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Lease Language

Rent Abatement in Commercial Leases: Free Rent & CAM Impact

Rent abatement gives tenants free rent periods. Understand how abatement affects CAM obligations, base year calculations, and what to watch in the lease language.

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

In this article

  1. Rent Abatement vs. Rent Deferral vs. Rent Concession
  2. When Landlords Offer Rent Abatement
  3. What Happens to CAM During Rent Abatement
  4. How Abatement Interacts with Base Year Gross-Up
  5. Recapture Clauses: When Abatement Is Not Permanent
  6. Negotiation Tactics for Rent Abatement
  7. Request full abatement, not just base rent abatement
  8. Stack abatement with TI allowances
  9. Tie abatement to premises delivery, not lease commencement
  10. Resist recapture clauses during the primary term

Rent Abatement in Commercial Leases: Free Rent & CAM Impact

Rent abatement in a commercial lease is a period during which the tenant pays reduced or no base rent, granted by the landlord as part of the deal structure. Abatement is one of the most frequently misunderstood lease concessions because tenants tend to treat it as straightforward free money, when the fine print often reveals that CAM charges, insurance, and taxes continue to accrue and remain the tenant's obligation throughout the abatement window.

The mechanics of how rent abatement interacts with CAM payment obligations, base year gross-up calculations, and potential recapture clauses determines whether an abatement package is as valuable as it appears at signing.


Rent Abatement vs. Rent Deferral vs. Rent Concession

These three terms describe different economic arrangements and are not interchangeable, though they are often treated as synonyms in early deal negotiations.

Rent abatement is a permanent waiver of base rent for a defined period. If you have three months of rent abatement at the start of a lease, you never owe that rent. There is no future repayment unless a recapture clause activates (discussed below). The landlord is giving up that income entirely in exchange for signing you and avoiding vacancy.

Rent deferral is a postponement, not a waiver. The deferred rent remains a liability and must be paid at a future date. Deferred rent arrangements became more common during the COVID-19 period when tenants negotiated payment relief but landlords protected the underlying obligation. If your lease says "deferred" rather than "abated" or "waived," you owe the money later.

Rent concession is a broader term that can mean any reduction in economic obligation, including abatement, deferral, tenant improvement allowances, or reduced base rent during a ramp period. Not all concessions are created equal. A $150,000 TI allowance and $150,000 of base rent abatement are both $150,000 in value, but they land on your cash flow differently. Abatement improves early cash flow directly. TI allowances are typically reimbursed after construction completion, with timing that depends on landlord disbursement processes.

When evaluating a deal package, identify which elements are true abatement (no future obligation), which are deferral (future obligation), and which are TI or other concessions with their own timing and conditions.


When Landlords Offer Rent Abatement

Rent abatement appears in commercial lease negotiations for several reasons, and understanding the landlord's motivation helps you negotiate the terms more effectively.

Construction and build-out periods. The most common form of abatement covers the period when a space is being built out and the tenant cannot operate. A standard retail or restaurant lease may include two to six months of rent abatement from the lease commencement date while construction proceeds. This is sometimes called a "free rent" or "construction period" abatement.

The critical negotiation point here is whether abatement begins at lease commencement or at delivery of the premises. If the landlord controls the construction schedule and the lease starts before delivery, you can end up in a lease with accruing obligations before you can occupy the space. Tie the abatement start date to premises delivery, not to a fixed calendar date.

Lease incentive in competitive markets. When vacancies are high or the landlord is motivated to fill a specific space, abatement functions as a price concession that preserves the stated base rent for comparables purposes while reducing the tenant's effective year-one cost. Three months of abatement on a $100/SF space lowers your effective first-year rent to $75/SF without showing up in the rental rate. Landlords prefer this structure over reducing the face rent because it preserves the yield analysis on the lease when presented to lenders or potential buyers of the property.

Force majeure and casualty events. Commercial leases typically include abatement provisions that activate when the premises are rendered unusable by a qualifying event, a fire, flood, or other casualty that triggers the casualty clause. The language governing force majeure abatement is separate from the incentive abatement and operates under different conditions. During the COVID-19 period, many tenants attempted to invoke force majeure clauses for abatement with mixed results; the outcomes depended heavily on the specific language and applicable state law.

Co-tenancy failure. As discussed in the kick-out clause context, co-tenancy provisions often include an abatement step before the full termination right activates. If a named anchor closes and the landlord does not cure within a defined period, your rent converts to percentage-of-sales or to a reduced abated amount. This is a specific form of abatement triggered by performance conditions rather than agreed incentive.


For how CAM obligations work during free-rent periods, see the base year adjustment guide.

For how CAM obligations work during free-rent periods, see the base year adjustment guide.

What Happens to CAM During Rent Abatement

This is the most important practical question tenants ask about abatement, and the answer depends entirely on the specific lease language.

Most commercial leases do not abate CAM. The standard lease structure separates base rent from CAM (and often from property taxes and insurance) and grants abatement only of base rent. During the abatement period, you pay zero base rent but continue paying your pro-rata share of CAM, taxes, and insurance at the normal rate.

In a triple-net lease where base rent might be $20/SF and CAM, taxes, and insurance might total $12 to $18/SF, your abatement period still has you paying $12 to $18/SF per month. The "free rent" is only free of the base rent component.

Some leases go further and specify full abatement of all occupancy costs, including CAM. This is more tenant-favorable and should be explicitly requested if you are negotiating an abatement package. The lease should state: "During the Abatement Period, Tenant shall have no obligation to pay Base Rent, CAM charges, property tax reimbursement, or insurance reimbursement."

Do not assume full abatement from a clause that only references "base rent abatement." If the word "CAM" or "operating expenses" does not appear in the abatement clause, those obligations are almost certainly continuing.


How Abatement Interacts with Base Year Gross-Up

For leases with a base year structure (where CAM costs in the base year become the reference point for future reconciliations), the abatement period creates a distortion risk.

The purpose of the base year in a modified gross or gross lease is to establish the landlord's baseline operating cost obligation. The tenant pays only the increment above that base. If the base year expenses are artificially low, the tenant pays more in every subsequent year.

The abatement distortion: If the base year overlaps with the abatement period, and the building was not fully occupied during that period (perhaps because multiple tenants were in free-rent periods or construction was ongoing), the actual expenses recorded in the base year may be lower than they would be at normal occupancy. Utilities, cleaning, and other occupancy-driven expenses are lower in an underoccupied building.

A landlord who uses an undistorted base year locks in low baseline expenses. Every future year, your share of the increment above that base is larger. The correction for this is the gross-up provision, which requires the landlord to adjust base year expenses as if the building were at a specified occupancy level (often 90% or 95%) even if actual occupancy was lower.

If your lease has a base year structure and your deal includes a substantial abatement period, verify that:

  1. The lease includes a gross-up clause for the base year.
  2. The gross-up occupancy assumption is at least 90%.
  3. The gross-up applies to variable expenses, not fixed expenses that do not change with occupancy.

After testing reconciliation samples from published audit cases through CAMAudit, base year gross-up errors are among the most financially consequential recurring patterns. A base year that is $150,000 below gross-up amounts translates directly into $150,000 in excess CAM obligations over the remaining lease term, all traceable to a poorly drafted abatement-period gross-up clause.


Recapture Clauses: When Abatement Is Not Permanent

Some leases include recapture provisions that claw back abated rent under defined conditions. The two most common triggers:

Early termination recapture. If you exercise an early termination right before a defined date, the abated rent "re-accrues" and becomes immediately payable as a termination fee. This structure is common in leases that front-load concessions. The landlord is effectively lending you the abatement and expects to recover the economic value over the full lease term. If you terminate early, you owe the abatement back.

The recapture schedule often amortizes over the full lease term. If you received $180,000 in abatement on a 10-year lease and terminate at year three, you might owe $126,000 (70% of the original abatement, representing the seven unreturned years). The exact formula is in the termination clause.

Default recapture. Some leases provide that if a tenant defaults and the default is not cured within the cure period, all abated rent vests immediately as liquidated damages. This is a meaningful acceleration of landlord recovery rights and should be scrutinized. Negotiate to limit recapture to only the unamortized portion of abatement at the time of default, using the same amortization schedule as the early termination recapture.


Negotiation Tactics for Rent Abatement

Request full abatement, not just base rent abatement

The starting negotiating position should be abatement of all occupancy costs, including CAM, taxes, and insurance. Landlords will often push back to base rent only. The counter is to accept base rent abatement plus CAM abatement, allowing taxes and insurance to continue, as a compromise. The economic difference is significant: in a NNN lease where CAM is 30% of total occupancy cost, full abatement is worth 43% more than base-rent-only abatement.

Stack abatement with TI allowances

Abatement and TI allowances serve different purposes in your cash flow. TI allowances fund construction costs that the tenant would otherwise pay out of pocket. Abatement reduces operating cash outflow during early occupancy. They stack well: negotiate maximum TI allowance first (to fund the build-out), then negotiate maximum abatement (to reduce occupancy cost during the ramp-up period when revenue is not yet at steady state).

Tie abatement to premises delivery, not lease commencement

If the landlord controls the construction schedule, a lease commencement abatement can expire before you are in the space. Specify that the abatement period does not begin until the premises are delivered in the condition required by the work letter, with all landlord-required construction substantially complete and a certificate of occupancy issued.

Resist recapture clauses during the primary term

The cleanest abatement package has no recapture clause. If the landlord insists on recapture, limit it to: (1) early termination only, not default; (2) the unamortized portion using straight-line amortization over the primary term; and (3) no recapture right if the landlord terminates the lease due to the landlord's own default.


Legal Disclaimer: This article provides general educational information about rent abatement provisions in commercial leases. This is not legal advice. Consult qualified commercial real estate counsel before negotiating or signing any commercial lease.


Frequently Asked Questions

Does rent abatement include CAM charges?

Usually no. Standard lease language grants abatement only of base rent. CAM, property taxes, and insurance reimbursements typically continue through the abatement period unless the lease explicitly states otherwise. Always read the abatement clause to confirm whether it says 'base rent only' or extends to all occupancy costs. If it is silent on CAM, assume CAM continues.

How long is a typical rent abatement period?

Build-out abatement commonly runs one to six months depending on construction complexity and lease length. Incentive abatement in competitive markets may run one to three months on shorter leases and three to six months on longer terms. Force majeure or co-tenancy abatement varies by the triggering event. The length is negotiable and should reflect the actual time needed to reach occupancy and initial operating revenue.

What is the difference between rent abatement and rent deferral?

Rent abatement is a permanent waiver. You never owe the abated rent unless a recapture clause activates. Rent deferral is a postponement and remains a liability. Deferred rent must be repaid on a schedule defined in the lease. These terms look similar in early deal conversations but have completely different balance sheet implications. Confirm in writing which applies before accepting any rent relief offer.

Can a landlord recapture abated rent?

Yes, if the lease includes a recapture clause. The most common triggers are early lease termination by the tenant and lease default. Recapture amounts are often calculated on a straight-line amortization basis over the primary term, so only the unamortized portion is owed. Negotiate to limit recapture to the unamortized balance only, to exclude landlord-initiated terminations, and to remove recapture as a standalone default remedy.

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