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Massachusetts Commercial Rent Increases: Lease-Driven Reviews and Escalations

Understand how commercial rent increases work in Massachusetts, focusing on lease-defined escalation clauses, NNN adjustments, and market-rate reviews.

Melvin Prince
3 min lezen
Geverifieerd Apr 2026United States flag
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Juridische Disclaimer

Deze inhoud is uitsluitend bedoeld voor algemene informatieve en educatieve doeleinden. Het vormt geen juridisch advies en mag daar niet op worden vertrouwd. Wetten veranderen voortdurend — verifieer altijd de huidige regelgeving en raadpleeg een bevoegde advocaat in uw rechtsgebied voor advies specifiek voor uw situatie. Landager is een vastgoedbeheerplatform, geen advocatenkantoor.Informatie laatst geverifieerd: April 2026.

Massachusetts has no statutory rent control for commercial properties. Rent increases in the commercial sector are governed entirely by the lease agreement. Without a specific rent review or escalation clause in the lease, the landlord cannot increase the rent during the term.

Official Law Citation: Commercial rent changes in Massachusetts are governed entirely by the terms of the private lease contract and M.G.L. Chapter 186 for at-will tenancies.

No Statutory Restrictions

Unlike some jurisdictions with retail rent review protections, there are no Massachusetts statutes placing caps, restrictions, or specific procedures on commercial rent increases. Freedom of contract prevails.

Common Rent Escalation Mechanisms

1. Fixed Annual Increases

The lease pre-defines exact rent increases for each year of the term (e.g., Year 1: $30/sq ft, Year 2: $31/sq ft, Year 3: $32/sq ft). This provides certainty for both parties.

2. CPI-Linked Increases

The base rent increases annually based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI), usually tracking CPI-U (All Urban Consumers) for the Boston-Brockton-Nashua metropolitan area. Leases may include caps and floors.

3. NNN Pass-Through Adjustments

In a Triple Net (NNN) lease, the base rent may remain constant, but the tenant's total cost increases as the "pass-through" charges for property taxes, insurance, and CAM (Common Area Maintenance) grow. These are not "rent increases" in the traditional sense, but they increase the tenant's total occupancy cost. Tenants should negotiate:

  • Annual caps on CAM increases (e.g., 3-5% per year).
  • Audit rights to inspect the landlord's books and verify outgoings.
  • Exclusions for capital expenditures that benefit only the landlord.

4. Market Rent Resets

For longer leases (10+ years), the lease may include periodic "market rent resets" where the rent is adjusted to the current fair market value. If the parties cannot agree on the new rate, the lease typically dictates arbitration or appraisal by a neutral third-party.

Lease Renewal Rent

When a commercial tenant exercises an option to renew, the renewal rent is usually specified in the option clause-either by formula (e.g., "95% of fair market value") or by a fixed schedule.

How Landager Helps

Missing a commercial rent review date can permanently cost landlords thousands in lost income. Landager's portfolio management system tracks every rent review mechanism across your Massachusetts commercial properties and sends automated alerts 90 days before each anniversary, ensuring no escalation is missed.

Back to Massachusetts Commercial Lease Laws Overview.

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