Does your dental office lease expire in the next 24 months?
If so, it’s time to start planning your renewal negotiation with your landlord!
Achieving a good lease with fair and affordable financial terms requires extensive research, preparation, and a strong negotiation strategy. Follow our Lease Renewal Guide to ensure you secure the best lease possible. Get the PDF!
STEP 1: Begin Preparations Early & Identify Goals
Time equals increased leverage, and leverage translates into money in your pocket. Your landlord generally knows very little about the business of dentistry, but what they do know is that the closer they get you to the end of your term, the less time and leverage you have to negotiate a good deal because you are less likely to relocate for one. The fact is, the more time you have until your renewal deadline, the better the deal you are going to get. If you’re within this two-year window, it’s time to start preparing for your renewal negotiation.
Things change (sometimes significantly) in our lives every 5-10 years. Your practice, professional situation and needs today will be different from 5-10 years ago. You’ll need various parts of the lease to work hard for you over the next 10 years versus the last 10 years.
You’re probably not in the same place you were when you initially signed your dental office lease. How have your needs and practice goals changed since initially signing your lease?
STEP 2: Analyze the Terms in Your Current Dental Lease for Risks
Language in the lease is often difficult to understand and written in a way that only favors the landlord, engineered by landlords and their attorneys. Once you’ve defined your goals and mapped out your long term plans, it’s time to review your current dental office lease to identify any terms that affect your flexibility or present risks. Many dentists make the critical mistake of signing their lease without first reviewing it for hidden terms and clauses.
Key Building Blocks to Look for in Your Lease:
Guidance from a professional, industry trained dental office lease negotiator is suggested at this critical stage to ensure that all potential risks in your lease are exposed, and an elimination or amendment plan can be developed.
STEP 3: Prepare with Market Research and Develop a Negotiation Strategy
Understanding nuances in the market around your practice is a surefire way to prepare for your dental office lease negotiation. Being aware of neighborhood competition, rental rates and local vacancy rates will put you at a huge advantage, allowing you to set proper and realistic negotiation goals, and give you the confidence to reach a fair deal for the long term.
Remember, your lease is a huge, long-term financial commitment to your landlord. Even a 3% over commitment can cost you tens of thousands of dollars in unnecessary costs.
Just like you do every day with your patients through proper treatment planning to achieve a predictable desired end goal, you want to map out the desired end goal for the lease negotiation as well as the strategies and tactics for achieving these goals. This is guaranteed to keep you focused on what really matters, enabling you to achieve the very best outcome.
STEP 4: The Lease Negotiation: Tackling Economics
Be cautious of looking at your landlord as a friend (at least during the lease negotiation process). If you do, you will lose this game.
Address the financial aspects of the lease with your landlord first by discussing your rental expectations. Ensure all the major “wins” of the negotiation are documented on paper, and aim to keep the discussion as formal and as brief as possible. Don’t fall into the trap of focusing all of your time and energy on rental rates. Securing terms in your lease that offer you protection is far more significant than saving a buck.
Negotiate Fair Terms
Once you’ve addressed the rental rates in your lease, you may begin negotiating the risks and detrimental clauses highlighted previously out of your lease.
At this stage, it’s important to remember your priorities, future plans, and long and short term practice goals. Stay focused, have patience, and ensure you commit consistent time, energy and attention to this important stage of the process.
STEP 5: Final Lease Review & Execution
Prepare the final lease document and give it a thorough review before signing it. Get the final sign-off from the landlord, make copies, and save them somewhere safe.
Click here to download this blog as a white paper.
Questions about how to renew your dental office lease?
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