Missouri Commercial Lease Requirements: Key Clauses and Best Practices
Guide to Missouri commercial lease requirements including essential clauses, NNN structures, assignment and subletting, and the Statute of Frauds.
법적 고지
이 콘텐츠는 일반 정보 및 교육 목적으로만 제공됩니다. 법률 자문에 해당하지 않으며 그러한 것으로 의존해서는 안 됩니다. 법률은 자주 변경되므로 항상 현재 규정을 확인하고 귀하의 상황에 맞는 조언을 받으려면 해당 지역의 면허가 있는 변호사와 상담하십시오. Landager는 부동산 관리 플랫폼이며 법률 회사가 아닙니다.정보 최종 확인: April 2026.
The commercial lease is the single most important document in any Missouri commercial real estate transaction. Because statutory protections are minimal for commercial tenants, both parties must rely on manage, precisely drafted agreements.
Official Law Citation: The Missouri Statute of Frauds requires that any lease for a period longer than one year must be in writing to be legally enforceable. (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 432.010)
Written Lease Requirements (Statute of Frauds)
Under Missouri's Statute of Frauds (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 432.010):
- Any lease for a term of more than one year must be in writing and signed by the party to be charged.
- Oral commercial leases for terms of one year or less are technically enforceable, but never recommended for commercial tenancies.
- Leases for terms exceeding three years should be recorded with the county recorder of deeds to provide constructive notice to future purchasers.
Essential Commercial Lease Clauses
Every Missouri commercial lease should address the following, at minimum:
Basic Terms
Financial Terms
Operational Terms
Default and Termination
Common Lease Structures
Gross Lease
- Tenant pays a flat rent; landlord pays all operating expenses.
- Common for office spaces.
Modified Gross Lease
- Tenant pays base rent plus some operating expenses (often utilities and janitorial).
- A middle ground between Gross and NNN.
Triple Net (NNN) Lease
- Tenant pays base rent plus property taxes, insurance, and all maintenance/CAM charges.
- Most common for retail and industrial spaces in Missouri.
- Shifts virtually all operating risk to the tenant.
Assignment and Subletting
Missouri commercial leases typically address assignment and subletting explicitly:
- Consent Required: Most leases require the landlord's prior written consent.
- Consent Standard: The lease should state whether consent can be withheld "in landlord's sole discretion" or only "not unreasonably withheld."
- Recapture Right: Some leases allow the landlord to terminate the lease and recapture the space instead of permitting an assignment.
- Profit Sharing: The lease may require the tenant to share any sublease profit (difference between the sublease rent and the original rent) with the landlord.
- Ongoing Liability: Unless explicitly released, the original tenant remains liable for all lease obligations even after assignment.
Best Practices for Commercial Landlords
- Hire a Commercial Real Estate Attorney: Template leases are insufficient for complex commercial transactions.
- Be Exhaustive on Maintenance: Every component of the property (roof, HVAC, parking lot, elevators) should be explicitly assigned in the lease.
- Include SNDA Agreements: Protect tenants (and attract quality tenants) by providing Subordination, Non-Disturbance, and Attornment agreements with your lender.
- Record Long-Term Leases: Leases exceeding 3 years should be recorded to protect both parties' interests.
- Regularly Review and Update: Laws change, and your lease templates should evolve with them.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, compliance rules, and late fee schedules - making it easy to stay compliant with Missouri regulations.
📬 해당 법규 변경 시 알림 받기
임대인-임차인 법규가 업데이트될 때 이메일을 보내드립니다. 스팸 없이 법규 변경 사항만 알려드립니다.




