Commercial Office Lease Template

(England & Wales)

Create your commercial lease with rent terms, service charges, repair obligations, and break clauses.

Professionally drafted — structured following UK commercial property law for England and Wales.

Download a professionally drafted Commercial Office Lease template for UK landlords and tenants. Also known as Business Lease, Office Tenancy Agreement, Commercial Tenancy. Covers rent, service charges, repairs, break clauses, and alienation. Structured following Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 for England and Wales.

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Who is this for?

Click your situation to start building your Commercial Office Lease

🏢
Commercial Landlords
Letting office space • Defined obligations • Rent reviews • Repair responsibilities
🏗️
Property Developers
New builds • Multi-tenant blocks • Fit-out provisions • Service charges
📊
Business Tenants
Securing premises • Break clauses • Alteration rights • Renewal protection
🚀
Startups & SMEs
First office lease • Clear terms • Budget certainty • Growth flexibility
🏠
Property Managers
Managing portfolios • Standardised leases • Maintenance obligations • Tenant compliance
🤝
Letting Agents
Client lettings • Professional documentation • Consistent terms • Quick turnaround
💼
Professional Firms
Law firms • Accountancy practices • Consultancies • Serviced office upgrades
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Lease Renewals
Updating existing terms • Rent review • Modern clauses • 1954 Act compliance
Commercial Property Law

Why You Need a Commercial Office Lease

Protect both landlord and tenant interests with a comprehensive lease defining rent, repairs, alterations, and termination rights

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Legal Protection

A written commercial lease is essential for legal enforcement. It defines rent obligations, repair responsibilities, permitted use, and termination rights - preventing costly disputes worth tens of thousands in legal fees and damages.

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Landlord & Tenant Act Compliance

Commercial leases must comply with Landlord & Tenant Act 1954 security of tenure provisions, or explicitly exclude them with Section 25/26 notices. Proper documentation protects both parties' rights and obligations under statute.

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Rent & Cost Recovery

Clear provisions for rent, service charges, insurance, business rates, and utilities prevent payment disputes. Rent review clauses protect landlords from inflation, while caps and break clauses protect tenants from excessive increases.

A UK commercial office lease must define the demise, term, rent and rent review mechanisms, service charge provisions, repair obligations, permitted use, alienation restrictions, break clauses, and insurance requirements — incomplete leases create disputes costing thousands in litigation.▼ Tap below to read more

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What Must Be Included in a Commercial Office Lease

A comprehensive commercial office lease must include essential provisions to protect both landlord and tenant:

Core Lease Terms:

  • Parties identification - Landlord and tenant full legal names, registered addresses, company registration numbers
  • Property description - Precise premises identification including floor plans, square footage, parking spaces, common areas
  • Lease term - Start date, end date (expiry), and total duration (e.g., 5 years from 1 January 2025 to 31 December 2029)
  • Permitted use - Specific business uses allowed (e.g., "general office use within Use Class E") and prohibited activities
  • Exclusive possession - Tenant's right to exclude others including landlord (except for inspections with notice)

Rent and Financial Provisions:

  • Base rent - Annual rent (e.g., £30,000 per annum) and payment frequency (monthly, quarterly, annually in advance)
  • Rent payment dates - Specific dates or intervals (e.g., quarterly in advance on 25th March, June, September, December)
  • Rent review provisions - Upward-only or up/down reviews, review frequency (typically every 3-5 years), review methodology (RPI-linked, open market rent, fixed percentage)
  • Rent deposit - Security deposit amount (typically 3-6 months' rent), holding terms, release conditions
  • Interest on late payment - Rate charged on overdue rent (e.g., 4% above Bank of England base rate)
  • Service charges - Tenant's proportionate share of building costs (cleaning, maintenance, management fees), payment schedule, reconciliation procedures
  • Insurance contributions - Tenant's share of building insurance premiums
  • Business rates - Confirmation tenant pays all business rates, utilities, and outgoings

Repairing Obligations:

  • Tenant's repair obligations - Full repairing and insuring (FRI) lease vs. landlord maintains structure/exterior
  • Condition schedule - Property condition at lease start (photos, detailed descriptions) limiting tenant's liability
  • Decoration obligations - Internal decoration frequency (e.g., every 3 years, last year of term)
  • Landlord's repair obligations - Structure, roof, exterior, common areas, plant/equipment maintenance
  • Dilapidations - Tenant's obligation to return premises in specified condition, dilapidations protocol compliance

Alterations and Improvements:

  • Structural alterations - Landlord consent required (absolute prohibition or qualified consent)
  • Non-structural alterations - May be permitted with landlord consent (not to be unreasonably withheld)
  • Improvements - Treatment of tenant improvements at lease end (removal required, landlord keeps, compensation)
  • Signage restrictions - Limitations on external signs, shopfronts, advertising

Assignment, Subletting, and Sharing:

  • Assignment restrictions - Landlord consent requirements, Authorised Guarantee Agreement (AGA) obligations
  • Subletting provisions - Whether permitted (whole/part), rent restrictions (not below passing rent)
  • Sharing occupation - Group company sharing, license vs. sublease distinctions
  • Privity of contract - Original tenant liability limitations post-assignment

Termination and Break Clauses:

  • Break clauses - Tenant break rights (e.g., at year 3 of 5-year lease), landlord break rights, notice periods (typically 6 months)
  • Break conditions - Requirements to exercise breaks (rent paid to date, no arrears, vacant possession, repairs completed)
  • Security of tenure - Landlord & Tenant Act 1954 Part II provisions (contracting out with Section 38 agreement)
  • Forfeiture rights - Landlord's right to terminate for rent arrears (14+ days) or other breaches
  • Yielding up - Tenant obligations at lease end (vacant possession, repairs, removal of alterations/fixtures)

Insurance and Liabilities:

  • Building insurance - Landlord insures building, tenant contributes proportionate share
  • Tenant's insurance - Contents, plate glass, public liability (minimum £5-10 million), employer's liability
  • Rent suspension - Rent cesser if premises unusable due to insured damage
  • Uninsured risks - Terrorism, war, nuclear - provisions for dealing with uninsurable events

Our commercial lease template includes all essential provisions for comprehensive protection of both parties.

Inadequate commercial leases expose landlords to unrecoverable rent, unenforceable repair obligations, invalid forfeiture proceedings, and service charge disputes — while tenants risk unlimited repair liability, unexpected costs, and losing security of tenure under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954.▼ Tap below to read more

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Risks of Using Inadequate Commercial Leases

Legal and Financial Risks:

  • Unenforceable rent recovery: Without clear rent provisions specifying amounts, payment dates, and late payment interest, landlords struggle to recover rent arrears. County court judges require precise rent clauses to grant possession orders. Vague terms like "reasonable rent" or "market rent" are unenforceable, resulting in months of unpaid rent worth £10,000-£50,000+ while landlords pursue costly possession proceedings.
  • Repair dispute costs: Ambiguous repair obligations create dilapidations disputes worth £50,000-£500,000+ at lease end. Without condition schedules documenting property state at lease start, tenants face claims for pre-existing defects. Without clear FRI (full repairing and insuring) language, landlords cannot recover structural repair costs from tenants. Legal disputes over "fair wear and tear" vs. "disrepair" cost £20,000-£100,000+ in surveyor fees and litigation.
  • Service charge abuse: Without detailed service charge provisions specifying eligible costs, calculation methods, and caps, landlords can inflate charges arbitrarily while tenants cannot challenge them. Proper clauses prevent £5,000-£30,000+ annual overcharging and provide dispute resolution mechanisms through RICS arbitration.
  • Rent review failures: Missing or defective rent review clauses cost landlords £50,000-£200,000+ over 10-year leases by locking in below-market rents during inflation. Reviews must specify methodology (open market rent, RPI-linked, fixed percentage), trigger dates, and dispute resolution. Missed review trigger dates often cannot be corrected, permanently losing uplift rights.
  • Break clause invalidity: Break clauses failing to specify exact notice periods, service methods, or conditions (e.g., "no rent arrears," "vacant possession") are unenforceable. Tenants remain liable for full lease terms (5-10 years) costing £150,000-£500,000+ in unwanted rent obligations. Landlords cannot remove problem tenants at planned break dates.
  • Security of tenure complications: Failing to contract out of Landlord & Tenant Act 1954 security of tenure gives tenants automatic renewal rights. Landlords cannot recover possession at lease end, even for redevelopment or own occupation, without proving statutory grounds (demolition, reconstruction, own use) - extremely difficult and expensive. This locks landlords into unwanted tenancies indefinitely.
  • Alterations disputes: Without clauses controlling alterations, tenants make structural changes affecting building safety, fire compliance, and resale value. Landlords face £100,000+ costs removing unauthorized alterations or obtain injunctions preventing alterations mid-term. Clauses requiring prior consent and reinstatement at lease end prevent these issues.
  • Assignment risks: Allowing unrestricted assignment without landlord consent or Authorised Guarantee Agreements (AGAs) exposes landlords to credit-worthless tenants. When poor assignees default, original tenants have no liability (post-1995 leases), leaving landlords with £50,000-£200,000+ unrecoverable rent from insolvent assignees.
  • Use class violations: Vague permitted use clauses allow tenants to conduct noisy, hazardous, or reputationally damaging businesses breaching planning permissions. This triggers enforcement notices from councils, damages building values, and violates mortgage covenants. Landlords face £20,000-£100,000+ planning penalties and mortgage breaches.
  • Forfeiture procedural failures: Defective forfeiture clauses or failing to follow Section 146 notice procedures invalidates possession claims. Landlords must re-let properties after invalid forfeitures, losing months of rent (£10,000-£30,000+) and incurring £15,000-£40,000 legal fees for wasted possession proceedings.

Common Commercial Lease Problems:

Tenants subletting entire premises (losing tenant protection), landlords unable to access for repairs/inspections, ambiguous service charge reconciliation creating disputes, missing insurance provisions leaving property uninsured, no rent deposit allowing tenant defaults, inadequate alienation restrictions, missing dilapidations schedules, defective break notice procedures, unclear VAT treatment, and no guarantor provisions for company tenants. These issues cost parties £100,000+ in litigation and lost revenue.

A £10 professional lease prevents £100,000-£500,000+ in disputes, unrecovered rent, and dilapidations claims.

This commercial office lease template covers the demise and plan, term and commencement, rent and rent review, service charges, repair and decoration obligations, permitted use, alienation and subletting, break clauses, insurance, forfeiture, and 1954 Act provisions.▼ Tap below to read more

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What's Included in Our Commercial Office Lease

Comprehensive Commercial Lease:

  • Lease Fundamentals
    • Parties (landlord, tenant, guarantor) identification
    • Detailed property description with plans
    • Lease term with start/end dates
    • Permitted use clause (Use Class specifications)
    • Exclusive possession provisions
  • Rent Provisions
    • Base rent specification (£X per annum)
    • Payment frequency (monthly/quarterly in advance)
    • Payment dates (quarter days or specific dates)
    • Late payment interest (base rate + 4%)
    • Rent deposit arrangements (3-6 months)
    • VAT treatment and provisions
  • Rent Review Mechanisms
    • Upward-only or up/down review options
    • Review frequency (3-year or 5-year cycles)
    • Review methodology (open market rent, RPI-linked, fixed %)
    • Timetable for review process
    • Independent surveyor appointment for disputes
    • RICS arbitration procedures
  • Service Charge Provisions
    • Eligible service charge costs defined
    • Tenant's proportionate share calculation
    • Annual budget and interim payments
    • Reconciliation procedures and timetables
    • Service charge caps (if negotiated)
    • Right to inspect service charge accounts
  • Repairing Obligations
    • Full repairing & insuring (FRI) options
    • Internal repairing (IR) lease alternatives
    • Schedule of condition limiting liability
    • Decoration obligations (frequency requirements)
    • Landlord's structural/common area obligations
    • Dilapidations protocol compliance
    • Yielding up provisions (exit condition)
  • Alterations & Improvements
    • Structural alteration prohibitions
    • Non-structural alteration consent requirements
    • Tenant improvement provisions
    • Reinstatement obligations at lease end
    • Signage and shopfront restrictions
    • Planning permission requirements
  • Assignment & Subletting
    • Assignment consent provisions (qualified consent)
    • Authorised Guarantee Agreement (AGA) requirements
    • Subletting restrictions (whole/part)
    • Rent restriction on sublets (not below passing rent)
    • Sharing occupation permissions
    • Group company provisions
  • Break Clauses
    • Tenant break options (timing specified)
    • Landlord break rights (if applicable)
    • Notice periods (typically 6 months minimum)
    • Break conditions (rent paid, no arrears, compliance)
    • Vacant possession requirements
    • Break notice service requirements
  • Security of Tenure
    • Landlord & Tenant Act 1954 exclusion (Section 38)
    • Health warning and statutory declarations
    • Security of tenure retention (if desired)
    • Section 25 notice provisions
    • Compensation provisions (if applicable)
  • Insurance Provisions
    • Landlord building insurance obligations
    • Tenant's insurance contribution (proportionate share)
    • Tenant's contents and liability insurance
    • Minimum public liability cover (£5-10M)
    • Rent suspension provisions (damage cesser)
    • Uninsured risks (terrorism, nuclear) provisions
  • Forfeiture & Termination
    • Forfeiture right for rent arrears (14+ days)
    • Forfeiture for other breaches
    • Section 146 notice procedures
    • Relief from forfeiture provisions
    • Peaceable re-entry rights
  • Guarantor Provisions
    • Guarantor covenant obligations
    • Joint and several liability
    • Continuing guarantee post-assignment
    • Guarantor release conditions
  • ✓ User covenants (permitted use restrictions)
  • ✓ Alienation covenants (assignment/subletting controls)
  • ✓ Insurance covenants
  • ✓ Compliance with laws and regulations
  • ✓ Nuisance and noise restrictions
  • ✓ Landlord's access rights for inspection/repair
  • ✓ Utilities and outgoings provisions
  • ✓ Business rates obligations
  • ✓ Notices provisions (service methods)
  • ✓ Dispute resolution procedures
  • ✓ Governing law and jurisdiction

Professional, RICS-aligned lease protecting landlord and tenant comprehensively.

Common Commercial Lease Mistakes

Don't Make These Critical Errors:

  • Using residential lease templates: Residential Assured Shorthold Tenancy (AST) agreements provide consumer protections inappropriate for commercial leases. They lack rent review clauses, service charges, repairing obligations, and alienation restrictions essential for business premises. Using ASTs for commercial property makes key provisions void and unenforceable.
  • No schedule of condition: Without photographic schedules documenting property condition at lease start, tenants face dilapidations claims for pre-existing defects worth £50,000-£200,000+. Always attach detailed condition schedules with photos limiting tenant liability to deterioration beyond documented baseline condition.
  • Defective rent review clauses: Missing review trigger dates, unclear methodology (open market vs. RPI vs. fixed), or "time of the essence" provisions invalidate reviews. Missing a single review date in 10-year leases can cost landlords £100,000+ in permanently lost rent increases. Use precise trigger dates and RICS-compliant procedures.
  • Break clause conditions too onerous: Requiring "full compliance with all covenants" for break exercise makes breaks virtually impossible - minor technical breaches void the break, trapping tenants for full terms costing £200,000-£500,000 in unwanted rent. Limit conditions to material breaches only (rent paid, no serious disrepair).
  • No Section 38 contracting out: Failing to exclude Landlord & Tenant Act 1954 security of tenure gives tenants automatic renewal rights. Landlords cannot refuse renewals without proving statutory grounds (own occupation, demolition, reconstruction) - extremely difficult. Always contract out with proper declarations unless intentionally providing security.
  • Unlimited service charges: Without caps, landlords can pass unlimited costs to tenants causing £10,000-£50,000+ annual disputes. Tenants should negotiate caps (e.g., 5% annual increase maximum) or require majority tenant approval for major expenditure. Landlords must define eligible costs precisely to avoid challenge.
  • No guarantor for company tenants: Company tenants can be dissolved leaving £50,000-£200,000+ unpaid rent with no recovery. Always require personal guarantees from directors or parent companies with substantial assets. Check guarantor creditworthiness before accepting guarantees.
  • Inadequate repair obligations: Vague "keep in good repair" clauses create disputes. Specify whether full repairing and insuring (FRI) or internal repairing (IR) with landlord maintaining structure. Define excluded items explicitly (inherent defects, fair wear and tear if applicable). Attach condition schedules limiting scope.
  • No late payment interest: Without interest clauses, landlords cannot charge penalties on late rent, removing incentive for prompt payment. Include 4-8% above Bank of England base rate to compensate for payment delays and encourage compliance.
  • Unclear permitted use: Broad permitted use (e.g., "any lawful business use") allows incompatible businesses (noisy manufacturing, food preparation affecting other tenants). Specify Use Class (E for offices) and exclude problematic activities. Prevents planning enforcement and mortgage breaches.
  • Missing forfeiture right: Without forfeiture clauses allowing lease termination for material breaches, landlords cannot remove non-paying or problem tenants. Must follow Section 146 notice procedures but having the right is essential. Include forfeiture for 14+ days rent arrears and serious covenant breaches.
  • No rent deposit: Rent deposits (3-6 months' rent) protect against tenant default, providing immediate funds to cover arrears while pursuing possession. Without deposits, landlords face 2-6 month gaps with no rent (£10,000-£50,000+) during possession proceedings.
  • Ignoring VAT implications: Failing to specify whether rent is VAT-inclusive or exclusive creates disputes. Most commercial property rent is exempt, but landlords can opt to tax making rent VAT-inclusive. Clarify VAT treatment explicitly and include mechanisms for changes in VAT treatment during term.
  • No rent cesser clause: Without rent suspension provisions, tenants pay rent even when premises destroyed by fire/flood and unusable. Rent cesser clauses suspend rent until premises reinstated, fair allocation of insured damage risk between parties.
  • Inadequate assignment restrictions: Allowing assignment with "landlord consent not unreasonably withheld" without requiring Authorised Guarantee Agreements (AGAs) exposes landlords to credit-worthless assignees. Always require AGAs from outgoing tenants guaranteeing assignee performance - provides recourse if assignee defaults.

Our template eliminates these errors with comprehensive, legally-tested provisions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between a commercial lease and a residential tenancy?

Commercial leases (for business premises) have fundamentally different legal frameworks than residential tenancies.

They typically run 3–10+ years vs. 6–12 months residential, include rent reviews (upward adjustments) not allowed in residential, and require tenants to repair/maintain property (FRI leases) vs. landlord repairs in residential.

Commercial leases also pass service charges and insurance costs to tenants, allow assignment and subletting with consent, and are not governed by consumer protection laws — no deposit schemes, no mandatory repairs.

They may also include Landlord & Tenant Act 1954 security of tenure (automatic renewal rights).

Never use residential AST templates for business premises — they lack essential commercial provisions and provide inappropriate consumer protections.

Should I contract out of the Landlord & Tenant Act 1954 security of tenure?

Most commercial leases contract out (exclude) security of tenure to give landlords certainty.

Without contracting out (Section 38), tenants gain automatic renewal rights at lease end — landlords cannot refuse renewals unless proving statutory grounds (own occupation, demolition, reconstruction, substantial works).

This makes selling properties difficult and locks landlords into unwanted tenancies indefinitely.

With contracting out, leases end definitively on expiry — landlords regain possession automatically.

However, you must follow proper procedures: serve Section 38 notices 14+ days before signing, and obtain tenant statutory declarations confirming they understand the rights being waived.

Most landlords contract out unless intentionally providing long-term security to quality tenants.

What are typical rent review provisions in commercial leases?

Rent reviews protect landlords from inflation by allowing periodic rent increases.

The most common structure is open market rent reviews — rent adjusted to market rate every 3–5 years, typically upward-only (rent never decreases even if the market falls).

RPI-linked reviews increase rent annually by the Retail Price Index or CPI inflation measure, offering more predictability than market reviews.

Fixed percentage increases (e.g., 3% annual) are simpler but may diverge from market over time.

Review clauses must specify trigger dates (exact dates reviews occur), methodology (how new rent is calculated), timetable (when notices are served and valuations completed), and dispute resolution (independent surveyor/RICS arbitration if parties disagree).

Missing review trigger dates typically cannot be corrected — landlords permanently lose uplift rights, costing £50,000–£200,000+ over lease terms.

What is a Full Repairing and Insuring (FRI) lease?

FRI leases require tenants to maintain and repair all parts of the property (structure, roof, exterior, interior, plant/equipment), pay for building insurance (or reimburse landlord's insurance costs), and return the property in good repair at lease end (subject to schedule of condition).

This transfers all repair costs and risks to tenants — landlords have zero repair obligations.

FRI is standard for standalone buildings, business parks, and industrial units.

For multi-let office buildings, Internal Repairing (IR) leases are more common — tenants repair internal spaces only, landlords maintain structure/exterior/common areas and pass costs through service charges.

Always attach a schedule of condition at lease start limiting tenant liability to deterioration beyond the documented baseline — this prevents claims for pre-existing defects worth £50,000–£200,000+.

Do I need a solicitor to create a commercial lease?

For straightforward office leases under £50,000 annual rent with standard terms, many complete without one.

Our template is based on UK commercial property law and includes all essential clauses.

Consider solicitor review for high-value leases (£50,000+ annual rent or 10+ year terms), complex properties (multiple floors, shared facilities, parking), FRI leases with substantial repair obligations, leases with unusual provisions (complex break clauses, overage/turnover rent), multi-party leases (guarantors, superior landlords, management companies), or secured lending against property (lenders require solicitor certification).

Your choice based on your situation.

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