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Washington State Commercial Rent Increase Rules

Understand how commercial rent increases work in Washington state, where HB 1217 residential caps do not apply and the lease escalation clause governs all.

Melvin Prince
3 min read
Verified Apr 2026United States flag
WashingtonUsaCommercialRent increaseRent escalation

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.Information last verified: April 2026.

Region
Washington
Major Statute
RCW 59.18
Last Verified
2026-04-10

Washington State Commercial Rent Increase Rules

A critical distinction for Washington landlords managing mixed portfolios: House Bill 1217's landmark rent stabilization caps (7% + CPI, or 10%) apply exclusively to residential tenancies. Commercial properties in Washington state are completely exempt from these restrictions.

Commercial rent increases are governed entirely by the "Rent Escalation" clauses negotiated into the multi-year lease agreement.

1. Fixed Base Rent Increases (Stepped Rent)

The most predictable escalation method. The lease explicitly states the exact base rent for every year of the term:

YearMonthly Base Rent
Year 1$5,000
Year 2$5,250
Year 3$5,500
Year 4$5,775
Year 5$6,050

These increases are automatically enforceable on the exact anniversary dates stated in the lease, with no additional statutory notice required.

2. Indexed Escalations (CPI Clause)

Many Washington commercial landlords, particularly in the Seattle-Tacoma metro, tie annual rent increases to the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for the Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue metropolitan area.

  • The rent automatically increases by the same percentage the CPI rose over the previous 12 months.
  • Caps and Floors: Leases routinely include "collars" (e.g., the CPI increase, but no less than 2% and no more than 5%) to protect both parties from extreme economic volatility.

3. Percentage Rent (Retail)

Common in Washington's retail sector (malls, shopping centers, downtown Seattle retail strips):

  • The tenant pays a lower fixed "Base Rent."
  • Additionally, they pay a percentage of their gross sales revenue once those sales exceed a negotiated threshold (the "natural breakpoint").

4. Holdover Premiums

If a commercial tenant in Washington remains in the building after their lease has expired without signing a renewal, most leases impose a harsh "holdover premium"—often 150% to 200% of the last month's rent—for every month the tenant illegally occupies the space. Washington courts consistently enforce these provisions as legitimate liquidated damages.

How Landager Helps

Managing Washington properties requires precision, especially with Seattle's strict security deposit caps and the statewide 30-day return deadline. Landager automates the mandatory move-in checklist process, tracks the 14-day "pay or vacate" notices, and ensures rent increases are delivered with the required 90-day notice. From managing installment payment requests to staying compliant with Just Cause eviction requirements, Landager helps you navigate the complex RCW 59.18 landscape.

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