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How to re-gear a lease

In the aftermath of the last economic recession, many tenants and landlords opted to renegotiate their lease terms to improve or consolidate their respective positions. Economic hardship had resulted in some lease provisions becoming too onerous for tenants, while many landlords were happy to make their leases more tenant-friendly to prevent properties from becoming vacant; empty premises was a key landlord concern, especially in view of empty business rates liability.

High-profile re-gears in 2017 involving tenants such as Time Inc UK and Warner Bros Entertainment demonstrate that re-gearing remains a popular practice. This article explains the concept of lease re-gearing; its advantages from both a landlord and a tenant perspective; how to document a lease re-gear; tips to avoid the common pitfalls when engaging in a re-gear; and how legislative changes and market developments can affect re-gearing.

What is re-gearing?

Lease re-gearing involves a landlord and a tenant changing a term or terms of their lease. Examples include changes in rent, replacing open-market rent review with RPI-linked rent review, term extensions, increasing or decreasing the demise, removing a break clause and/or variations to alienation or alterations provisions. A compromise is usually reached: a landlord may offer its tenant a rent-free period in exchange for the deletion of the tenant’s break right or may agree to pay a capital sum to refurbish the premises in return for the tenant accepting an extended lease term.

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