CAM Overcharge Statistics: The $15 Billion Problem in Commercial Real Estate
40% of CAM reconciliations across U.S. commercial properties contain material errors — not rounding discrepancies, but significant financial deviations that breach the lease agreement. That figure, from a Tango Analytics analysis cited by PredictAP in 2023, describes a structural breakdown in how landlords bill tenants for common area maintenance.
The dollar exposure is large. U.S. commercial properties generate $600 billion to $700 billion in annual rental income, and CAM charges represent 15–35% of a tenant's total occupancy cost. Applying that ratio yields an estimated $90 billion to $200 billion in annual CAM billing volume (BOMA International). A 40% error rate against that base means tens of billions in annual overcharges flowing from tenants to landlords unchallenged.
This page compiles the full statistical inventory on CAM overcharge rates, disclosure gaps, and recovery outcomes — organized so you can quickly find the specific data point you need.
The Core Error Rate Data
Tango Analytics (2023)
The landmark industry benchmark. Tango Analytics examined thousands of CAM reconciliations across U.S. retail shopping centers and found that 40% contain material errors. These are defined as significant financial deviations that actively breach the financial parameters, caps, and exclusions in the governing lease. The study focused on retail assets but is widely cited as representative of broader commercial patterns.
PredictAP (2024–2026)
PredictAP's research confirms the 40% material error rate across the industry. Among sophisticated portfolios that undergo regular routine reviews, PredictAP found a 3–5% rate of persistent overcharges and misclassifications that survive internal review. Their 2026 estimate: this structural failure produces $5 billion to $15 billion in annual capital leakage across the U.S. commercial real estate market.
Deloitte
Deloitte's commercial real estate advisory group reports that up to 70% of commercial tenants identify some form of billing discrepancy or lack of transparency when evaluating their CAM invoices and annual ledgers in detail. This broader figure captures both material overcharges and documentation gaps that prevent tenants from verifying charges.
JLL (Jones Lang LaSalle, 2023)
A JLL industry operations report documented that 28% of commercial tenants discovered discrepancies in their annual CAM reconciliations independently — without hiring professional auditors. Only a fraction of those tenants pursued formal dispute processes after finding the discrepancy.
BOMA International
BOMA consistently identifies CAM reconciliation and expense classification as among the most frequent drivers of landlord-tenant disputes. The association's guidelines attribute the disputes primarily to two recurring causes: unclear ledger statements and improperly misclassified capital expenses.
National Lease Advisors
A study by National Lease Advisors found that misallocated expenses — such as improperly grossing up fixed expenses or failing to exclude vacant anchor square footage from expense pools — can inflate a standard in-line tenant's CAM charges by up to 18%.
The Annual Volume Driving These Statistics
| Metric | Figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| U.S. commercial rental income (annual) | $600B–$700B | Industry aggregate |
| CAM as % of total occupancy cost | 15%–35% | BOMA International |
| Estimated annual CAM billing volume | $90B–$200B | BOMA-derived calculation |
| Material error rate | 40% | Tango Analytics (2023) |
| Annual capital leakage from errors | $5B–$15B | PredictAP (2026) |
| Tenants finding discrepancies independently | 28% | JLL (2023) |
| Tenants identifying any billing issue | 70% | Deloitte |
The $90–200B range reflects the wide variation in CAM intensity by property type. Industrial leases carry modest CAM loads ($0.15–$3/SF annually). Medical office buildings can exceed $20/SF annually. The $200B upper bound applies to portfolios weighted toward high-density office and medical assets in major markets.
Average Recovery Rates When Tenants Audit
When commercial tenants initiate formal CAM audits, the financial outcomes consistently favor the tenant. Industry aggregate data from major audit providers shows tenants who engage professional auditors recover an average of 15% to 20% of their total billed CAM charges.
Applying a conservative median of 17.5% to common tenant footprints:
| Property Type | Avg. CAM (per SF) | Annual CAM (10,000 SF) | Recovery at 17.5% |
|---|---|---|---|
| Retail (standard) | $5.00 | $50,000 | $8,750 |
| Retail (high-end) | $10.00 | $100,000 | $17,500 |
| Office (Class B) | $10.00 | $100,000 | $17,500 |
| Office (Class A) | $15.00 | $150,000 | $26,250 |
| Industrial/Flex | $2.00 | $20,000 | $3,500 |
| Medical Office | $18.00 | $180,000 | $31,500 |
These are retroactive recoveries. Most states and most leases permit a 24- to 36-month lookback. A 3-year lookback on a $26,250 annual recovery for a Class A office tenant yields $78,750 in corrected charges, plus compounded future savings from fixing the error going forward.
Error Types by Frequency
The 40% material error rate breaks down across 12 identifiable error categories. Based on published audit firm data and case law patterns:
| Error Type | Estimated Frequency in Audited Leases | Avg. Annual Impact (10,000 SF tenant) |
|---|---|---|
| Excluded service charges (CapEx as OpEx) | 25–40% | $9,000–$37,500 |
| Management fee overcharge | 15–25% | $600–$3,600 |
| Pro-rata share denominator error | Variable (common) | $5,000–$35,000 |
| Gross-up on fixed expenses | 25–35% | $3,000–$8,000 |
| CAM cap not applied | 15–25% | $1,500–$4,000/yr |
| Base year error | 15–25% | $2,500–$20,000/yr |
| Insurance overcharge | 20–30% | $1,250–$7,500 |
| Tax overallocation / unreturned refund | 20–35% | $1,250–$15,000 |
| Utility overcharge (allocation vs. submeter) |
Gross lease errors are the least common but carry the highest single-error dollar impact. CapEx-as-OpEx is the most common category across audited portfolios.
Why the Rate Stays High
The 40% error rate has persisted despite growing tenant awareness. The structural reasons are:
Property management software defaults. CAM reconciliations are data exports from Yardi, MRI, or AppFolio. Account coding decisions made by property accountants determine what flows into the recoverable CAM pool. Yardi's 7000-series accounts should contain only operating expenses; 8000-series capital accounts should not appear in CAM. In practice, a roof replacement gets coded to a recoverable account, and it hits every tenant's bill as an operating expense.
Lease-vs.-accounting gap. CAM exclusions are drafted by attorneys and negotiated with tenants. The software configuration that enforces those exclusions is set up by IT and accounting teams. These groups rarely coordinate directly. When the lease excludes "above-property management fees," someone has to configure the software accordingly — a step that is frequently skipped.
Volume and time pressure. CAM reconciliations are typically prepared in January through March for the prior year, the busiest period for property accounting teams. Under that pressure, errors receive less careful review before statements go out.
Low challenge rates. Landlords in buildings where tenants never audit have minimal operational incentive to catch errors. The 28% who find problems independently often don't pursue formal dispute processes, which further reduces the correction pressure on landlords.
What the Market Size Means for Individual Tenants
The $15 billion annual capital leakage figure is useful context for policy discussions. For individual tenants, the relevant number is their specific overcharge exposure.
For a retail tenant paying $8/SF CAM on 5,000 SF ($40,000/year), a 17.5% overcharge rate represents $7,000 annually — $21,000 over a 3-year lookback. That's recoverable money sitting in the landlord's account because no one checked the math.
The challenge rate is low because most tenants don't know they have the right to audit, or they assume it's too complex or expensive to pursue. Traditional lease audit firms charge $2,500–$15,000 per property plus 33% contingency, which prices out most small to mid-size tenants. The market gap between the 40% overcharge rate and the actual audit frequency is where most of the $15 billion stays permanently uncollected.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where does the 40% CAM overcharge statistic come from?
The 40% figure originates from a Tango Analytics empirical analysis cited by PredictAP in their 2023 report. The analysis examined thousands of CAM reconciliations across U.S. retail shopping centers and found that 40% contained material errors — significant financial deviations that breach specific lease provisions. It is the most frequently cited industry benchmark for CAM error rates.
Is the 40% error rate specific to retail, or does it apply to office and industrial leases too?
The Tango Analytics study focused specifically on retail reconciliations. Retail CAM is more complex than industrial CAM and involves more expense categories, so the retail rate is likely higher than the commercial average. However, PredictAP's broader research citing a 3–5% persistent overcharge rate across sophisticated portfolios suggests the structural problem exists across property types.
How much can a commercial tenant realistically recover from a CAM audit?
Industry aggregate data shows tenants who engage professional auditors recover an average of 15–20% of their total billed CAM charges. For a tenant paying $60,000/year in CAM, that's $9,000–$12,000 annually. Most leases and state laws permit a 24- to 36-month lookback, so total recovery can reach $27,000–$36,000 before accounting for compounded future savings from correcting the error.
What is the $15 billion CAM overcharge figure based on?
PredictAP's 2026 research estimates $5–$15 billion in annual capital leakage from CAM billing errors. This is derived by applying the material error rates documented in Tango Analytics and JLL research to BOMA's estimate of $90–200 billion in annual U.S. CAM billing volume. The $15 billion figure represents the upper estimate; PredictAP's conservative floor is $5 billion.
Why do so few tenants audit their CAM reconciliations?
Three main reasons: (1) Most tenants assume the reconciliation is accurate and don't know they have the right to dispute it. (2) Traditional lease audit firms charge $2,500–$15,000 per property plus 33% contingency, pricing out most small and mid-size tenants. (3) The audit process — requesting general ledgers, reviewing vendor invoices, applying detection formulas — appears complex without a systematic framework. Only 28% of tenants who discover a discrepancy independently pursue a formal dispute.
For a detailed breakdown of how each of the 12 error types is detected, see the CAM Overcharge Detection Playbook. For context on what drives error rates by property type, see CAM Costs by Property Type. Run a free CAM scan to check your own reconciliation against all 12 detection rules.