Base Year CAM Errors: How One Mistake Costs You for the Entire Lease
TL;DR: The base year sets the floor for what you pay in escalation charges. If it is understated, every future year's bill is too high. A $2,000 base year error compounds to $10,618 over 5 years. A $10,000 error reaches $53,091 over 5 years and over $114,000 over 10 years. Gross-up inconsistency between the base year and comparison years is the most common and damaging cause.
"I built CAMAudit because base year errors are the single most expensive repeating CAM mistake, and the hardest for tenants to catch without forensic analysis. The base year is set once. If it is wrong, every escalation charge for the rest of the lease is wrong too. CAMAudit's Rule 7 cross-references your base year against gross-up provisions and occupancy data to flag the understatement." — Angel Campa, Founder of CAMAudit
40% of commercial CAM reconciliations contain material billing errors (Tango Analytics, 2023)
How the base year works
In a full-service gross or modified gross lease, the base year establishes the landlord's expense obligation: the "floor" below which you pay nothing beyond base rent. It is typically set to the actual operating expenses incurred during the first calendar year of the lease.
Every subsequent year, the landlord runs a simple formula:
Current Year Operating Expenses - Base Year Amount = Excess
You pay your pro-rata share of that excess. The base year amount is a constant subtracted from a growing variable. Operating expenses rise annually due to inflation, tax reassessments, insurance, and service costs. If the base year number is wrong, that error appears in the calculation every single year for the remainder of the lease.
As Mazirow Commercial, a tenant advisory firm, states: "A mistake in year one will compound each and every year of the lease, often resulting in significant overpayments by Tenants."
The compounding math
Two structures determine how a base year error accumulates.
Flat excess structure: The tenant overpays by the exact error amount every year. A $2,000 error produces $2,000/year in excess, or $10,000 over five years. Straightforward, but still substantial.
Compounding escalation structure: When your lease applies a percentage increase (typically 3%) to the prior year's escalation payment, the error itself compounds. Year 1's inflated payment becomes the basis for Year 2's 3% increase.
$2,000 base year error at 3% escalation
| Year | Annual Overcharge | Cumulative Total |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | $2,000 | $2,000 |
| 2 | $2,060 | $4,060 |
| 3 | $2,122 | $6,182 |
| 4 | $2,185 | $8,367 |
| 5 | $2,251 | $10,618 |
Over five times the original error.
$10,000 base year error at 3% escalation
| Year | Annual Overcharge | Cumulative Total |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | $10,000 | $10,000 |
| 2 | $10,300 | $20,300 |
| 3 | $10,609 | $30,909 |
| 4 | $10,927 | $41,836 |
| 5 | $11,255 | $53,091 |
Over a 10-year lease (common in commercial real estate), this same $10,000 error produces over $114,000 in cumulative overcharges. The Year 10 annual overcharge alone ($13,048) is 30% larger than the original error.
The takeaway: the base year error is not a one-time cost. It is a permanent structural shift in your expense curve. The longer the lease runs without correction, the greater the cumulative damage.
The gross-up problem
Gross-Up: A gross-up clause adjusts variable operating expenses to reflect a hypothetical occupancy level, typically 95% per the BOMA Green Lease Guide standard. This prevents tenants from subsidizing vacant space through artificially low base year expenses.
Gross-up inconsistency is the most technically complex and most frequently exploited source of base year errors. Three specific gross-up errors amplify base year problems:
1. Grossing up comparison years but not the base year
This is the most common and most damaging pattern. The landlord fails to gross up the base year expenses (reflecting low occupancy at lease start) but applies the gross-up formula to every subsequent year. The base year is artificially deflated while comparison years are inflated, creating a double distortion.
Example: A building at 50% occupancy with actual variable costs of $5.00/SF. Grossed up to 95%, those costs become approximately $9.50/SF. If the landlord records $5.00/SF as the base year but $9.50/SF as Year 2's comparison, the tenant pays escalation on a $4.50/SF gap that does not reflect actual cost increases.
2. Grossing up fixed expenses
Property taxes, insurance, building security, and exterior lighting are fixed costs that do not vary with occupancy. They should never enter the gross-up calculation. Published research from Cushman & Wakefield demonstrates that 30 to 35% of electricity costs alone are fixed (exterior lighting, garage lighting, emergency systems) and should be excluded from any gross-up formula.
3. Inconsistent occupancy assumptions
If base year occupancy is at or below 95% and a subsequent year exceeds 95%, the tenant pays increased expenses purely from occupancy change, not from actual cost increases. Parr Brown, a law firm specializing in commercial real estate, notes this as a recurring finding in lease audits.
Published recovery examples
These are documented cases from professional audit firms and court records.
$584,000 base year tax error. A tenant occupying 76,000 SF in a Class-A office building on Long Island, New York, discovered the landlord had used a pre-conversion real estate tax valuation as the base year, when the lease specified the first tax-assessed year after building expansion. Recovery: $584,000 in refunds plus over $1 million in future cost avoidance. (Source: Commercial Tenant Services)
$2.2 million portfolio audit. A portfolio-wide audit across major Class-A offices identified inaccurately calculated rent escalations tied to wrong base years, among other errors. Total recovery: over $2.2 million in refunds and credits, plus $10 million in future cost avoidance. (Source: CTS)
$63,614 court judgment. In Sheplers, Inc. v. Kabuto International (1999), the federal court awarded recovery after discovering the landlord had charged excluded expenses as CAM costs. The court held that the landlord's testimony about management costs was "impossible to believe" and enforced lease exclusion language literally.
How to audit your base year
Step 1: Get the original base year expense statement. Request the complete general ledger detail for the base year operating expense accounts, not summaries.
Step 2: Verify the gross-up. Check whether the base year was grossed up to the same occupancy level as comparison years. If the building was below 95% occupied in the base year and the landlord did not gross up, every subsequent escalation charge is inflated.
Step 3: Check for capital expenditures. Roof replacements, HVAC system replacements, and parking lot resurfacing are capital items. They should be excluded from the base year operating expenses or amortized over their useful life per GAAP.
Step 4: Verify the denominator. Confirm the pro-rata share denominator matches total leasable area per the lease, not occupied area.
Step 5: Compare across years. If the management fee percentage, insurance allocation method, or utility billing methodology changed between the base year and comparison years, the comparison is invalid.
Your recovery window
Most lease audit clauses allow review of 2 to 3 prior years, but your state's statute of limitations for written contracts typically provides a longer lookback: 3 to 10 years depending on jurisdiction. Published case analysis shows that lease audit time limitations do not necessarily limit the right to sue. Tenants can invoke the state's statute of limitations even when the lease's audit window has technically passed.
Every year without correction adds another full year of overcharge to the cumulative total. The 5-audit credit pack at CAMAudit covers five years of reconciliation statements for one lease.
How CAMAudit catches base year errors
CAMAudit's Rule 7 (Base Year Error) cross-references your lease's base year provisions against the reconciliation data. It checks:
- Whether the base year amount is consistent with the occupancy level and gross-up requirements in your lease
- Whether fixed expenses were improperly included in the gross-up calculation
- Whether the base year reflects the correct calendar period specified in the lease
- Whether the same methodology was applied to both base year and comparison years
Rules 5 (Gross-Up Violation) and 3 (Management Fee Overcharge) provide additional coverage for the gross-up and fee calculation errors that most commonly interact with base year understatement.
Upload your lease and CAM reconciliation statement. If CAMAudit flags a base year error in the current year, upload prior years too. The same error is almost certainly there.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a base year in a commercial lease?
The base year is the first calendar year of your lease, used as the benchmark for operating expense escalations. You pay your pro-rata share of any expenses above the base year amount. If the base year is understated, every future escalation charge is inflated.
How much can a base year error cost over 5 years?
A $2,000 base year error compounds to approximately $10,618 over 5 years with 3% annual escalation. A $10,000 error reaches $53,091 over the same period. Over a 10-year lease, a $10,000 error can exceed $114,000 in cumulative overcharges.
What is the most common base year error?
Gross-up inconsistency: the landlord fails to gross up the base year expenses to reflect full occupancy but does gross up comparison years. This creates a double distortion where the base year is artificially low and comparison years are artificially high, inflating every escalation charge.
Can I audit my base year if my lease started several years ago?
Yes. While your lease's audit rights clause may specify a shorter window, your state's statute of limitations for written contracts (3 to 10 years depending on jurisdiction) may provide a longer lookback. Published case law supports tenants invoking the statutory period even when the contractual audit window has passed.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult with a qualified attorney for legal questions specific to your lease and jurisdiction.