Property owners/leasing agents and prospective tenants goals are
different and they do not speak the same language.
Your goal, as the prospective tenant, is to make a good deal that falls
within your lease budget.
Your landlords goal is to price their space competitively and
attractively so they can lease space to tenants like you.
Lets look back at your transaction. This time Ill
translate, take you through it step by step and help you understand some of the language
of office leasing:
When you first called the buildings leasing agent, you asked if
they had the amount of square feet you needed and how much it would cost. Lets say
you were looking for 1,000 square feet:
The answer you probably got was "we have approximately what
youre looking for and we are asking
$18.00 per leaseable square foot.
When you first visited the property, while looking at the space, the
leasing agent mentioned that the building has a 15% common area factor.
Here are 3 vital definitions, so you understand what you have just been
told:
Usable square feet: The amount of square footage
within the confines of your physically occupied office space.
Leaseable or Rentable square feet: The space you physically
occupy (Usable space) plus the percentage of common area in the building. This is the
amount of space you will pay rent on.
Common Area Factor: These are defined as all areas in the
building that are used by or for all tenants of the building. These areas usually include:
building lobby, all corridors, janitorial and electrical closets, elevator rooms and rest
rooms. It does not include vertical penetrations such as elevator shafts and stairwells.
The owner determines what percentage of the building these areas represent and adds that
percentage to the amount of space, you, the tenant occupies.
Armed with these definitions, you now know the leasing agent has just
told you in order to occupy 1,000 square feet, (usable space) you will be paying rent on
1,150 square feet (leaseable square feet). The $18.00 quote has now increased 15% to
$20.70 .
It appears the space will work for you so you ask the leasing agent to
send you a proposal. The proposal contains the following:
Leaseable Square
Feet
..1,150
sq. ft.
Building Common Area
Factor
15%
Usable Square
Feet
1,000
sq. ft.
Rate per sq.
ft
$18.00
L.s.f.
Annual Rental
Increases
...$1.00
per sq. ft
Lease
Term
.5
years
Operating
Expenses
Base
Year 1999 (Estimated $7.50)
Annual Operating Expense
Increases
..3 4%
Parking
Tenant
will be given 3 unreserved
Parking space in our garage at a Rate of $70 per month per space.
FYI: Typically in downtown buildings parking is paid for by
tenant on a monthly basis. Rates for indoor parking range from $60 - $75, outside spaces
around $50 - $55. In the suburban market parking is usually free, the parking ratio per
thousand square feet is usually higher, and most parking is outside.
In reviewing the terms of this proposal you can now see the original
$18 per square leaseable square foot quote ($20.70 usable square feet) only represents
year one. The term of this lease will be 5 years and it includes annual increase in rent
and operating expenses. Lets see how this affects the rate:
OPERATING COST PER
| BASE RENT |
EXPENSES |
LEASEABLE SQ. FT. |
USABLE SQ. FT. |
| YEAR 1 |
| $11.50 |
$7.50 |
$18.00 |
$20.70 |
| YEAR 2 |
| $12.50 |
$7.80 |
$20.30 |
$23.35 |
| YEAR 3 |
| $13.50 |
$8.11 |
$21.61 |
$24.85 |
| YEAR 4 |
| $14.50 |
$8.44 |
$22.94 |
$26.38 |
| YEAR 5 |
| $15.50 |
$8.77 |
$24.27 |
$27.91 |
The average usable rental cost (the 1,000 sq. ft. physically occupied)
over the 5 year period is $24.63.
These figures do not include your cost of parking. For 3 spaces at $70
per space your cost would be an additional $2,520 per year. This means you can add $2.19
per square foot to the leaseable total or $2.50 to the usable square footage total.
SO THERES YOUR COMMUNICATION BREAKDOWN.
Are you spending more than $18 per square foot? A lot more !!!
Did the leasing agent/owner tell you everything up front? Sure did
!!!
Did you understand it? Probably Not !!!
What did it cost you? In this case $33,150, not including
Parking.
Its important you understand this is the way commercial space is
leased worldwide. Some of the terminology may vary, a bit, from market to market. It has
been the norm throughout the industry for years. Until someone comes up with a more
consumer friendly approach to leasing office space in order for you, the prospective
tenant to protect yourself you must:
- LEARN TO SPEAK THE LANGUAGE
- ASK IN-DEPTH QUESTIONS
- CONSULT AN EXPERT, IF NECESSARY