Calculate your share of operating expense pass-throughs in a commercial lease. See how base year stops and pro-rata shares affect your costs.
In many commercial leases — especially gross and modified gross structures — the landlord includes operating expenses at a "base year" level. When actual expenses exceed the base year amount, the landlord passes the excess through to tenants proportionally. This is called an operating expense (OpEx) pass-through or expense escalation.
For example, if base year operating expenses are $12/sq ft and current year expenses are $14/sq ft, you'd pay ($14 − $12) × your pro-rata share. As operating costs rise due to inflation, these pass-throughs increase your occupancy cost beyond the quoted rent.
This calculator computes your share of OpEx pass-throughs based on actual vs. base year expenses and your pro-rata share. Use it to budget for annual escalations and evaluate proposals from competing landlords.
Homebuyers, investors, and real-estate professionals all benefit from precise opex pass-through figures when evaluating properties, negotiating deals, or planning long-term investment strategies. Save this calculator and revisit it whenever market conditions or your financial situation changes.
OpEx pass-throughs are often underestimated by tenants. Rising insurance, tax, and maintenance costs can add $2–$5/sq ft in pass-throughs within 3–5 years, significantly increasing your rent. Instant recalculation lets you compare scenarios side by side, so every buying, selling, or investment decision is grounded in solid financial analysis. No sign-up is required, and you can instantly re-run scenarios as interest rates, property values, or your financial goals evolve. No sign-up is required, and you can instantly re-run scenarios as interest rates, property values, or your financial goals evolve.
Pro-Rata Share = Tenant Sq Ft / Building Sq Ft Excess OpEx = (Actual OpEx − Base Year OpEx) per Sq Ft Annual Pass-Through = Excess OpEx × Tenant Sq Ft Monthly Pass-Through = Annual Pass-Through / 12
Result: $10,000/year ($833/mo) pass-through
Excess OpEx: $14.50 − $12.00 = $2.50/sq ft. Your pass-through: $2.50 × 4,000 sq ft = $10,000/year ($833/month). This is in addition to your base rent and represents real cost growth.
An expense stop is a fixed dollar amount (e.g. $12/sq ft) above which expenses pass through. A base year uses the actual expenses in a specific year as the benchmark. Both accomplish similar goals, but base year stops better reflect actual conditions while fixed stops provide more certainty.
If operating expenses grow at 3.5% annually from a $12 base, they'll reach $14.25 in year 5 and $16.99 in year 10. Your cumulative pass-through over 10 years would be approximately $120,000 on a 5,000 sq ft space — not something to overlook.
Some leases separate expenses into controllable (management can influence) and uncontrollable (taxes, insurance). Negotiate caps only on controllable expenses; uncontrollable expenses are harder to cap because the landlord can't control them.
A base year stop is the operating expense level in your lease's first year (or a specified base year). The landlord covers expenses up to this amount; anything above is passed through to tenants. A higher base year amount means lower initial pass-throughs for tenants.
Typically: property taxes, insurance, common area maintenance, management fees, utilities for common areas, security, landscaping, and elevator/HVAC maintenance. Some leases also include administrative costs. Capital expenditures are usually excluded (and should be).
Historically, commercial operating expenses increase 2–5% annually. However, spikes happen: property tax reassessments (5–20% jumps), insurance market hardening (10–30% increases), and energy cost volatility can cause above-trend increases in specific years.
A gross-up adjusts operating expenses as if the building is fully occupied (typically 95%). Without gross-up, vacancies inflate the building's per-sq-ft expense calculation, and occupied tenants pay a disproportionate share. Always include a gross-up clause.
Most leases grant audit rights. If you suspect errors or overcharges, exercise this right. Professional lease auditors typically find errors in 40–60% of audits, with average recoveries of $0.50–$2.00/sq ft. Much of the industry works on contingent fees.
If actual expenses fall below the base year, most leases do NOT reduce your rent — the base year is a floor, not a ceiling. You only benefit from expense reductions if they fall below the base year AND your lease includes a pass-back clause, which is rare.