Tokyo Commercial Real Estate Laws: 2026 Overview
An overview of commercial property laws in Tokyo, Japan. Learn about lease types, business requirements, and key differences from residential.
法律免责声明
本内容仅供一般信息和教育目的。它不构成法律建议,不应作为法律建议依赖。法律法规经常变化——请务必核实当前法规并咨询您所在司法管辖区的持证律师,以获取针对您具体情况的建议。Landager 是一个物业管理平台,而非律师事务所。信息最后验证时间: April 2026.
Unlike residential leases that are heavily skewed toward the tenant (the "weaker party"), the leasing of commercial real estate in Tokyo-such as prime office buildings, retail space in Ginza or Omotesando, or logistics warehouses-operates in an entirely different dimension. Because commercial leasing is fundamentally a Business-to-Business (B2B) transaction, the strict consumer protection laws (like the "Tokyo Rules") are legally stripped away. This allows landlords to prioritize "Freedom of Contract," enabling highly protective, landlord-favorable "Special Clauses" (Tokuyaku) to secure the immense capital required for commercial asset management.
Massive Discrepancies: Commercial vs. Residential
Astronomical Deposits and the "Shikibiki" Clause The greatest culture shock for foreign investors entering Tokyo's commercial market is the sheer scale of the Security Deposit (Hoshokin / Shikikin). To lease a prime office floor in Minato-ku or a 1st-floor restaurant space, tenants must routinely wire 6 to 12 months of rent to the landlord before they are handed the keys. This gigantic pool of cash acts as the ultimate guarantor against corporate bankruptcy, ensuring the landlord can instantly fund the massive multi-million yen demolition costs (Skeleton Return) if the tenant vanishes. also, the crown jewel of Japanese B2B leasing is the legally permitted Amortization Clause (Shikibiki or Shokyaku). A landlord can legally mandate that, regardless of how spotless the tenant leaves the property, a massive percentage of the deposit (e.g., 20%) or the equivalent of 1-3 months' rent is automatically confiscated as a non-refundable "fee" upon move-out. The Japanese Supreme Court has explicitly ruled that this is completely legal and enforceable in B2B transactions. For a deeper dive, read the Commercial Security Deposits & Shikibiki Rule Guide.
The Terror of Ordinary Leases and "Justifiable Grounds" Another common misconception among foreign investors is assuming that "because it's a B2B contract, I can easily kick the tenant out when the lease expires." If a landlord signs an Ordinary Lease (Futsu Shakka Keiyaku) for a Tokyo office space, the tenant is granted the exact same statutory protections as a vulnerable residential renter. Under Article 28 of the Act on Land and Building Leases, a landlord cannot refuse to renew the contract without "Justifiable Grounds." To successfully convince a court to evict a thriving Tokyo restaurant just so the landlord can redevelop the building, the landlord must pay staggering Eviction Compensation (Tachinoki-ryo). This compensation will brutally calculate the tenant's new interior construction costs, moving fees, and the loss of "goodwill" (brand reputation/lost profits from closing down). Landlords routinely bleed tens of millions of JPY just to remove a single commercial tenant. Because of this, 100% of newly structured commercial leases in modern Tokyo office buildings use the Fixed-Term Lease Agreement (Teiki Shakka Keiyaku), mathematically eliminating all eviction compensation risks. For a deeper dive, read the Commercial Eviction & Fixed-Term Lease Guide.
The "Skeleton Return" (Sukeruton Modoshi) In the residential world, the landlord pays to fix faded wallpaper. In the commercial world, the tenant pays to destroy the walls entirely. Almost every commercial lease mandates a "Skeleton Return." When a corporate tenant's business ends, they are legally required-at their own massive expense-to rip out all lighting, Raised Access Floors (OA floors), partitions, and AC units until the space is merely bare concrete and exposed pipes ("Skeleton"). also, for safety and insurance reasons, tenants in large buildings are legally barred from using cheap contractors; they must use the landlord's designated mega-construction firm (the notoriously expensive "B-Kouji" system), which is then directly deducted from their massive Security Deposit.
Asset Management (AM) Compliance Pillars To successfully maximize Net Operating Income (NOI) in a Tokyo commercial portfolio, Asset Managers must perfectly execute three distinct protocols: 1. Flawless Fixed-Term Compliance: Missing the "Notice of Lease Expiration" 6-12 months before a commercial lease ends by even a single day defaults the landlord into an unwinnable multi-million dollar eviction negotiation. 2. Demarcation (A/B/C Kouji) Management: Strictly defining within the contract exactly which multi-million yen HVAC repairs are the financial responsibility of the Landlord (Core asset) vs. the Tenant (Exclusive space). 3. Ironclad Corporate Guarantees: Implementing strict B2B Guarantor Companies rather than relying on the CEO's personal signature, which requires legally dangerous "Maximum Limit" caps under the 2020 Civil Code. Landager's B2B Commercial Engine automatically tracks thousands of critical "Fixed-Term Expiration Warning" dates across corporate portfolios, programmatically executes the highly complex A/B/C Demarcation maintenance requests, and automatically calculates the massive "Shikibiki" deductions into final B2B liquidation invoices. Explore the detailed compliance requirements for Tokyo commercial properties:
How Landager Helps
Landager automates your overview tracking, manages Tokyo-specific renewal deadlines, and ensures your commercial property meets all fire safety and Seismic standards.
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