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Georgia Commercial Lease Agreement Requirements

Understand the legal requirements for drafting and enforcing commercial lease agreements in Georgia, including the Statute of Frauds.

Melvin Prince
4 min čitanja
Provjereno Apr 2026United States flag
Zahtjevi ugovora o najmuGeorgiaKomercijalnoPredložak ugovora o poslovnom najmu u GeorgijiStatut prijevara u vezi s nekretninama u Georgiji

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Statute of Frauds
> 1 Year Must be Written
Notarization
Not Required
Usufruct vs Estate
Less than 5 Years

Georgia Commercial Lease Agreement Requirements

In Georgia, the commercial lease agreement is the single most important document governing the landlord-tenant relationship. Courts will strictly enforce the written terms, and the absence of a "commercial tenant protection" statute means there are very few judicial safety nets available if a lease is poorly drafted.

Official Law Citation: Official Code of Georgia Annotated (O.C.G.A. § 13-5-30 and § 44-7-1)

The Statute of Frauds: Written vs. Oral Leases

Georgia's Statute of Frauds (O.C.G.A. § 13-5-30) requires that any lease for a term exceeding one year must be in writing and signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought. An oral commercial lease for one year or less is technically valid, but is highly inadvisable due to the complexity of commercial liabilities.

Essential Elements of a Valid Commercial Lease

A Georgia commercial lease must clearly identify:

  1. Parties: Exact legal names and corporate structures of the landlord and tenant.
  2. Premises: Clear description of the leased space (square footage, suite numbers, building blueprints as exhibits).
  3. Term: Precise commencement and expiration dates.
  4. Rent: Exact base rent amount, due date, and payment method.
  5. Signatures: Signed by authorized representatives of both parties.

Critical Clauses for Georgia Commercial Leases

Because Georgia law provides almost no default commercial tenant protections, the lease must cover:

  • Use Clause: Define exactly what business the tenant may operate.
  • Maintenance and Repair Allocation: O.C.G.A. § 44-7-13 places a general duty on landlords to keep premises in repair, but commercial leases routinely shift this obligation to the tenant. The lease must explicitly detail who handles the roof, HVAC, plumbing, and structural elements. (See our Commercial Maintenance Obligations guide).
  • Insurance and Indemnification: Specify liability insurance limits and require the landlord to be listed as "additional insured."
  • Default and Remedies: Detail what constitutes monetary and non-monetary default, required cure periods, and consequences (including the Dispossessory Proceeding process). (See our Commercial Eviction Process guide).
  • Subletting and Assignment: Define conditions for subleasing and whether landlord consent is required.
  • CAM and NNN Charges: For NNN leases, clearly define the calculation method, audit rights, and reconciliation schedule for pass-through expenses.

Types of Commercial Leases

Georgia landlords commonly use:

  • Gross Lease: Tenant pays flat rent; landlord covers operating expenses.
  • Triple Net (NNN): Tenant pays base rent plus pro-rata share of taxes, insurance, and CAM.
  • Modified Gross: Specific operating expenses are split between parties as negotiated.

The "Mutual Departure" Doctrine

Georgia courts recognize a unique doctrine called "mutual departure," which can modify a lease without either party formally amending it. If a landlord consistently accepts late payments, waives provisions, or deviates from the lease terms without objection, the court may treat those deviations as a modification of the original contract. This can severely undermine a landlord's position during a Dispossessory Proceeding.

Best Practice: Always enforce lease terms consistently, issue formal notices for every breach, and document all waivers in writing.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, required compliance items, and accounting records - making it easy to stay compliant with Georgia regulations.

Back to Georgia Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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