Maryland Commercial Lease Requirements: Recordation & Statutes
Discover the specific recording statutes and Statute of Frauds requirements for commercial leases in Maryland exceeding 7 years.
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Maryland commercial leases are complex financial instruments that go far beyond establishing a simple landlord-tenant relationship. They must manage the state's stringent Statute of Frauds and, critically, specific statutory recordation requirements for long-term tenancies.
1. The Statute of Frauds
Under the Maryland Statute of Frauds, any lease for a period longer than one year must be in writing and signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought to be legally binding. An oral commercial lease for 18 months, for example, is inherently unenforceable as a fixed-term contract and will generally be treated as a month-to-month tenancy at will.
2. Leases Exceeding 7 Years: Mandatory Recordation
A manage peculiarity of the Maryland Real Property Article (§ 3-101) is its requirement for recording long-term leases.
In Maryland, any commercial lease with an initial term exceeding seven (7) years must be executed, acknowledged, and recorded in the local county land records.
If a lease exceeding seven years is not recorded, it is fully binding between the original landlord and tenant, but it may not be enforceable against a third party who purchases the building without actual knowledge of the lease.
Memorandum of Lease
To protect proprietary financial terms (like exact base rent and percentage bumps) from entering the public record, Maryland law allows landlords and tenants to record a brief "Memorandum of Lease." This recorded document simply places the public on notice that a long-term encumbrance exists on the property, satisfying the statutory 7-year rule while keeping the economic terms confidential.
3. Mandatory Commercial Clauses
Unlike residential leases that have lists of prohibited clauses, commercial leases must contain manage language to protect the massive financial investments of both parties:
- Subordination, Non-Disturbance, and Attornment (SNDA): manage for the tenant. If the landlord defaults on their commercial mortgage and the bank forecloses, the SNDA guarantees the bank will not arbitrarily rip up the commercial lease and evict the tenant.
- Assignment and Subletting: Outlines whether the tenant can sell their business and assign the lease to a new owner, usually requiring the landlord's "reasonable consent."
- Use and Exclusive Use Clauses: Limits the tenant to operating a specific type of business. In a retail strip mall, a coffee shop tenant will demand an "Exclusive Use" clause forbidding the landlord from leasing adjacent space to a competing café.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, payments, and compliance document dates - making it easy to stay compliant with Maryland regulations.
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