HomeSelling a Business with a Commercial Lease (2026 Guide)

Selling a Business with a Commercial Lease (2026 Guide)

Quick Answer

When selling a business that operates from a leased commercial space, the lease is one of the most consequential variables in the deal. Most commercial leases require landlord consent to assign to a buyer, and many landlords use that consent right to renegotiate rent, demand a personal guaranty from the buyer, or capture some of the sale economics. Start the landlord conversation early (60-120+ days before close), structure the request carefully (consent to assignment with release of seller’s continuing liability is the ideal outcome), and price the lease’s risks into the deal, a short remaining term, large rent escalators, an option-only renewal, or a landlord with a history of difficulty all suppress price. Asset sales typically assign the lease; stock sales avoid assignment but may still trigger a change-of-control clause. Always read the lease yourself and have your attorney review it before signing the LOI.

An empty commercial storefront at golden hour

The commercial lease is often the single most under-managed risk in a business sale, and it can derail an otherwise clean deal in the final weeks. Almost every commercial lease has an assignment clause that requires landlord consent, and landlords routinely use that consent as leverage to capture some of the sale economics, renegotiate rent, or extract personal guaranties. This page covers what actually matters when your business runs from a leased space, in roughly the order it matters.

We are CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm. With the buyer-paid model, sellers pay no advisory fee, the buyer pays at closing. This page is general orientation, not legal advice; lease assignment work is a transactional attorney’s job. For broader context, see due diligence checklist and legal documents needed to sell.

What this guide covers

  • Almost every commercial lease requires landlord consent to assign, asset sales trigger this directly; stock sales may trigger change-of-control
  • The ideal outcome: consent to assignment with full release of the seller’s continuing liability
  • Start the landlord conversation 60-120+ days before close. Landlord delays kill deal momentum
  • Lease risks that suppress price: short remaining term, large escalators, option-only renewals, difficult landlord history
  • Read the lease yourself. Assignment, change-of-control, recapture, ROFR, personal guaranty release, audit/cure rights
  • Asset sale typically assigns the lease; stock sale may avoid assignment but check change-of-control language

Why the commercial lease is a strategic variable, not paperwork

Almost every commercial lease contains an assignment clause that requires the landlord’s prior written consent to transfer the lease to a new tenant. This is true even for routine business sales. The clause turns the landlord into a deal participant whose cooperation is required to close, and gives the landlord leverage to:

For a business whose value depends on the location, restaurants, retail, gyms, auto-repair shops, certain service businesses, the lease is not a side issue; it can be the deal.

Read the lease first, and look for these specific clauses

Asset sale vs stock sale, lease consequences

Asset sale Stock sale
Does the lease transfer? Only via assignment to the buyer entity, requires landlord consent Lease stays with the entity; technically no assignment, but change-of-control clauses may trigger
Landlord consent required? Almost always Depends on change-of-control language in the lease
Seller’s continuing liability Released on assignment if negotiated; otherwise seller may remain liable Seller exits via stock transfer; entity remains the tenant
Common path for small business deals Most common Less common; more in lower-middle-market and above

The realistic landlord conversation

How we know this: the ranges, timelines, and patterns on this page reflect the transactions we work on and the buyer mandates in our network of 100+ active capital partners. They are informed starting points, not guarantees, your actual outcome depends on the specifics. For a sector-adjusted estimate, use our free 90-second valuation tool.

How lease issues kill deal economics

If the landlord is also a buyer candidate

Occasionally the landlord wants to buy the business themselves (or owns a competing operation). This is delicate, the conversation has to happen but with care, ideally through your advisor or attorney rather than directly. Use NDAs aggressively. The landlord knowing about a planned sale before you’ve vetted them as a buyer can erode your leverage on consent and lease terms.

Related: legal documents needed, due diligence checklist, asset sale vs stock sale, steps to sell a business.

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Frequently asked questions

Can I sell a business that has a commercial lease?

Yes, but the lease is one of the most consequential variables in the deal. Almost every commercial lease requires landlord consent to assign to a buyer (in an asset sale) or may trigger a change-of-control clause (in a stock sale). Start the landlord conversation 60-120+ days before close, push for consent with release of seller’s continuing liability, and price the lease’s risks (term, escalators, renewal terms, landlord history) into the deal. Sophisticated buyers will diligence the lease as carefully as the financials.

Does the landlord have to approve the sale of my business?

Almost always yes for an asset sale, the lease assignment requires landlord consent under nearly every commercial lease. For a stock sale, the lease technically stays with the entity, but most leases include a change-of-control clause that triggers consent if more than a stated percentage of the tenant’s equity changes hands. Read the assignment and change-of-control clauses in your lease carefully, and have your attorney review them before signing the LOI.

How long does landlord consent take?

It varies dramatically by landlord, market, and clause. A cooperative landlord with a well-funded buyer can grant consent in 2-4 weeks. A reluctant landlord, or one with leverage (recapture rights, profit-share clauses), can take 60-120 days and use the timeline to renegotiate. Many leases specify a deemed-approval timeframe (often 10-30 business days from receipt of buyer information); if yours does not, negotiate a reasonable one as part of the consent request.

Can a landlord block the sale of my business?

Effectively, sometimes. A ‘sole discretion’ consent standard gives the landlord the right to refuse consent for almost any reason; a ‘reasonable’ standard requires legitimate business justification. Recapture clauses let some landlords terminate the lease entirely rather than consent to assignment. The practical move is approaching the landlord early as a relationship rather than a contract dispute, having a credit-worthy buyer, and being prepared to offer modest concessions (small rent bump, term extension, increased security deposit) in exchange for consent.

What if my lease is about to expire?

A short remaining term meaningfully suppresses the sale price for a location-dependent business. Renew before going to market if you can, ideally with at least 3-5 years of remaining term plus renewal options. If renewal is option-only at FMV, try to convert to an extension at agreed rent. If renewal is uncertain, disclose it proactively and price it into your expectations rather than discovering the issue mid-diligence.

Do I have to pay rent after I sell?

Depends on the assignment language. The ideal seller outcome is consent to assignment with full release of the seller’s continuing liability, the seller is off the hook for the buyer’s lease performance once assignment is complete. Without negotiated release, many leases keep the seller liable as a secondary obligor if the buyer defaults, sometimes for the remainder of the original term. This is one of the most important asks in the landlord consent negotiation.

Will the landlord raise rent when I sell?

Often yes, especially if the lease is below current market or the landlord has a ‘recapture’ right that gives them leverage. Many landlords condition consent to assignment on a rent increase or term extension. Price this into your expectations: a 5-15% rent bump in exchange for consent is not unusual. The negotiation is part of the deal economics; experienced advisors and attorneys know what is reasonable for your market.

Should I tell the landlord I’m planning to sell?

Eventually yes, but timing matters. Telling the landlord too early, before you have a credible buyer identified, can erode your leverage on consent and trigger preemptive demands. The typical pattern: signal that ‘we are exploring strategic options’ early to test landlord reaction; engage formally with a specific buyer 60-120 days before target close; provide buyer financials when requested. If the landlord is also a potential buyer (or owns a competing business), be especially careful and route the conversation through your advisor or attorney.

Related research



Christoph Totter, Founder of CT Acquisitions

About the Author

Christoph Totter is the founder of CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm in Sheridan, Wyoming. He is a published researcher in lower middle market M&A on Zenodo, Academia.edu, and ORCID, and an active contributor on LinkedIn on M&A, private equity, and business sales. CT Acquisitions works directly with 100+ buyers including PE platforms, family offices, search funders, and strategic consolidators. Buyers pay our fee, never sellers. No retainer, no exclusivity, no contract until close.