 52606
Lafayette, LA
Raymond Frederick Gollmitzer
318-676-3850
Louisiana Towers, Suite 700, 401 Edwards St
Shreveport, LA
George B. Eldredge
225-922-0597
1885 Wooddale Boulevard, Room 621
Baton Rouge, LA
Alva Clay Smith
225-925-5735
8181 Brandon Drive
Baton Rouge, LA
Margaret E. Carriere
985-871-7237
P.O. Box 4179
Covington, LA
John Karl Etter
504-483-3224
620 North Carrollton Ave
New Orleans, LA
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Negotiating Lower Rent for Your Business

If you own a small business or franchise then leasing a commercial space can be one of your largest expenses. The good news is, the current economic climate has been very tough on commercial landlords, and this presents an opportunity to negotiate lower rent. Real estate attorney Gary O'Brien explains how commercial tenants can leverage the current economic environment to renegotiate their lease and save significant money in this article from JD Supra .

lease negotiation
In my ten years of commercial real estate practice, I have never seen a better opportunity for tenants to reduce costs or secure better space.  With few exceptions, today’s commercial leasing market is a tenant’s market.  Tenants should not shy away from renegotiating their leases early to take advantage of the favorable market conditions.

It’s All About Leverage

I have been saying the same thing to my clients for many years, which is that lease negotiations are largely about leverage.  In a landlord’s market, the only leverage a tenant has is to begin negotiations early and keep all options open, including moving to new space.  For example, if a tenant has been leasing 20,000 square feet of office space for the past fifteen years it is unlikely that the tenant wants to move.  Landlord’s know this.  Therefore, the landlord will wait until as late as possible to approach the tenant about renewing its lease.  Waiting serves the landlord’s interests, because at some point there is not enough time for a tenant to find new space, negotiate business terms, engage legal counsel to document the deal, complete improvements to the new space, pack up their existing space, retain a moving company, and move into the new space.  Depending upon the size, type, and complexity of the space, negotiations should begin anywhere from two years to a few months in advance of commencement.  Many small commercial tenants believe that they can pack and move into a new space that does not require improvements quite quickly, however, they frequently forget that at least a few months must be allotted to finding the new space, negotiating the business terms, completing legal documentation, and moving. 

Leverage shifts to the landlord in negotiations when the landlord knows the tenant does not have sufficient time to move before the expiration date of the tenant’s current lease.  Unless there is a provision in the tenant’s current lease to the contrary, the tenant will likely become a holdover tenant on the first day after the expiration of the term.  In the best case scenario, the landlord will have to provide a thirty day notice to quit which would not be effective until the last day of the calendar month following the thirty day notice.  Accordingly, in the best case scenario, a tenant would have sixty days to vacate if landlord delivered such a notice on the first day after the expiration of...

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