Kansas Commercial Lease Requirements
Review essential Kansas commercial lease elements including the Statute of Frauds, NNN allocations, and default/cure mechanics.
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Kansas Commercial Lease Requirements
Because the Kansas Residential Landlord and Tenant Act does not extend to commercial properties, Kansas commercial leases are governed by general contract law principles. The written lease agreement is the single most important legal document in the commercial landlord-tenant relationship.
Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are structurally governed by general contract principles and the Kansas Statute of Frauds.
The Statute of Frauds Under Kansas law (K.S.A. 34-106), any lease agreement for real property lasting more than one year must be in writing to be enforceable. This applies equally to commercial and residential leases. An oral commercial agreement for a 3-year term would be unenforceable in Kansas courts.
Given the complexity and financial magnitude of commercial transactions, oral agreements are strongly discouraged even for terms under one year.
Essential Commercial Lease Elements
A well-drafted Kansas commercial lease should include:
- Parties and Guarantors: Full legal names of the landlord entity and tenant entity, plus any personal guarantors.
- Demised Premises: Precise description of the leased space (square footage, suite number, building address).
- Lease Term: Exact commencement and expiration dates, renewal options, and holdover provisions.
- Rent Schedule: Base rent, escalation formulas (CPI steps, fixed increases), and percentage rent provisions if applicable.
- Expense Allocation: Whether the lease is Full-Service Gross, Modified Gross, or Triple Net (NNN), with detailed definitions of what constitutes base year expenses, CAM charges, and reconciliation procedures.
- Permitted Use: Explicit restrictions on the type of business activity allowed on the premises.
- Insurance Requirements: Minimum commercial general liability (CGL) coverage amounts, with the landlord named as an "Additional Insured."
- Default and Cure: Precise definitions of what constitutes a monetary and non-monetary default, the exact notice period required, and the remedies available to the landlord (including accelerated rent, security deposit forfeiture, and attorney's fees).
- Tenant Improvements (TI): Who pays for build-outs, who owns the improvements upon lease termination, and whether the tenant must restore the space to "shell condition."
- Assignment and Subletting: Whether the tenant may assign the lease or sublet the space, and under what conditions landlord consent is required.
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How Landager Helps
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Back to Kansas Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
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