Tennessee Commercial Leases: Essential Terms and NNN Structures
Review the critical components of a Tennessee commercial lease, focusing on NNN versus Gross structures, build-outs, and assignment clauses.
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.
A Tennessee commercial lease is a highly customizable, heavily negotiated contract between two businesses. Because the state's residential tenant protections (like URLTA) deliberately exclude commercial properties, the lease document is the sole authority governing the relationship. If a scenario is not addressed in writing, it becomes a severe risk for litigation in Chancery or Circuit Court.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial lease drafting is complex. Always engage a qualified Tennessee real estate attorney. Information last verified: March 2026.
The Lease Structure: NNN vs. Gross
The most fundamental decision in drafting the lease is defining the economic and operational structure:
- Triple Net (NNN): The tenant pays a relatively low base rent but is responsible for their pro-rata share of property taxes, building insurance, and all maintenance (Common Area Maintenance - CAM). This is standard for Tennessee retail pads and industrial warehouses.
- Gross (Full-Service) Lease: The tenant pays a higher, single flat rent amount. The landlord pays all operating expenses out of that rent. Common in Class A office towers in Nashville and Memphis.
- Modified Gross: A hybrid where the tenant and landlord split specific operating expenses.
Essential Commercial Lease Clauses
1. The Demised Premises
A precise definition of the space being rented. It must legally clarify if rent is based on "Useable Square Footage" (the actual space inside the suite walls) or "Rentable Square Footage" (which includes an expensive portion of common areas like lobbies and hallways).
2. Permitted Use / Exclusive Use
- Permitted Use: The lease must strictly define what business the tenant can conduct. A broad clause ("any lawful retail use") heavily favors the tenant; a narrow clause ("a high-end, artisan coffee shop serving pastries") protects the landlord's tenant mix.
- Exclusive Use: In a shopping center, a tenant may demand an "exclusive use" clause, preventing the landlord from leasing another suite in the same center to a direct competitor (e.g., restricting a second coffee shop).
3. Build-Out and Tenant Improvements (TI)
Before the business opens, the space usually requires construction (a "build-out"). The lease must define:
- Who performs the construction (landlord's general contractor or tenant's)?
- Who pays for it? Does the landlord provide a "Tenant Improvement Allowance" (e.g., $40/sq ft)?
- Restoration: Must the tenant tear down the improvements and restore the space to its original "vanilla shell" condition at the end of the lease?
4. Assignment and Subleasing
Tenants generally want the flexibility to sublease the space if their business struggles or grows too large. Landlords want total control over who occupies their building.
- A standard Tennessee clause requires the landlord's "prior written consent, which shall not be unreasonably withheld, delayed, or conditioned."
- The lease should specify whether an assignment releases the original tenant from liability (often it does not; the original tenant remains a guarantor).
5. Insurance Requirements
The lease must stipulate the exact type and dollar limits of insurance the tenant must carry (Commercial General Liability, Property Insurance, Worker's Compensation) and require that the landlord be legally named as an "Additional Insured."
6. Subordination, Non-Disturbance, and Attornment (SNDA)
Crucial for mortgaged properties. An SNDA clause ensures that if the landlord defaults on their building mortgage and the bank forecloses, the bank will honor the tenant's lease (Non-Disturbance), provided the tenant continues paying rent reliably to the new owner (Attornment).
How Landager Helps
A 60-page commercial lease is useless if you don't enforce its deadlines. Landager acts as your digital lease abstractor, pulling the critical dates from your Tennessee commercial agreements—insurance renewal deadlines, option exercise windows, and rent escalations—and translating them into automated, actionable notifications for your property management team.
Sources & Official References
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