Hawaii Commercial Lease Requirements
Review essential commercial lease requirements in Hawaii, including the Statute of Frauds, essential clauses, and GET pass-throughs.
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.
Hawaii Commercial Lease Requirements
In Hawaii, a commercial lease agreement is the absolute legal foundation of a landlord-tenant relationship. Because commercial parties are presumed to be equal, the courts will strictly interpret and enforce the provisions contained within the written document, offering virtually no statutory "safety nets" for either side.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Hawaii for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Written Agreements and the Statute of Frauds
Under Hawaii's Statute of Frauds, a commercial lease intended to last exactly one year or longer must be in writing and signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought to be considered legally enforceable.
Operating a commercial business on a "handshake agreement" or oral lease in Hawaii is a disastrous business practice. The extreme complexity of commercial real estate—involving build-outs, Common Area Maintenance (CAM), zoning, insurance indemnification, and tax liabilities—demands a tailored, comprehensive written contract.
Essential Commercial Lease Clauses in Hawaii
A Hawaii commercial lease should contain, at a minimum, the following critical clauses:
1. General Excise Tax (GET) Pass-Through
This is uniquely critical in Hawaii. Because the state assesses a General Excise Tax on the landlord's gross rental income, the lease must explicitly state that the tenant is responsible for paying not only the base rent, but also the GET assessed upon that rent. If the document is silent, the landlord cannot retroactively force the tenant to cover the tax burden.
2. Structure of Rent (Gross vs. Triple-Net)
The lease must indisputably define what the tenant pays for beyond the base rent.
- In a NNN (Triple-Net) lease, the tenant pays property taxes, building insurance, and all maintenance.
- In a Gross (Full-Service) lease, the landlord absorbs these costs into a higher base rent.
3. Clear Default Remedies and Notice Periods
Because Hawaii permits landlords to utilize strict debt collection maneuvers (and sometimes, "self-help" evictions) under highly specific circumstances, your lease must cleanly delineate the process for declaring a default.
- How many days of grace period before rent is "late"?
- Exactly how many days of written notice must you provide before declaring a default for a non-monetary breach (like tearing down a wall without permission)?
- Does the lease explicitly authorize "self-help" lockouts, or default to HRS Chapter 666 Summary Possession?
4. Permitted Use and Exclusivity
Clearly define exactly what type of business the tenant is permitted to operate. You must prevent a tenant from pivoting a quiet retail clothing store into a loud, high-traffic nightclub. In shopping centers, you must also carefully draft "exclusivity clauses," ensuring you don't rent neighboring space to a direct competitor of your anchor tenant.
5. Insurance and Indemnification
The lease must require the commercial tenant to carry adequate Commercial General Liability (CGL) insurance and specifically require them to name the landlord (and property management company) as an "Additional Insured" on the policy.
6. Subordination, Non-Disturbance, and Attornment (SNDA)
Crucial for landlords who carry commercial mortgages. An SNDA clause ensures that the commercial lease remains subordinate to the landlord's mortgage, meaning if the landlord defaults and the bank forecloses, the bank can easily clear out the commercial tenants to sell the building.
Best Practices
- Retain Specific Hawaii Counsel: Commercial leases drafted in other states will inherently fail to address Hawaii's unique GET tax structure and specific real estate terminology. Always have a Hawaii-licensed attorney draft or review your lease agreements.
- Require Personal Guarantees: Always demand that the principals behind a corporate LLC sign a personal guarantee, allowing you to go after their personal assets if the corporate entity goes bankrupt and breaches the lease.
How Landager Can Help
Commercial leases are massive, complex documents that define your property's value. Landager securely stores the final, fully-executed versions of all your Hawaii commercial agreements in the cloud. You can pull them up instantly to reference CAM caps, verify maintenance clauses, or ensure the tenant's GET tax is calculating correctly for billing purposes.
Back to Hawaii Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
Sources & Official References
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