Rent Increases in Ohio Commercial Real Estate

There is no commercial rent control in Ohio. Learn how landlords utilize CPI escalations, fixed percentage bumps, and FMV reviews.

3 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.

Just as the state of Ohio explicitly prohibits local municipalities from enacting residential rent control, it is fundamentally illegal to enact any form of commercial rent control or stabilization within the state.

The commercial real estate market in Ohio is entirely unrestricted. The only factor determining how much, and how often, a commercial landlord can increase the rent is the negotiated lease agreement.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed commercial real estate attorney. Information last verified: March 2026.

Structuring Commercial Rent Escalations

Because there are no statutory limits on rent hikes, Ohio commercial leases almost universally incorporate built-in "escalation clauses" to ensure the property's yield outpaces inflation.

If a five-year commercial lease does not contain an escalation clause, the rent remains entirely flat for 60 months, eroding the landlord's real return.

1. Fixed Percentage Escalations

The most predictable method. The lease stipulates that the Base Rent will increase by a fixed, predetermined percentage (typically 3% to 5%) on a specific date, usually the annual anniversary of the lease commencement.

2. CPI Adjustments (Consumer Price Index)

To hedge against sudden, severe inflation, landlords often tie the rent increase to a published government index, most commonly the CPI for the Midwest Urban region.

  • The Danger: If inflation drops to nearly zero, the landlord's rent increase is zero. Therefore, landlords frequently negotiate a "floor" (e.g., minimum 2% increase) and tenants negotiate a "cap" (e.g., maximum 6% increase).

3. Fair Market Value (FMV) Renewals

When a tenant reaches the end of their primary term (e.g., year 10) and exercises an option to renew for another 5 years, the rent rarely stays the same. The lease typically requires the rent to reset to the "Current Fair Market Value," determined by independent commercial appraisers analyzing comparable properties in the Columbus, Cincinnati, or Cleveland submarkets.

Absolute NNN Leases and "Hidden" Increases

In an absolute "Triple Net" (NNN) commercial lease, the tenant is responsible for their pro-rata share of all operating expenses (property taxes, insurance, and CAM).

Even if the Base Rent only increases by a modest 3% annually, the tenant's total monthly payment can skyrocket if the local Ohio county drastically reappraises the property's value, resulting in a massive spike in property taxes that the tenant is contractually obligated to absorb.

Automating Escalation Calculations

Manually tracking which of your 50 commercial tenants are on a flat 4% annual bump versus a complex trailing-12-month CPI adjustment is a recipe for lost revenue. Landager standardizes commercial escalation management. You input the lease variables once, and the platform automatically triggers the correct rent increases precisely on the lease anniversary, updating the tenant's ledger and automatically dispatching the required notification letter without manual intervention.

Back to Ohio Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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