Indiana Commercial Lease Requirements: Essential Terms and Provisions
Guide to Indiana commercial lease agreement requirements including NNN structures, essential clauses, use restrictions, and negotiation best practices.
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.
Indiana commercial leases are governed by contract law rather than the detailed statutory framework that applies to residential leases. This gives both landlords and tenants significant freedom to negotiate terms — but also means that well-drafted leases are critically important.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Indiana for guidance specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Written Lease Requirement
While Indiana technically allows oral leases, commercial leases should always be in writing:
- Leases over 12 months must be in writing under the Statute of Frauds (IC §32-21-1-1)
- Leases exceeding 3 years must be recorded with the county recorder
- Oral commercial leases are extremely difficult to enforce and should never be used
Essential Commercial Lease Terms
Core Financial Terms
| Term | Description |
|---|---|
| Base rent | Monthly or annual rent amount |
| Rent escalation | How and when rent increases (fixed, CPI, FMV) |
| Operating expenses | NNN pass-throughs, CAM charges, taxes, insurance |
| Security deposit | Amount, conditions, and return terms |
| Additional rent | Percentage rent, late fees, other charges |
Lease Duration and Renewal
- Initial term — typically 3-10 years for commercial leases
- Renewal options — number of options, term length, and rent for renewal periods
- Early termination — conditions under which either party can terminate early
- Holdover provisions — what happens if the tenant stays past expiration
Use and Exclusivity
- Permitted use — specific description of allowed business operations
- Exclusive use — protection against landlord leasing to competing businesses (retail/shopping center leases)
- Prohibited uses — activities that are not allowed on the premises
- Compliance with laws — tenant's obligation to comply with zoning, licensing, and regulations
Property and Improvements
- Tenant improvements (TI) — who pays for buildout, TI allowance amount
- Alterations — tenant's right to modify the space and landlord approval requirements
- Signage — rights, location, size, and approval process
- Common areas — definition and maintenance responsibilities
NNN Lease-Specific Provisions
Triple Net leases require additional detail:
Operating Expense Pass-Throughs
- Base year or expense stop — the baseline above which tenants pay increases
- CAM reconciliation — annual true-up of estimated vs. actual expenses
- Audit rights — tenant's right to review landlord expense records
- Controllable expense caps — limiting annual increases for controllable items (typically 3-5%)
Excluded Expenses
Standard NNN leases often exclude from pass-throughs:
- Capital expenditures (amortized over useful life)
- Landlord's income taxes
- Mortgage payments
- Leasing commissions
- Landlord's management personnel above on-site level
Assignment and Subletting
Commercial leases should address:
- Whether the tenant may assign the lease or sublet the space
- Landlord's consent requirements (cannot be unreasonably withheld in many cases)
- Recapture rights — landlord's ability to take back the space instead of allowing sublease
- Profit sharing — splitting any sublease premium between landlord and tenant
- Personal guarantees — whether the original tenant remains liable after assignment
Default and Remedies
A well-drafted commercial lease includes clear default provisions:
Tenant Defaults
- Nonpayment of rent (typically with a 5-10 day cure period)
- Breach of other lease terms (typically 30 days to cure)
- Bankruptcy or insolvency
- Abandonment of the premises
Landlord Remedies
- Terminate the lease and recover possession
- Accelerate rent — demand all remaining rent due immediately
- Re-let the premises and charge the tenant for any shortfall
- Self-help remedies (limited; must be carefully drafted)
- Attorneys' fees — the prevailing party's right to recover legal costs
Insurance Requirements
Commercial leases should specify:
- Minimum general liability coverage amounts ($1M-$2M common)
- Property insurance — who insures the building vs. tenant improvements
- Business interruption insurance
- Workers' compensation coverage
- Additional insured — landlord should be named
- Waiver of subrogation — mutual waivers to prevent insurer lawsuits
Best Practices for Commercial Landlords
- Use experienced commercial real estate attorneys — Template residential leases are insufficient
- Negotiate thoroughly — Every term is negotiable in a commercial lease
- Define all financial obligations clearly — Ambiguity leads to disputes
- Include detailed CAM provisions — Specify what's included and excluded
- Address tenant improvements upfront — TI allowances, approval processes, and ownership
- Plan for lease end — Removal of improvements, restoration obligations, holdover terms
- Review insurance annually — Ensure coverage keeps pace with property values
How Landager Helps
Landager provides commercial lease management tools that track all lease provisions, renewal dates, escalation schedules, and compliance requirements — helping landlords manage complex commercial portfolios with confidence.
Sources & Official References
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