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🏢 Parties to the Lease

Optional - Companies House registration

📍 Premises Details

Total usable floor space
? Defines what business activities are allowed. Use Class E covers most office uses since September 2020 planning reform. Be specific to protect both parties.

📅 Lease Term

When the lease term begins
? Commercial leases typically run 3-10 years. Longer terms (5+ years) often include break clauses. Terms under 7 years avoid Land Registry registration requirements but still recommended.
? Allows either party to end the lease early at specified times. Common in leases over 3 years. Usually requires 6 months notice and compliance with lease covenants. Provides flexibility but reduces certainty.
Usually at year 3 in a 5-year lease

💷 Rent & Payment

Base rent excluding service charges
? UK commercial leases traditionally require quarterly payments in advance on the quarter days: 25 March, 24 June, 29 September, 25 December. Monthly payments increasingly common for smaller offices.
? Initial period with no rent, often given for fit-out works. Common in new leases, typically 1-6 months depending on term length and market conditions. Allows tenant to prepare premises without immediate rent burden.
? Mechanism to adjust rent during the lease term. Upwards-only reviews are standard in UK commercial leases. Open market review sets rent to current market value. RPI/CPI indexation ties increases to inflation. Essential for long leases (5+ years).

🔒 Security & Guarantees

? Typically 3-6 months rent for commercial properties. Protects landlord against unpaid rent, dilapidations, or breach of lease terms. Must be held separately and returned at lease end if obligations met. Not subject to TDS scheme protection like residential deposits.
Typically 3-6 months rent
? Legal document governing the deposit. Standard practice for commercial leases. Specifies deposit amount, holding arrangements, circumstances for deduction, interest treatment, and release conditions. Provides clear framework preventing disputes.
? Third party (person or company) guarantees tenant's obligations. Common for startups, new businesses, or tenants with limited trading history. Guarantor becomes liable if tenant defaults. Requires separate guarantee deed. Must take independent legal advice.

🧾 Service Charge & Outgoings

? Covers building maintenance, repairs, insurance, common areas, etc. Can be fixed annual amount or variable (tenant pays percentage of actual costs). Variable charges must provide annual budgets and accounts. Essential for multi-let buildings. Consider service charge cap to limit exposure.
Based on floor area proportion
? Landlord must insure building structure. Tenant typically pays insurance premium as additional rent. Landlord arranges policy, tenant reimburses cost. Covers fire, flood, storm, etc. Tenant needs separate contents insurance. Rent suspension clause should apply if premises destroyed.
? Who pays for electricity, gas, water, etc. Tenant usually pays directly to suppliers with separate meters. In multi-let buildings without separate meters, may be apportioned through service charge. Be clear about responsibility to avoid disputes.
? Tax on commercial properties paid to local council. Tenant almost always responsible in commercial leases. Based on rateable value set by Valuation Office Agency. Small business rate relief may be available. Tenant pays directly to council, not landlord.

🔧 Repairs & Maintenance

? Defines who repairs what. FRI (Full Repairing & Insuring) = tenant repairs everything including structure (common for whole buildings). Internal only = tenant repairs inside, landlord does structure/exterior (common for multi-let). Choice depends on premises type and lease length.
? Tenant usually responsible for internal decorations. May require decoration in final year and/or at specified intervals (e.g., every 3 years). Schedule of condition at lease start protects tenant from repairing pre-existing defects. Fair wear and tear may be excluded for short leases.
? Photographic record of premises condition at lease start. Limits tenant's repair obligations to maintaining current condition (not improving). Essential for older buildings or second-hand premises. Protects tenant from 'betterment' claims. Should be professionally prepared and agreed by both parties.
? Tenant's obligation to return premises in specified condition at lease end. Landlord may claim for cost of remedying breaches of repair covenants. Can be expensive - get professional survey near end of lease. Dilapidations Protocol applies. Consider negotiated exit settlement to avoid disputes.
Tenant must return premises in good repair at lease end, subject to schedule of condition and fair wear & tear exclusions where applicable.

🏗️ Alterations & Use

? Controls tenant's ability to alter premises. Structural alterations usually require landlord's consent. Non-structural/cosmetic alterations may be allowed with consent (not to be unreasonably withheld). Tenant typically must reinstate at lease end. Planning permission and building regulations may apply.
? Tenant's right to display business signage. May require landlord's consent for size, position, design. Planning permission may be needed. Building may have signage policy in multi-let developments. Tenant must remove and make good at lease end.
? Tenant's ability to sublet premises. Usually requires landlord's consent (not unreasonably withheld). May require rent review to market value. Original tenant remains liable unless lease assigned. Useful for tenants needing flexibility. Landlord typically requires sub-tenant references and covenant strength assessment.
? Transfer of entire lease to new tenant. Requires landlord's consent (not unreasonably withheld). Assignee must provide references and prove financial covenant. Original tenant may remain as guarantor under Authorised Guarantee Agreement (AGA). Essential for business sales/relocations.

📋 Additional Terms

? Any additional terms specific to this lease. Examples: parking arrangements, access hours, use of common facilities, specific insurance requirements, rent review mechanisms, option to renew, personal guarantees, or any negotiated variations from standard terms.

✉️ Notice Details

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