Sale-Leaseback in Commercial Real Estate: Tenant Guide
A sale-leaseback is a transaction where a business that owns the building it occupies sells that building to an investor, then immediately signs a long-term lease to stay in the same space as a tenant. One day you control the property. The next, you have a landlord.
The financial logic is straightforward: unlock the capital tied up in real estate and redeploy it into the core business. For many owner-occupiers, the building represents one of the largest line items on the balance sheet. Selling it converts an illiquid asset into working capital while preserving use of the space.
What most owner-occupiers do not fully account for is the CAM exposure they are about to take on. When you owned the building, operating expenses were just expenses. You managed them, you paid them, and you had full visibility into every dollar. After a sale-leaseback, those same expenses flow back to you as CAM charges, filtered through a landlord's accounting system, and now governed by lease language you negotiated under time pressure.
What a Sale-Leaseback Transaction Looks Like
The structure is consistent across most transactions. The owner-occupier sells the real property (land and building) to an investor, typically at a negotiated capitalization rate applied to a notional or actual net operating income figure. Simultaneously, the seller signs a long-term lease with the buyer. The lease term is usually 10 to 25 years, often with renewal options.
The lease type matters enormously. Most sale-leasebacks use absolute net or NNN structures. The investor wants stable, predictable cash flow with minimal management obligations. That means all operating expenses, including taxes, insurance, maintenance, and repairs, flow to the tenant. In an absolute net structure, even structural repairs and roof replacement can be the tenant's responsibility.
The purchase price in a sale-leaseback is typically determined by the lease economics, not the building's replacement cost. A longer lease term with creditworthy tenant covenants produces a higher purchase price. The trade-off is that you lock in the lease terms for a long period, which limits your flexibility if the business changes.
Why Companies Do Sale-Leasebacks
The primary driver is balance sheet optimization. Real estate is a capital-intensive asset that generates no direct revenue for most operating businesses. Selling the building converts equity into deployable capital: expansion, debt paydown, acquisition financing, or shareholder distributions.
There are accounting motivations as well. Under prior accounting standards, sale-leasebacks could move real estate off the balance sheet entirely, converting a fixed asset into an operating expense. FASB ASC 842 changed how operating leases are recorded, but sale-leaseback structures can still offer financial reporting advantages depending on the classification of the resulting lease.
Tax treatment provides another incentive. Selling appreciated real estate triggers capital gains, but the proceeds can fund immediate capital needs. Some transactions are structured to time recognition across tax years or to use proceeds for 1031-like reinvestment in other transactions.
Sale-leasebacks also make sense when a building is no longer the right size or configuration for the business, and the tenant wants flexibility to eventually move to a different space without the complexity of selling property.
How CAM Obligations Arise Post-Leaseback
When you owned the building, there was no CAM. There were operating expenses: the actual cost of maintaining the property. After the sale-leaseback, those same categories become CAM line items that flow to you through a lease, subject to the landlord's allocation methodology, management fee markup, and accounting conventions.
The new landlord may calculate these charges differently than you did as the owner. Property management is now a service the landlord provides (or outsources), and the management fee, typically 3 to 5 percent of operating expenses, is a new cost that did not exist when you were the owner. You were your own property manager. Now you are paying someone else for that function.
For how NNN obligations work once you become a tenant, the NNN lease tenant guide covers the core exposure areas.
For how NNN obligations work once you become a tenant, the NNN lease tenant guide covers the core exposure areas.
The landlord's operating expense definitions and allocation conventions can also differ from your prior practices. Items you previously expensed directly, below-threshold repairs, routine maintenance contracts, utility agreements, now flow through the landlord's accounting and appear as CAM charges with the landlord's classification applied.
If the new landlord owns multiple properties and uses shared service arrangements (shared management staff, shared utility contracts, pooled insurance), the allocation methodology for your building may produce charges that differ from your actual proportional share of those services.
What Changes When You Go From Owner to Tenant
The most significant operational change is loss of control over expense management. As the owner, you chose vendors, negotiated contracts, decided when to defer maintenance, and set maintenance standards. After the sale-leaseback, the landlord makes those decisions. Your costs are determined by someone else's choices.
Depending on the landlord's management philosophy, expenses may increase, decrease, or shift in timing. A landlord who defers maintenance pushes repair costs into future years. A landlord who contracts aggressively for services may reduce some costs. A landlord who is hands-off may allow deferred maintenance to accumulate until a major repair is required.
The dispute dynamic also changes. As the owner, if a vendor overcharged you, you had direct recourse. As a tenant, if you believe a CAM charge is improper, you must exercise your lease audit rights to verify the calculation and issue a formal dispute. The process is slower, more adversarial, and requires documentation of your lease rights.
Some sale-leaseback tenants are surprised to find that their new landlord manages the property very differently than they did. A property they maintained meticulously may now receive minimal attention, affecting both operating costs and the condition of the space.
Negotiation Points for CAM in a Sale-Leaseback
Because you control the lease terms at the time of the transaction, a sale-leaseback is the best opportunity you will ever have to negotiate CAM protections. You are the tenant, the investor needs you, and the lease terms directly affect the purchase price. Use that leverage.
Cap on controllable CAM. Negotiate a cumulative annual cap on controllable operating expenses, typically 3 to 5 percent per year. This protects you against expense inflation over a 15 to 20 year lease. Without it, operating expenses that were manageable in year 1 can become a material cost burden in year 15.
Explicit exclusions list. Define what cannot be charged through CAM. The list should include capital expenditures (except for agreed amortized items), landlord's financing costs, leasing commissions for other tenants, executive salaries, and costs reimbursed by insurance. Broad operating expense definitions without a specific exclusions list are the most common source of overcharges.
Audit rights with meaningful teeth. Negotiate audit rights that allow you to audit CAM records within 90 days of receiving the reconciliation, covering at least the prior 3 years. Include a provision that if the audit reveals errors exceeding 5 percent of total charges, the landlord reimburses your reasonable audit costs. The cost-shifting provision is the incentive for accurate accounting.
Management fee definition and cap. Specify the management fee as a percentage of controllable CAM, excluding the fee itself from its own calculation base. A circular calculation, where the fee is a percentage of expenses including the fee, produces inflated charges. Market rate is 3 to 5 percent of controllable expenses, not gross revenues or total operating expenses.
Documentation requirements. Require the landlord to deliver an annual CAM reconciliation within 90 days of lease year-end, with backup documentation available for inspection within 30 days of request. Specify that failure to deliver within 120 days waives the tenant's obligation to pay any true-up for that year.
What to Verify in the First Year Post-Leaseback
The first annual reconciliation after a sale-leaseback is the most important one. It establishes the baseline and reveals how the landlord calculates expenses. Issues found in year 1 can be addressed before they compound over a multi-year lease.
Request the full backup documentation when the reconciliation arrives. Do not accept a summary statement alone. You want the vendor invoices, the management fee calculation, the insurance certificates and premium invoices, and the tax bills for your property.
Compare the CAM charges in the reconciliation against your actual operating costs from the last year you owned the building. Significant increases in any category warrant investigation. Some increase is expected because the landlord is now adding a management fee that did not exist before. But increases beyond that margin require explanation.
Verify that the pro-rata share calculation uses the denominator defined in your lease. If other tenants have been added to the building, or if any space has been subdivided, the denominator may have changed and your lease should define how that affects your share.
Check that excluded items are actually excluded. Line items like "capital improvement amortization," "landlord financing charges," or "property improvement reserve" appearing in the first reconciliation signal that the landlord's accounting team may not have applied your lease exclusions correctly.
After testing reconciliation samples from published audit cases through CAMAudit, the first-year reconciliation in a sale-leaseback produces more findings than subsequent years. The landlord's accounting team is applying standard templates to a lease with custom exclusions, and the mismatches appear early.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a sale-leaseback transaction?
A sale-leaseback is a transaction in which a business that owns its building sells the property to an investor and simultaneously signs a long-term lease to remain in the space as a tenant. The seller unlocks the equity in the real estate while retaining use of the space. The buyer receives a long-term tenant covenant. The resulting lease is typically structured as an NNN or absolute net lease, with all or most operating expenses flowing to the tenant.
What type of lease is used in a sale-leaseback?
Most sale-leasebacks use NNN (triple net) or absolute net lease structures. The investor wants stable income with minimal management obligations, which means property taxes, insurance, maintenance, and operating expenses are passed through to the tenant. Absolute net leases go further, sometimes requiring the tenant to cover structural repairs and roof replacement. The lease terms typically run 10 to 25 years, often with renewal options.
How does a sale-leaseback affect CAM charges?
Before the sale-leaseback, operating expenses were direct costs you controlled as the property owner. After, those same categories become CAM charges flowing through the landlord's accounting system, now including a management fee that did not exist when you were the owner. The landlord's expense methodology, allocation conventions, and vendor choices determine what appears in your reconciliation. You have no direct control over these expenses and must exercise your lease audit rights to verify they are calculated correctly.
What CAM protections should tenants negotiate in a sale-leaseback?
The most important CAM protections in a sale-leaseback lease are: a cumulative annual cap on controllable operating expenses (3 to 5 percent per year), an explicit exclusions list covering capital expenditures, financing costs, and landlord overhead, audit rights with a 3-year lookback and a cost-shifting provision if errors exceed 5 percent, a management fee definition that excludes the fee from its own calculation base, and annual reconciliation delivery deadlines with consequences for late delivery. These provisions should be negotiated at the time of the transaction, when your leverage is highest.