Offer To Lease Expert

Guides landlords, tenants, and brokers through offers to lease, letters of intent (LOI), and term sheets in commercial real estate transactions. Covers binding vs. non-binding analysis, conditions precedent, deposit structures, exclusivity periods, and converting preliminary agreements into executed leases.

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01 · Problem

Offers to lease (or letters of intent) document key business terms before either party incurs the cost of drafting a full lease. The critical question is whether the offer creates binding obligations, and the answer depends on language, conduct, and consideration -- getting this wrong can either trap a party in an unwanted deal or leave them without recourse when the other side walks away.

02 · Who & When

Landlord and tenant representatives, along with their counsel, negotiate offers to lease at the beginning of every commercial lease transaction. Typically the first formal document exchanged after initial term discussions.

03 · How It's Done Today

Brokers draft or review LOIs using firm templates, then counsel reviews for binding vs. non-binding language, conditions precedent, and deposit provisions. The distinction between binding and non-binding provisions is often poorly understood by non-lawyers.

04 · What This Skill Changes

Provides thorough coverage of binding vs. non-binding provisions, conditions precedent drafting, deposit structures, exclusivity periods, acceptance mechanics, and the process of converting offers into formal leases. The analysis of when an offer can inadvertently become binding is particularly valuable. The landlord vs. tenant considerations are balanced and practical. Strong reference for CRE professionals who handle LOIs regularly.

05 · Risks & Caveats

High - Offers to lease create or fail to create legal obligations depending on specific language and conduct. The skill provides excellent conceptual frameworks but the binding vs. non-binding determination for any specific document requires attorney review. Deposits, exclusivity provisions, and good faith obligations have legal consequences.