Lease audit for CPAs: a high-margin niche your clients already need
If your firm has clients who sign commercial leases, there is a financial document they receive every year that almost nobody on your team is reviewing: the annual CAM reconciliation statement. The landlord sends it, the client pays it, and it goes into the file.
The reconciliation is not audited, not standardized, and regularly contains overcharges. Published industry estimates from Tango Analytics and other commercial real estate sources put typical CAM billing error rates in the 10 to 20 percent range on the reconciled amount. For a tenant with a $60,000 annual CAM obligation, that is real money sitting on the table every year.
Most CPAs skip this work. The reasons are understandable. Lease language is dense, the dispute windows are short, and the line between a math rule and a judgment call is not obvious when you first read a reconciliation. But lease audit is also one of the few advisory services a general CPA firm can add without becoming a commercial real estate shop. The math is deterministic, the lease provisions that drive the math are narrow, and the tooling to extract and verify them exists.
I built CAMAudit because my own early testing on published reconciliation samples showed how repeatable the pattern is. This article walks through why lease audit fits well as a CPA practice niche, what you actually need to offer it, and how the economics work.
Why most CPAs skip lease audit (and why that is changing)
Three barriers have historically kept CPAs out of this work.
Barrier 1: Lease expertise feels like a prerequisite. A commercial lease is 40 to 80 pages. The CAM-relevant provisions are scattered across the operating expense definition, the exclusion list, the management fee cap, the pro-rata share formula, the gross-up clause, the base year or expense stop, and the audit rights section. For someone who has never read one, the document feels impenetrable. The assumption is that you need years of commercial real estate practice to audit a reconciliation.
You do not. You need to know what those seven provisions say and how the math flows from them. That is a one-week learning curve, not a one-year one.
Barrier 2: The economics look thin at first glance. A traditional lease audit firm charges $2,500 to $5,000 per engagement and works on contingency for large portfolios. A general CPA firm doing a $150 per hour standard bill rate cannot absorb ten hours of manual lease reading to find a $2,000 overcharge. The unit economics break.
Software changes this. Document extraction, line item classification, and rule-based math checks are the parts of a CAM audit that absorb most of the hours. Tools like CAMAudit run those steps deterministically and return a structured findings report in under 15 minutes per audit. The remaining professional work is judgment, context, and client communication, which is exactly what a CPA is trained to do.
Barrier 3: It is not a service clients ask for. Clients do not walk in and say "please audit my CAM statement." They do not know the service exists. Which is why the CPA firms that add this to their practice are the ones capturing the market. Clients do not know to ask, but once you frame it, almost every commercial tenant nods.
The barrier dropped meaningfully over the last 18 months as extraction and classification models became accurate enough to handle the document processing layer. That is the opening.
What you actually need to offer lease audit as a service
There are three capabilities. Only one requires outside tooling.
Capability 1: The intake conversation. You need to be able to walk a client through what you will need from them (the reconciliation statement, the underlying lease, any amendments, and estimated payment records) and explain what you are going to do with it. This is a conversation a CPA can have on day one.
Capability 2: The audit itself. This splits into two distinct layers.
- Math rules. Management fee overcharge, pro-rata share error, gross-up violation, CAM cap violation, base year error, controllable expense cap overcharge, and estimated payment true-up. These are deterministic. Given the lease provision and the reconciliation numbers, the math is either right or it is wrong. No judgment.
- Classification rules. Whether a charge belongs in CAM at all, whether an excluded service (capital improvements, leasing commissions, landlord overhead, financing costs) slipped into the pool, whether insurance or taxes were overallocated, whether common areas were misclassified. These involve reading descriptions and comparing them against the lease exclusion list. More judgment, more context.
CAMAudit runs both layers automatically and flags potential violations with the specific lease provision cited. Your role is to validate the output, apply judgment to the borderline classification calls, and decide which findings to pursue.
Capability 3: The dispute. When a finding holds up, the client needs a dispute letter draft that cites the lease clause, the reconciliation line, and the specific overcharge amount. CAMAudit generates a draft. Your role is to review the draft, adjust the tone for the client's landlord relationship, and advise on timing given the audit window in the lease.
None of those three capabilities require you to be a commercial real estate specialist. They require you to read a lease carefully once, understand how the output maps back to it, and advise the client the way you already advise them on tax and financial matters.
Math rules versus classification rules: the split that matters
This split is where a lot of firms get stuck. It is worth spending a minute on.
Math rules are unambiguous. If the lease caps the management fee at 3 percent of operating expenses excluding the fee itself, and the reconciliation shows a 4.2 percent fee on the full pool including the fee, that is a computable overcharge. There is no judgment. The formula is specified, the inputs are in the reconciliation, and the result is a dollar figure. Rules like management fee overcharge, pro-rata share error, base year error, and controllable expense cap overcharge fall in this category.
These rules are the easiest wins. They are also the most common. Over the audits I have run through CAMAudit on publicly available reconciliation samples, the math rules account for the majority of identifiable overcharges.
Classification rules require context. If the reconciliation has a line labeled "parking lot resurfacing," is that an operating expense (repair) or a capital improvement (new asset)? The answer depends on scope, useful life, and the lease's definition of operating expenses. A resurface that extends the life of the lot by 10 years is typically a capital item. A patch job is typically a repair. The classification rule flags the line. The professional decides.
Classification rules are where CAM audit firms historically spent the most billable hours. They are also where software assistance pays off the most, because the tool surfaces the line for review rather than requiring the CPA to read every line and decide what to look at.
A useful mental model: the math rules tell you whether the landlord did the arithmetic correctly. The classification rules tell you whether the landlord put the right expenses into the pool in the first place. A thorough audit catches both.
How white-label tooling removes the expertise barrier
The fastest path into this service line for a CPA firm is to use a tool that handles the document processing and rule-based checks, and to position your firm's judgment as the value layer on top.
There are two ways to do this.
Option 1: Refer clients directly. The client uploads their reconciliation and lease to CAMAudit, pays the flat fee, and gets a findings report. You review the findings with them and advise on which to dispute. This works well when the client is cost-sensitive and your engagement is advisory rather than delivery.
Option 2: White-label the analysis. Your firm runs the tool under its own brand. The client sees a branded findings report from your firm. You bill the client for the full engagement. The tool handles the extraction, calculation, and draft generation, which keeps your hours invested in the judgment and advisory layer. See the CAMAudit partner program for how this works.
Either option sidesteps the expertise barrier. Your firm is not building a lease audit practice from scratch. It is layering advisory judgment on top of a deterministic analytical engine.
"The question I hear most from CPA firm partners is, do we need to hire someone with a CRE background to offer this? The answer is no. The math is deterministic. The classification is flaggable. What clients pay for is the CPA telling them which flags are real and which ones are noise. That is judgment work you already do." — Angel Campa, Founder of CAMAudit
What to charge a client for a lease audit
Pricing depends on delivery model, client size, and portfolio complexity. A few anchor points.
Flat fee per reconciliation. The simplest model. Charge a fixed amount per statement audited. For a small tenant with a single location and a straightforward lease, a $500 to $800 fee is defensible. For a mid-size multi-location client with five to 10 statements, a per-location fee in the $300 to $500 range is typical once the lease has been read once and the pattern has been established.
Tiered engagement. Package the service as an annual review. Tier 1 is a screening review with automated checks and a findings summary. Tier 2 adds dispute letter draft preparation and landlord correspondence. Tier 3 adds ongoing monitoring, multi-year look-back analysis, and lease renewal leverage. Annual fees in the $2,000 to $10,000 range depending on tier and client complexity.
Contingency on recoveries. For larger clients or portfolios, a contingency structure at 25 to 40 percent of recovered overcharges is consistent with what lease audit specialists have historically charged. This works best when the client has a history of large reconciliation balances and you have reason to believe significant overcharges are present.
The margin story matters. If your firm spends two to three hours per engagement (intake, review of the findings report, dispute letter customization, client communication) and the rest of the work is automated, a $600 flat fee on two hours of professional time runs at a healthy effective rate. Compared to tax preparation margins on small business clients, lease audit typically prices higher per hour because the value delivered is concrete: a specific dollar recovery traced to a specific lease clause.
The client conversation that lands this work
The highest-converting framing I have seen is simple. You tell the client you would like to add one thing to the annual review: a structured check of their CAM reconciliation. You explain that the landlord's bill is not audited and regularly contains overcharges. You offer a flat-fee or tiered review, and you set expectations: most reviews identify at least one flaggable item, not every flag is a winning dispute, and the dispute window in most leases is 90 to 180 days from receipt.
Clients who have been in the same space for three or more years are the easiest sell. They have never reviewed the reconciliation, the lookback window in most leases goes three or more years back, and the cumulative overcharge exposure is largest.
For prospect conversations, the CAMAudit for CPAs hub has the framework and the pitch deck material. The CPA guide to CAM reconciliation review walks through the 20-minute triage process you can use before you even quote the engagement.
Frequently asked questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a commercial real estate background to offer lease audit services?
No. The math rules are deterministic and run by software. The classification rules require reading the lease exclusion list and applying judgment to flagged items. A CPA familiar with operating expense accounting and financial document review has the foundational knowledge. The lease-specific learning curve is measured in days, not years.
What kinds of clients benefit most from lease audit services?
Commercial tenants with NNN (triple net) leases and annual CAM obligations of $20,000 or more typically have enough exposure to justify an audit. Multi-location operators (retail franchises, medical practice groups, professional services firms with multiple offices) are the highest-value segment because a single billing pattern error at one location often repeats across the portfolio.
How long does a lease audit take once I have the documents?
With software assistance, the analysis itself runs in under 15 minutes. The professional review, client discussion, and dispute letter preparation add another two to four hours per engagement. Without software, a manual audit traditionally takes 8 to 15 hours per engagement.
What if the client does not have their lease or amendments organized?
This is common. Part of the engagement is helping the client pull the base lease, all amendments, and the annual reconciliation statement from their records or the landlord. For clients with multi-location leases, this document collection step sometimes takes longer than the audit itself.
Are lease audits adversarial? Will this damage my client relationship with their landlord?
CAM disputes are a routine commercial lease process, not litigation. Most leases explicitly grant tenant audit rights. Most landlords process disputed reconciliation items through their property management team as standard business. A professionally documented dispute rarely affects the underlying landlord-tenant relationship.
What about contingency pricing? Is that still the standard in lease audit?
Contingency is still common at the enterprise level for large portfolio engagements. For small and mid-size tenants, flat-fee pricing has become more prevalent because the unit economics of contingency work break down below certain recovery thresholds. Most CPA firms offering this as an add-on service use flat-fee or tiered pricing.
How does this fit alongside tax and advisory work?
It fits naturally into the annual review cycle. CAM reconciliation statements arrive in the first quarter for most commercial leases, which aligns with tax season document collection. Many firms bundle the initial review into the annual engagement and break out the dispute work as a separate line item when findings warrant it.
Sources
- AICPA. Advisory services and non-attestation engagement guidance for CPA firms. https://www.aicpa.org/
- IREM (Institute of Real Estate Management). Operating expense management and audit resources. https://www.irem.org/
- BOMA (Building Owners and Managers Association). Standard methods of measuring floor area in office buildings and operating expense benchmarking. https://www.boma.org/
- Tango Analytics. "CAM Reconciliation: Why tenants should verify the math." https://tangoanalytics.com/blog/cam-reconciliation/
- Journal of Accountancy. Practice expansion and advisory services resources. https://www.journalofaccountancy.com/
Lease audit is one of the few service lines a CPA firm can add in 2026 that has genuine client demand, clear unit economics, and low specialist barrier. The work is repeatable, the math is deterministic, and the tooling to do it at scale exists. If you have commercial real estate tenants in your book, they have a reconciliation they have never questioned.