WALT: Weighted Average Lease Term Explained for Tenants
Weighted average lease term, or WALT, shows up in investor presentations and property marketing materials. Landlords and brokers use it to signal portfolio stability. What those presentations rarely explain is what WALT tells you, as a tenant, about the building you are in and the CAM risk profile you are carrying.
Understanding WALT is not about becoming a real estate investor. It is about reading the building around you and knowing whether the landlord's financial situation creates pressure on how CAM costs get reconciled.
What WALT means and how it is calculated
WALT is the average remaining lease term across all tenants in a property, weighted by each tenant's annual rent contribution. A simple average (sum of remaining terms divided by number of leases) would treat a tenant paying $5,000 per month the same as one paying $80,000 per month. The weighted version corrects for that by giving larger rent contributors proportionally more influence over the result.
The formula:
WALT = (Sum of each tenant's remaining term in years multiplied by their annual rent) divided by total annual rent across all tenants
Worked example: a building with three tenants.
| Tenant | Remaining Lease Term | Annual Rent |
|---|---|---|
| A | 8 years | $600,000 |
| B | 3 years | $200,000 |
| C | 1 year | $100,000 |
Total annual rent: $900,000
WALT = ((8 × $600,000) + (3 × $200,000) + (1 × $100,000)) / $900,000
WALT = ($4,800,000 + $600,000 + $100,000) / $900,000
WALT = $5,500,000 / $900,000
WALT = 6.1 years
The largest rent payer (Tenant A) dominates the calculation because their lease term is both long and large. If Tenant A had only 2 years remaining instead of 8, WALT would drop to under 2.1 years, dramatically changing the picture even though the two smaller tenants changed nothing.
If your building has a low WALT profile, a CAM audit before your lease rolls is the right defensive move.
Why investors and landlords track WALT
From an investor's perspective, WALT is a proxy for income certainty. A property with a WALT of 7 years has predictable cash flows for most of the next decade. A property with a WALT of 1.5 years is mostly rolling leases, which means higher rollover risk, higher tenant improvement costs, and potential vacancy.
Lenders use WALT to assess the collateral quality of a property. A low-WALT property at refinancing time is harder to finance because the lender cannot rely on locked-in rent through the loan term.
Landlords track WALT internally to flag when renewal campaigns need to start and to assess whether the portfolio needs lease extensions before a planned sale or refinancing.
None of that is your problem directly, but all of it shapes the landlord's behavior at reconciliation time.
What WALT signals for tenants
High-WALT buildings: stable income, less pressure to negotiate
When a building has a WALT above 6 years, the landlord has locked-in income from long-term leases. The financial pressure to push aggressive CAM reconciliations is lower because the property cash flows are secure regardless of whether every disputed charge is recovered.
That said, high-WALT buildings are not immune to CAM overcharges. Landlords in stable buildings have less incentive to reduce costs or renegotiate exclusions because they know tenants are locked in. If your CAM language is weak, a landlord with guaranteed income for the next 8 years has no financial reason to fix a management fee that should be excluded from the gross-up base.
The risk in a high-WALT property is not predatory reconciliation. It is passive overcharging: the landlord applies the same methodology every year and no one scrutinizes it because the relationship feels stable.
Low-WALT buildings: cash flow pressure and aggressive reconciliation timing
When a building's WALT drops below 3 years, the landlord is facing significant rollover risk. A large portion of the rent roll is expiring soon. This creates two related pressures that tenants feel directly.
First, the landlord may be deferring maintenance and capital expenditures to manage cash flow ahead of rollover uncertainty. Buildings that are being starved of capital before a lease roll tend to have higher real operating costs because deferred repairs become emergency repairs. Those emergency costs get passed into CAM.
Second, a landlord facing lease expirations has a narrowing window to recover any CAM amounts that were under-billed or not captured in prior years. Audit rights run both ways, and landlords who notice their prior reconciliations were conservative will sometimes issue aggressive true-up notices in years 7 and 8 of a 10-year lease, precisely when they know tenants are close to lease-end and less likely to fight a reconciliation dispute that delays their renewal negotiations.
This pattern appears in published CAM audit cases: the final two to three years of a lease term generate a disproportionate share of retroactive reconciliation adjustments. It is not always calculated; sometimes it reflects a management team that finally gets around to a detailed review when the lease is near expiration. Either way, the tenant is on the receiving end.
How to calculate WALT for your building
You will not always have access to the full rent roll. But you can make a reasonable estimate using what is visible:
Count the number of occupied tenants. Note any anchor tenants and estimate their square footage and likely rent range.
Look at your own remaining lease term and your rent level. Estimate where you fall relative to the building's rent base.
Check whether there are visible vacancies or empty storefronts. High vacancy combined with short remaining terms on the occupied leases signals low WALT.
If you have a co-tenancy clause or a right to inspect rent roll data, use it. Some leases grant tenants access to certain property financial information.
You do not need a precise WALT figure. What you are trying to assess is whether the building's income picture is stable or under pressure, and whether the timing of your lease expiration aligns with a period when the landlord is likely to be focused on squeezing reconciliations.
How WALT interacts with CAM audit timing
The connection between WALT and audit strategy is timing. Most commercial leases grant tenants an audit window of 12 to 24 months after receiving a reconciliation statement. If you wait until year 9 of a 10-year lease to audit years 5 through 8, you may find that the statute of limitations or the lease's own audit clock has already run.
The right time to audit is before lease renewal negotiations begin, not after. If your building has a falling WALT and you are in the final third of your lease, there are three things happening at once: the landlord has incentive to push aggressive reconciliations, the audit window for prior years is closing, and you are about to enter a negotiation where your leverage depends partly on knowing whether you have been overcharged.
After testing reconciliation samples from published audit cases through CAMAudit, overcharge patterns in years 5 through 8 of a 10-year lease are significantly more common than in years 2 through 4. The early years of a lease tend to be clean because the landlord is eager to establish a good relationship. The middle and late years are when the billing methodology drifts.
What WALT cannot tell you
WALT is a single metric. It does not tell you whether the building is well-maintained, whether the landlord is financially distressed, or whether the CAM language in your lease is favorable. A high-WALT building can still have systematic overcharges. A low-WALT building can have a diligent property manager who runs clean reconciliations.
What WALT does is give you one data point for assessing the background pressure the landlord is operating under. Combined with your lease language, your reconciliation history, and your own remaining term, it helps you decide when to invest in an audit and what patterns to look for.
If you are in a property where multiple large leases are expiring in the next 24 months, your building's effective WALT is probably falling fast. That is the window when CAM reconciliation pressure tends to peak, and it is the window when having your own numbers verified matters most.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is weighted average lease term (WALT)?
WALT is the average remaining lease term across all tenants in a property, weighted by each tenant's annual rent contribution. Tenants paying more rent have proportionally more influence over the final number. A WALT of 6 years means the average dollar of rent in the building is locked in for 6 more years.
How is WALT calculated?
Multiply each tenant's remaining lease term (in years) by their annual rent, sum those products across all tenants, then divide by total annual rent across the property. For example, a tenant with 8 years remaining paying $600,000 per year contributes 4,800,000 to the numerator. Divide the total numerator by total rent to get WALT in years.
How does WALT affect CAM charges?
In low-WALT buildings where many leases are expiring soon, landlords may push more aggressive CAM reconciliations in the final years of long-term leases to capture any amounts they consider under-billed. High-WALT buildings tend to have less reconciliation pressure but may have passive overcharges that go unchallenged because the relationship feels stable and tenants are locked in.
What does a low WALT mean for tenants?
A low WALT signals that a significant portion of the building's leases are expiring soon. For tenants in that building, it means the landlord faces rollover risk and may be under financial pressure. This can translate to deferred maintenance (which raises operating costs passed through CAM) and more aggressive reconciliation reviews in the final two to three years of expiring leases.