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  7. Proportionate Share Clause: How It Is Calculated and Where It Goes Wrong
Lease Language

Proportionate Share Clause: How It Is Calculated and Where It Goes Wrong

Your proportionate share determines how much of the building CAM you pay. The denominator is the most commonly manipulated number in commercial leases.

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

In this article

  1. What Proportionate Share Means
  2. How the Denominator Is Defined and Why It Matters
  3. The Three Common Denominator Manipulations
  4. Manipulation 1: GLOA Instead of GLA
  5. Manipulation 2: Excluding Anchor Tenant Space
  6. Manipulation 3: Different RSF Figures for CAM vs. Base Rent
  7. A Numeric Example of the Impact
  8. How to Verify Your Proportionate Share Against the Lease Definition
  9. What Documentation to Request
  10. How CAMAudit Flags Pro-Rata Errors

Proportionate Share Clause: How It Is Calculated and Where It Goes Wrong

Every commercial tenant pays a share of the building's common area maintenance costs. How large that share is depends on one number: the denominator in your proportionate share calculation. That denominator, the total rentable square footage used to divide up the CAM pool, is the most commonly manipulated figure in commercial real estate billing.

Most tenants know their own square footage. Few tenants verify what the landlord is using as the denominator. The difference between the denominator your lease requires and the denominator the landlord actually uses in the reconciliation determines whether you are paying your fair share or subsidizing costs that belong to other tenants or the building owner.

What Proportionate Share Means

Proportionate share (also called pro-rata share) is the fraction of total building CAM expenses allocated to your tenancy. The formula is simple:

Your Proportionate Share = Your Rentable Square Footage / Total Building Rentable Square Footage

If you occupy 5,000 square feet in a 100,000 square foot building, your proportionate share is 5 percent. If total annual CAM expenses are $200,000, your share is $10,000.

The numerator, your square footage, is established in the lease and rarely changes without a lease amendment. The denominator is where problems occur. Your lease defines what goes in the denominator, and that definition directly determines your proportionate share. A smaller denominator means a larger share for you.

How the Denominator Is Defined and Why It Matters

Most commercial leases define proportionate share as the tenant's rentable square footage divided by the "total rentable area" or "gross leasable area" of the building. But the definition does not end there. What the lease says about what is included in, and excluded from, that total determines the economic exposure.

Gross Leasable Area (GLA) refers to all leasable floor space in the building, whether occupied or vacant. GLA-based denominators are favorable to tenants because they include vacant space. When a tenant vacates, the denominator stays large and your percentage stays small.

Gross Leasable Occupied Area (GLOA) refers only to the floor space that is currently occupied or leased. GLOA-based denominators shrink as building occupancy falls. When other tenants vacate, the denominator shrinks and your percentage rises. You absorb a larger share of CAM costs because the building has a leasing problem that is not yours.

The distinction between GLA and GLOA is the single most important definitional issue in a proportionate share clause. A tenant who believes their denominator is GLA-based and discovers it is actually GLOA-based may have been overpaying for years.

The Three Common Denominator Manipulations

After reviewing CAM reconciliations across commercial lease types, three denominator manipulations appear consistently. Each has the same effect: reducing the denominator below what the lease requires, which increases your proportionate share above your contractual obligation.

Manipulation 1: GLOA Instead of GLA

This is the most prevalent denominator issue in retail and mixed-use properties. The lease requires GLA (total leasable area including vacant space). The reconciliation calculates the denominator using only occupied or leased space.

When a property experiences vacancies, a GLOA-based calculation passes those costs to remaining tenants. You are effectively subsidizing the landlord's carrying costs on vacant space. The economic transfer can be significant in buildings with higher vacancy rates.

The calculation difference is direct and proportional. If a building has 20 percent vacancy and your lease requires a GLA denominator, your proper share in a 100,000 square foot building with 5,000 square feet of your space is 5 percent. If the landlord uses GLOA (80,000 square feet occupied), your share becomes 6.25 percent. That is a 25 percent overcharge on every CAM dollar billed to you for that year.

Manipulation 2: Excluding Anchor Tenant Space

In retail shopping centers, anchor tenants often negotiate separate CAM arrangements. They may pay CAM directly to the landlord at negotiated rates, contribute to specific expenses separately, or receive partial CAM exclusions as a condition of their tenancy. These arrangements are commercially reasonable and common.

The problem arises when the landlord excludes anchor tenant space from the denominator without contributing a corresponding amount to the CAM pool. If a 30,000 square foot anchor is excluded from the denominator, the remaining 70,000 square feet of tenants divide the full CAM pool. A tenant with 5,000 square feet now has a 7.14 percent share instead of 5 percent, a 42.8 percent overcharge on CAM.

The correct structure, from a tenant protection perspective, requires the landlord to contribute an amount equal to the anchor's pro-rata share calculated on total GLA. This "landlord contribution" fills the denominator gap and prevents the cost shift onto other tenants.

Some anchor tenant side agreements are confidential, and the landlord may resist disclosing them. Your lease should require the landlord to notify you of any tenant whose space is excluded from the denominator and to certify the methodology used.

Manipulation 3: Different RSF Figures for CAM vs. Base Rent

The square footage used to calculate your base rent and the square footage used in the CAM denominator should be consistent measures of the same building. In some reconciliations, the denominator figure in the CAM calculation differs from the total RSF figure used in the rent calculation, without explanation.

This can happen when the landlord uses different measurement standards for different purposes (BOMA 1996 vs. BOMA 2017 measurement standards produce different RSF figures for the same space), when recent tenant additions have changed the denominator without a corresponding amendment to the reconciliation methodology, or when the landlord maintains different RSF records for different administrative purposes.

If the denominator in your CAM reconciliation is smaller than the total RSF implied by the base rent calculation, you are paying a higher proportionate share than your lease requires. The discrepancy should be documented and disputed.

Use the pro-rata share calculator to verify your denominator independently before accepting the landlord's figure.

A Numeric Example of the Impact

Consider a straightforward scenario. You occupy 5,000 square feet in a building with 100,000 square feet of total leasable area. Two anchor tenants occupy 20,000 square feet each (40,000 square feet total) and have separate CAM arrangements. Annual CAM expenses are $500,000.

Correct calculation (GLA, anchor contribution required): Total denominator = 100,000 SF (including anchor space) Your share = 5,000 / 100,000 = 5.0% Your CAM obligation = $500,000 x 5% = $25,000

Incorrect calculation (anchors excluded from denominator, no landlord contribution): Adjusted denominator = 60,000 SF (excluding 40,000 SF anchor space) Your share = 5,000 / 60,000 = 8.33% Your CAM obligation = $500,000 x 8.33% = $41,667

The difference is $16,667 per year. Over a 5-year lease term, that is $83,333 in overcharges attributable entirely to the denominator manipulation, before compounding or any cap analysis.

The same math applies to GLOA vs. GLA manipulation. A building at 75 percent occupancy with a GLOA denominator charges a 5,000 SF tenant in a 100,000 SF building (75,000 SF occupied) a 6.67 percent share instead of 5 percent, a 33 percent overcharge on every CAM dollar.

How to Verify Your Proportionate Share Against the Lease Definition

Verification requires three things: your lease, the CAM reconciliation, and the landlord's documentation of the denominator.

Step 1: Read the proportionate share definition in your lease. Locate the section that defines how your pro-rata share is calculated. Note whether the denominator uses GLA, GLOA, or some other measure. Note whether any tenants are explicitly excluded and whether a landlord contribution is required when tenants are excluded.

Step 2: Find the denominator actually used in the reconciliation. The CAM reconciliation should state your proportionate share as a percentage or state your RSF and the denominator RSF explicitly. If it states only a percentage, request the calculation: "Please provide the numerator and denominator used to calculate our X% proportionate share for the reconciliation year."

Step 3: Compare the denominator to what your lease requires. Calculate what the denominator should be under your lease definition. Compare it to the denominator the landlord used. If they differ, determine why.

Step 4: Request documentation. If the denominator is different from what you calculated, request the building's total RSF documentation. This might include the building's floor plans, the current rent roll, and any executed lease amendments that changed tenants' square footage. The rent roll in particular will show which tenants are occupying which spaces and at what RSF.

What Documentation to Request

A complete proportionate share verification requires:

The current rent roll. This document lists every tenant in the building, their leased square footage, and their lease status. The total of all tenants' RSF should equal or closely approximate the denominator used in the CAM reconciliation. If it does not, the landlord needs to explain the difference.

The building's total RSF certification. Some landlords maintain a formal RSF certification prepared by an architect or space measurement professional. This establishes the authoritative total square footage of all leasable space in the building.

Documentation of any tenant-specific denominator exclusions. If any tenant's space is excluded from the denominator, request the lease provision or side agreement that authorizes the exclusion. Also request confirmation of the landlord contribution amount substituted for that excluded space.

Year-over-year denominator history. If your proportionate share percentage has changed from one year to the next without a corresponding change in your occupied square footage, request the denominator for each year and an explanation of the change. Building additions, tenant additions, and measurement methodology changes can all affect the denominator legitimately. Unexplained denominator changes should be scrutinized.

How CAMAudit Flags Pro-Rata Errors

CAMAudit's pro-rata share detection rule analyzes the denominator used in each year's CAM reconciliation against the lease definition, flagging discrepancies that produce an overstated proportionate share.

When the extracted lease data specifies a GLA-based denominator and the reconciliation reflects a denominator consistent with GLOA (or with anchor space excluded without a landlord contribution offset), CAMAudit surfaces the finding with the calculated dollar impact.

The rule also catches cases where the same building's RSF appears differently in different documents in the audit package. If the base rent rider, the CAM reconciliation, and the floor plan exhibit show three different total building RSF figures, that inconsistency is flagged for review.

For tenants who want to verify their proportionate share before running a full audit, the pro-rata share calculator in the tools section lets you input your RSF, the denominator from your reconciliation, and the denominator your lease requires, and calculates the dollar impact of any discrepancy over the period you specify.

The denominator is a number your landlord controls. Your lease defines what it should be. Verifying the two match is one of the simplest and most frequently productive steps in any CAM reconciliation review.


Frequently Asked Questions

How is proportionate share calculated in a commercial lease?

Proportionate share is calculated by dividing the tenant's rentable square footage by the total rentable square footage of the building, as defined in the lease. The result is expressed as a percentage, and that percentage is multiplied by total CAM expenses to determine the tenant's CAM obligation. For example, a tenant with 5,000 square feet in a 100,000 square foot building has a 5 percent proportionate share and pays 5 percent of all CAM expenses. The denominator definition in the lease determines whether vacant space and excluded tenant space are included in the calculation.

What is the most common error in proportionate share calculations?

The most common error is using GLOA (Gross Leasable Occupied Area) instead of GLA (Gross Leasable Area) as the denominator. GLA includes all leasable space, whether occupied or vacant. GLOA includes only currently occupied or leased space. When a lease requires GLA but the landlord calculates using GLOA, vacancies in the building reduce the denominator and increase every remaining tenant's proportionate share. In a building at 80 percent occupancy with a GLA-required lease, a GLOA-based calculation overstates a tenant's share by 25 percent.

Can my proportionate share change during my lease term?

Your proportionate share can change if the building's total rentable square footage changes (through additions or reconfigurations), if the denominator definition allows for occupancy-based adjustments (GLOA), or if tenants are added or removed from the denominator due to separate CAM arrangements. Your lease should specify the denominator definition precisely. If your proportionate share percentage changes from one year to the next without any change in your leased square footage, request the denominator used in each year and an explanation of the change. Unexplained changes warrant a formal documentation request.

How do I verify my proportionate share is correct?

Verification requires three steps: review the proportionate share definition in your lease to identify the required denominator, find the denominator actually used in the CAM reconciliation (request the numerator and denominator if only a percentage is stated), and compare the two figures. If they differ, request the building's current rent roll and total RSF documentation. The rent roll shows all tenant RSF figures that should total to the denominator. If anchor tenants are excluded from the denominator, verify that a corresponding landlord contribution is credited to the CAM pool to prevent cost shifting onto remaining tenants.

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Written by Angel Campa, Founder

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