Lease Parameters
Model Assumptions
- Rent escalations compound annually on the base rent
- Free rent occurs at the beginning of the lease (first N months)
- TI allowance paid at lease commencement (t=0, not discounted)
- Discount rate reflects the lease's cash-flow risk (tenant credit, intralease risk)
- All rents received at year-end (payments in arrears)
- Rents assumed on same expense basis (no expense normalization)
- Excludes leasing commissions, default risk, and renewal/cancellation options
For educational purposes. Not financial advice. Market conventions simplified.
Effective Rent Analysis
Year-by-Year Rent Schedule
| Year | Rate ($/SF) | Rent Received | PV of Rent |
|---|
Formula Breakdown
Understanding Effective Rent
What is Effective Rent?
Effective rent is the level annuity equivalent of a commercial lease's expected cash flows, discounted at the appropriate rate. Per Geltner Chapter 30, it converts the complex stream of lease payments (with escalations, free rent, and TI concessions) into a single annual figure that enables apples-to-apples comparison across leases with different structures.
Effective Rent = Net PV / Annuity Factor
Annuity Factor = (1 - (1+r)-n) / r
Why Concessions Matter
In competitive leasing markets, landlords offer concessions to attract tenants. The two most common are:
- Free rent (rent abatement): Months at the start of the lease where the tenant pays no rent. Reduces the landlord's total revenue.
- Tenant improvement (TI) allowance: An upfront cash payment by the landlord to fund buildout of the tenant's space. Paid at t=0.
Both concessions reduce the landlord's net revenue below the stated "face rent." Effective rent quantifies this gap.
Comparing Lease Structures
High Face Rent + Large Concessions
A lease with $35/SF rent but 12 months free and $50/SF TI may have a lower effective rent than a simpler lease at $28/SF with no concessions.
Lower Face Rent + No Concessions
A straightforward lease with no free rent and no TI may deliver higher effective rent to the landlord despite the lower stated rate.
Practical Applications
- Lease comparison: Compare offers from different tenants on an equivalent basis
- Property valuation: Use effective rent (not face rent) to estimate sustainable NOI for cap rate analysis
- Negotiation: Understand the true cost of concessions when structuring lease terms
- Portfolio analysis: Assess the quality of rental income across a portfolio of leases
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only. Effective rent analysis is one tool for evaluating commercial lease economics. Actual lease decisions should consider additional factors including tenant creditworthiness, market conditions, expense structures, leasing commissions, renewal options, and local market conventions. Consult a qualified real estate professional or financial advisor for leasing decisions.