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Lease Language

Lease Commencement Date: Definition, CAM Impact, and Disputes

The lease commencement date triggers your rent and CAM obligations. Disputes over when it started can shift thousands in first-year CAM exposure.

Angel Campa, FounderPrincipal SDET & Founder
Last updated: April 17, 2026Published: April 17, 2026
9 min read

In this article

  1. What the lease commencement date is
  2. How CAM is handled during the pre-commencement period
  3. The base year and its relationship to commencement
  4. Disputes over the commencement date
  5. Late delivery
  6. Substantial completion vs. full completion
  7. Year-1 proration and CAM exposure
  8. What to document at lease commencement

Lease Commencement Date: Definition, CAM Impact, and Disputes

Most tenants know when they signed their lease. Fewer know exactly when their lease commenced, which is a different date, and a date that carries significant financial consequences. The lease commencement date is the anchor for rent obligations, CAM obligations, the base year definition, and the audit window. Getting it wrong, or accepting a landlord's interpretation that does not match your lease language, can cost you.

What the lease commencement date is

The lease commencement date is the date from which rent and CAM obligations begin running. It is usually defined explicitly in the lease, either as a fixed calendar date or as a date triggered by an event (delivery of the space, substantial completion of landlord's work, or a fixed period after the lease execution date).

Three dates are often confused with each other:

Execution date: The date the lease was signed by both parties. This starts your contractual relationship but does not start most financial obligations.

Possession date: The date the landlord delivers physical access to the space. This may come before the commencement date (to allow you to begin your buildout) or it may coincide with commencement.

Commencement date: The date from which base rent and CAM obligations begin accruing under the lease terms.

In a straightforward deal, all three happen close together. In a deal involving a significant buildout, tenant improvement allowance disbursement, or phased delivery, the gaps between these dates can span months, and each gap carries specific financial implications.

How CAM is handled during the pre-commencement period

Most commercial leases require CAM payment from the possession date even if base rent is abated during a buildout or fixturing period. The logic the landlord applies is that the tenant is occupying and using the building's common areas (parking, lobbies, HVAC, security) even before they open for business, and those costs do not pause because the tenant has not yet started paying rent.

This is a significant and frequently overlooked obligation. If your lease grants you four months of rent-free occupancy for buildout and your annual CAM estimate is $48,000, you may still owe $16,000 in CAM during those four months, even while paying no base rent. The lease typically spells this out in the CAM definition or in a separate pre-opening obligations section, but it is easy to miss in a long lease document.

The practical implication: when you review your first year's CAM reconciliation, the year may include partial-year CAM from a pre-commencement possession period that predates what you think of as "year one." That pre-commencement period needs to be priced into your cost model before you sign.

The relationship between your commencement date and base year directly determines your gross-up exposure in years two through ten.

The base year and its relationship to commencement

For office leases and some retail leases structured as modified gross or base year leases, the base year is set relative to commencement. The base year is the landlord's actual operating expenses for a defined period, typically the calendar year of commencement or the first 12 months after commencement. The tenant pays the excess of actual CAM over the base year amount in subsequent years.

If your lease commences on October 1, 2025, a calendar-year base definition means your base is the landlord's 2025 operating expenses. But you only occupied the space for the last quarter of 2025. If the base year is calculated on full-year 2025 expenses, you are getting the benefit of a full year of costs against which future increases are measured, which is favorable. If the lease requires the base to be annualized from your partial-year occupancy, the calculation matters enormously: a landlord who annualizes using a low-expense quarter gives you a different base than one who uses the full calendar year.

The gross-up provision interacts directly with this. In years where the building is under-occupied, operating expenses may be artificially low because some costs scale with occupancy. If the base year is set when the building is 70% occupied and the lease allows gross-up to 95%, the grossed-up base year expenses will be higher than actual, reducing the spread in future years and lowering your escalation exposure. But the exact calculation depends on when your commencement falls relative to the building's occupancy levels that year.

Disputes over the commencement date

Late delivery

When the landlord does not deliver the space by the contractually agreed delivery date, the commencement date may shift. Leases typically handle this one of two ways: the commencement date is pushed out by the same number of days the delivery was delayed, preserving your rent-free period and buildout schedule; or the commencement date stays fixed but the rent-free period is extended by the delay period.

The two approaches produce the same rent outcome but different CAM outcomes. If the commencement date shifts, your base year definition may move to the next calendar year. If the date stays fixed but you get more free-rent days, the base year stays as originally set.

Which approach your lease uses, and whether the landlord actually applies it correctly, is worth verifying before your first reconciliation arrives.

Substantial completion vs. full completion

Many leases tie commencement to "substantial completion" of landlord's work rather than full completion. Substantial completion typically means the space is usable for its intended purpose even if minor punch-list items remain. Whether the space was substantially complete on a specific date is frequently disputed, especially when the tenant claims they could not open for business due to outstanding work.

Courts and arbitrators apply different tests for substantial completion depending on lease language and jurisdiction, but the core question is always whether the remaining work prevented the tenant from making productive use of the space. A missing floor finish that delays opening is treated differently from missing decorative trim that does not affect operations.

Year-1 proration and CAM exposure

When a lease commences mid-year, the first-year reconciliation creates a partial-year CAM exposure that differs from subsequent years. This proration, if handled incorrectly, can overstate your first-year obligation.

Numeric example: your lease commences July 1, 2025. Annual CAM is $60,000 per year. Your first-year CAM for the 6-month period from July 1 through December 31 should be $30,000 (6/12 of the annual amount, applied to actual expenses for those 6 months).

If the landlord's reconciliation uses the full-year operating expenses of $60,000 for 2025 without prorating to your actual period of occupancy, you are being billed $30,000 too much. This exact error appears in CAM audit findings more often than you might expect. The property management system calculates a pro-rata percentage and applies it to full-year expenses without adjusting for the partial occupancy period.

A related issue: some landlords bill estimated CAM monthly from commencement, then reconcile at year-end. If estimated monthly payments were collected starting July 1 but the reconciliation uses full-year actual expenses without adjusting, the reconciliation balance due will be overstated.

What to document at lease commencement

Documentation at commencement creates the evidentiary record for every dispute that follows. The items worth capturing:

Space condition: Walk the space with the landlord's representative and document anything that is not per the lease or the work letter. Photograph every incomplete item. If the landlord claims substantial completion but work is outstanding, you want a record of exactly what remained at the date they declared completion.

Meter readings: If your lease includes direct utility billing or sub-metering, read the meters on commencement day. Disputes over utility charges frequently come down to what the starting baseline was.

Square footage verification: If your rent and CAM obligations are calculated per square foot, measure or confirm your actual usable square footage before commencement, not three years in. Errors in the lease square footage survive undetected for years when no one measures.

Delivery letter: Some leases require the landlord to deliver a written notice confirming the commencement date once they have delivered the space. If your lease requires this notice and the landlord did not deliver one, document the actual date you received keys or access regardless.

Rent commencement date confirmation: Get written confirmation of when rent and CAM begin. If there is any ambiguity about the free-rent period or the handling of a delayed delivery, put the agreed date in writing before you start paying.

These records matter most in years 4 through 7, when a landlord may attempt a retroactive adjustment to first-year CAM that depends on their interpretation of the commencement date. Leases that were not well-documented at signing often produce disputes that are genuinely difficult to resolve because neither party has reliable records.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a lease commencement date?

The lease commencement date is the date from which rent and CAM obligations begin under the lease. It is often different from the date the lease was signed (execution date) or the date the tenant received physical access to the space (possession date). The commencement date is the anchor for base year calculations, audit windows, and the timeline of all financial obligations under the lease.

When does CAM obligation begin relative to lease commencement?

Most commercial leases require CAM payments from the possession date, which may be earlier than the base rent commencement date. Even during a rent-free buildout or fixturing period, tenants are typically obligated to pay their share of CAM because they are using building common areas. This pre-commencement CAM obligation is often missed and can add up to several months of CAM before the tenant opens for business.

What happens if the landlord delays delivery past the commencement date?

Depending on lease language, a late delivery either shifts the commencement date (pushing all obligations back by the delay period) or keeps the commencement date fixed while extending the rent-free period. The two approaches produce the same rent outcome but different base year and CAM outcomes. The applicable method should be spelled out in the lease, and any agreed adjustment should be confirmed in writing before the first rent payment.

How does lease commencement affect the CAM base year?

The base year is typically set as the calendar year of commencement or the first 12 months of the lease. If the lease commences mid-year, the base year calculation depends on whether the landlord uses actual partial-year expenses or a full-year annualized figure. For tenants in base year leases, a mid-year commencement creates meaningful variability in the base year expense figure, which affects every future escalation calculation for the life of the lease.

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Written by Angel Campa, Founder

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