Commercial lease negotiation / Las Vegas / First Mutual Realty Group
NEGOTIATE TERMS THAT HOLD UP.
A lease can help a business grow or quietly create friction for years. We represent owners and tenants with attention to term structure, escalation, options, buildout obligations, flexibility, and the day-to-day realities behind the deal.
Lease negotiation
Lease terms matter long after the signing date.
Commercial lease negotiations are rarely just about rent. Use clauses, renewal options, tenant improvements, abatements, escalations, guarantees, assignment rights, operating expenses, and exit flexibility can all materially shape the quality of the deal.
We help clients negotiate with a clear understanding of what matters most now and what could create problems later if it is overlooked.
Our lease process
Built to protect leverage before it disappears.
Clarify the requirement
We define location goals, timing, use needs, budget range, size, flexibility, and what a successful lease actually needs to support.
Assess negotiating posture
Before terms are discussed, we look at vacancy, inventory, tenant quality, timing pressure, and alternatives to understand leverage.
Review the economics
We compare proposed terms against market conditions and the practical cost of occupancy, not just the base rent headline.
Shape the structure
We help negotiate concessions, term length, options, responsibilities, and operational protections that suit the client.
Pressure-test the paperwork
Letters of intent and lease drafts need careful review so business assumptions and legal language actually align.
Execute with fewer surprises
We stay close to the final round so issues are caught early and the transition to occupancy or renewal stays cleaner.
What strong lease representation does
The best lease is the one that works after the excitement fades.
Better visibility into real occupancy cost
We help clients understand the full economic picture, including concessions, escalations, pass-throughs, and likely friction points.
Terms that support actual operations
A good lease should fit how the business or asset needs to function, not just what looked acceptable in the first draft.
Less avoidable exposure later
Strong negotiation upfront helps reduce painful surprises around renewal, use restrictions, maintenance, assignment, or exit.
Plan the negotiation
Tell us about the space, timing, and terms you are weighing.
Whether you are negotiating a new lease, renewal, relocation, or owner-side structure, we can help you map the priorities before terms harden.