Get a realistic 2026 estimate of total annual and monthly commercial rent by space type, square footage, and lease structure — then compare quotes from local brokers.
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Did You Know?
Commercial lease costs in 2026 run about $20-$50/sqft/yr for office, $15-$75 for retail, and $5-$15 for warehouse space. On a triple-net (NNN) lease, add $3-$15/sqft for CAM, taxes, and insurance, so a 2,500 sqft office near $43/sqft all-in costs roughly $107,500 a year, or about $8,950 a month.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q
How much does it cost to lease commercial space per square foot in 2026?
In 2026, US commercial rents average roughly $20-$50 per square foot per year for office (Class A in major metros reaches $40-$60), $15-$75 for retail depending on foot traffic, and $5-$15 for warehouse or industrial space. The national office average sits near $33 per square foot. Your total annual cost is the square footage multiplied by the base rate, plus CAM charges on a triple-net lease.
Office: $20-$50/sqft/yr ($40-$60 for Class A metros)
Retail / storefront: $15-$75/sqft/yr by location and foot traffic
Warehouse / industrial: $5-$15/sqft/yr
Flex / mixed-use: $10-$20/sqft/yr
National office average is about $33/sqft/yr
Space Type
Typical $/sqft/yr
2,500 sqft Annual
Office
$20-$50
$50,000-$125,000
Retail
$15-$75
$37,500-$187,500
Warehouse
$5-$15
$12,500-$37,500
Flex / mixed-use
$10-$20
$25,000-$50,000
Q
What is the difference between a triple net (NNN) and a gross lease cost?
On a full-service gross lease, the quoted rate bundles base rent plus taxes, insurance, and common-area maintenance, so the number you see is close to your all-in cost. On a triple-net (NNN) lease, the base rate is lower, but you pay your pro-rata share of CAM, property taxes, and insurance on top — typically $3-$15 per square foot per year. A $30 NNN quote can actually cost $40-$45 all-in once those charges are added.
Modified gross: some operating costs shared, some passed through
A $30 NNN base can run $40-$45/sqft all-in
Always ask for the effective (all-in) rate before signing
Lease Type
Who Pays Operating Costs
Quoted Rate
Triple net (NNN)
Tenant pays CAM, tax, insurance
Lowest base, add-ons
Modified gross
Shared / partial pass-through
Mid-range
Full-service gross
Landlord pays from rent
Highest, all-inclusive
Q
What are CAM charges and how much should I budget for them?
CAM (common-area maintenance) charges cover the upkeep of shared spaces — parking lots, lobbies, landscaping, snow removal, and exterior repairs — split among tenants by their share of the building. In 2026, CAM, taxes, and insurance combined typically run $3-$15 per square foot per year, with dense office and retail centers at the high end and bare warehouses at the low end. CAM is reconciled annually, so budget for a true-up bill.
CAM + taxes + insurance: $3-$15/sqft/yr in 2026
Office / retail centers run highest; warehouses lowest
Charged as your pro-rata share of building square footage
Reconciled annually — expect a year-end true-up adjustment
Ask for a CAM cap to limit unexpected increases
Q
How do I estimate my total monthly commercial rent?
Multiply your square footage by the base rate per square foot to get annual base rent, add CAM and other pass-throughs if you are on an NNN lease, then divide by 12 for the monthly figure. For example, a 2,500 sqft office at $33/sqft base plus $10/sqft CAM is $82,500 + $25,000 = $107,500 a year, or about $8,958 per month. The calculator above runs this for your exact inputs and region.
Annual base rent = square footage x base rate
Add CAM (square footage x CAM rate) on NNN leases
Monthly rent = total annual cost / 12
2,500 sqft at $33 + $10 CAM = $107,500/yr (~$8,958/mo)
Budget extra for fit-out, utilities, and a security deposit
Q
What else costs money when signing a commercial lease?
Beyond rent and CAM, plan for a security deposit (often one to three months of rent), tenant improvement or fit-out costs that exceed the landlord allowance, utilities billed separately, and a broker or legal review fee. Many landlords offer free-rent or TI allowances to win tenants, so negotiate those concessions before agreeing to the headline rate.
Security deposit: typically 1-3 months of rent
Tenant improvement / fit-out above the landlord allowance
Utilities, janitorial, and signage often billed separately
Annual escalations of 2-4% built into most multi-year leases
Negotiate free rent or TI allowance before signing
Example Calculations
12,500 sqft Class A office, NNN lease (major metro)
Inputs
Space typeOffice (Class A)
Lease structureTriple net (NNN)
Square footage2,500 sqft
Base rate$33/sqft/yr
CAM charges$10/sqft/yr
Result
Typical annual cost$100,000 - $115,000
Monthly rent$8,300 - $9,600
All-in rate~$43/sqft/yr
Base rent is 2,500 x $33 = $82,500 and CAM is 2,500 x $10 = $25,000, for $107,500 a year (about $8,958 a month). A premium metro market keeps this near the top of the office range.
Base rent of 1,200 x $40 = $48,000 plus CAM of 1,200 x $12 = $14,400 totals $62,400 a year (about $5,200 a month). High foot-traffic retail commands premium per-square-foot pricing.
Base rent of 10,000 x $9 = $90,000 plus low warehouse CAM of 10,000 x $4 = $40,000 totals $130,000 a year (about $10,833 a month). Large footprints keep the per-square-foot rate low.
Formulas Used
Total commercial lease cost build-up
Annual cost = Square footage x (Base rate + CAM if NNN); Monthly = Annual / 12
Commercial rent starts from a base rate per square foot, then adds CAM, taxes, and insurance on a triple-net lease. Multiply the area by the all-in rate for annual cost, then divide by 12.
Where:
Square footage= Rentable area of the space, often 5-15% above usable area due to load factor
Base rate= Quoted rent per square foot per year: office $20-$50, retail $15-$75, warehouse $5-$15
CAM= Common-area maintenance plus taxes and insurance on NNN leases, typically $3-$15/sqft/yr
Annual / 12= Converts the yearly occupancy cost into the monthly rent payment
NNN vs gross effective rate
Effective NNN rate = Base rate + CAM + Taxes + Insurance; compare to gross quoted rate
To compare a triple-net quote against a full-service gross quote, add all pass-through charges to the NNN base so both numbers represent true all-in cost per square foot.
Where:
Base rate= The headline NNN number, which excludes operating costs
CAM + Taxes + Insurance= Pass-through charges of $3-$15/sqft that the tenant pays on top of base rent
Gross quoted rate= Full-service rate that already bundles all operating costs into one number
Commercial Lease Costs in 2026: Rent Per Square Foot, Lease Structures, and Total Occupancy
1
How Commercial Lease Cost Is Calculated in 2026
Commercial rent is almost always quoted as a price per square foot per year, and that single number is the foundation of every lease cost estimate. To get your annual base rent, multiply the rentable square footage by the quoted rate; to get the monthly payment, divide that annual figure by 12. A 2,500 sqft office quoted at $33 per square foot, for example, carries $82,500 in base rent a year, or about $6,875 a month before any operating costs are added. The calculator above runs this math for your exact inputs, but understanding the build-up helps you sanity-check any broker quote.
The base rate swings widely by space type, because each use puts different demands on the building. In 2026, office space runs roughly $20 to $50 per square foot per year, with Class A towers in major metros reaching $40 to $60 and the national office average sitting near $33. Retail ranges from $15 to $75 depending almost entirely on foot traffic and visibility, while warehouse and industrial space stays cheap at $5 to $15 because it is mostly bare shell. Flex and mixed-use space lands in between at $10 to $20. The table below shows how those rates translate into annual cost for a 2,500 sqft footprint.
One subtlety that trips up first-time tenants is the difference between usable and rentable square footage. Landlords charge on rentable area, which adds your pro-rata share of lobbies, hallways, and shared restrooms on top of the space you actually occupy. This load factor typically runs 5 to 15 percent, so a suite with 2,200 usable square feet might be quoted as 2,500 rentable. Always confirm which number a quote is based on, because a 12 percent load factor on a $40 rate quietly adds nearly $5 per usable square foot to your real cost.
Commercial lease base rates by space type, US, 2026.
Space Type
Typical $/sqft/yr
2,500 sqft Annual Base
Drives the Rate
Office
$20-$50
$50,000-$125,000
Class, metro, amenities
Retail / storefront
$15-$75
$37,500-$187,500
Foot traffic, visibility
Warehouse / industrial
$5-$15
$12,500-$37,500
Clear height, location
Flex / mixed-use
$10-$20
$25,000-$50,000
Office-to-warehouse mix
Confirm whether a quote is based on usable or rentable square footage. The load factor that adds shared common areas to your billed area can quietly raise your effective per-square-foot cost by 5 to 15 percent.
2
Lease Structures Explained: NNN, Gross, and CAM Charges
The lease structure decides who pays the buildings operating costs, and it matters as much as the base rate. On a full-service gross lease, the quoted number bundles base rent plus property taxes, insurance, and common-area maintenance, so the figure you see is close to your all-in cost. On a triple-net lease, written NNN, the base rate is lower but you pay your pro-rata share of those three nets on top. A modified gross lease splits the difference, with some operating costs included and others passed through to the tenant.
Those pass-through charges are the part new tenants underestimate. CAM, or common-area maintenance, covers the upkeep of shared spaces such as parking lots, lobbies, landscaping, snow removal, and exterior repairs, and it is split among tenants by their share of the building. In 2026, CAM plus taxes and insurance combined typically runs $3 to $15 per square foot per year, with dense office and retail centers at the high end and bare warehouses at the low end. That means a $30 NNN base rate can actually cost $40 to $45 all-in once the nets are layered on.
Because CAM is reconciled annually, the number on your lease is only an estimate. Landlords bill a monthly CAM amount through the year, then true it up against actual expenses, so a cold winter with heavy snow removal or a major parking-lot repaving can produce a year-end catch-up bill. Protect yourself by asking for a CAM cap that limits annual increases, and request the prior two years of CAM history before signing so you can spot a building with runaway operating costs. The table below compares the three structures side by side.
Commercial lease structures and who carries operating costs, 2026.
Lease Type
Who Pays Operating Costs
Quoted Rate
Best For
Triple net (NNN)
Tenant pays CAM, tax, insurance
Lowest base + add-ons
Most retail and industrial
Modified gross
Shared / partial pass-through
Mid-range
Multi-tenant office
Full-service gross
Landlord pays from rent
Highest, all-inclusive
Small office tenants
Always ask for the effective all-in rate, not just the base. A $30 NNN quote with $12 in CAM, taxes, and insurance is really $42 per square foot, while a $40 full-service gross quote can be the cheaper deal once you add the nets.
3
Negotiation Tips and Total Occupancy Cost
Your real budget number is total occupancy cost, not the headline rent. Start with annual base rent, add CAM and other pass-throughs if you are on an NNN lease, then layer in the one-time and recurring extras that every commercial tenant faces. A 2,500 sqft office at $33 base plus $10 CAM is $82,500 plus $25,000, or $107,500 a year, which works out to about $8,958 a month all-in. On top of that, plan for a security deposit of one to three months of rent, tenant-improvement or fit-out costs above the landlord allowance, separately billed utilities and janitorial, and annual escalations of 2 to 4 percent baked into most multi-year terms.
The good news is that almost every line item is negotiable, especially in a tenant-favorable market. Landlords routinely offer concessions to win a creditworthy tenant on a multi-year term, including free rent for the first one to three months, a tenant-improvement allowance measured in dollars per square foot, and a cap on annual escalations or CAM increases. These concessions can be worth more than a small cut in base rate, so negotiate the whole package rather than fixating on the per-square-foot number alone. Getting two months of free rent on a five-year lease, for instance, lowers your effective rate across the entire term.
Finally, weigh the lease against the alternatives before you commit to a multi-year obligation. A buildout or relocation is a capital decision, so it pays to run the numbers on the return, and the cap rate a landlord uses to price the space tells you how much margin sits in the asking rent. The related calculators in the finance category, including the cap rate and ROI tools, help you pressure-test whether the all-in occupancy cost makes sense for your business before you sign.
Total occupancy cost components for a commercial lease, 2026.
Cost Component
Typical Range
When You Pay
Base rent
$5-$75/sqft/yr
Monthly, full term
CAM + taxes + insurance (NNN)
$3-$15/sqft/yr
Monthly, trued up yearly
Security deposit
1-3 months rent
At signing
Tenant improvement / fit-out
Above landlord allowance
Before move-in
Annual escalation
2-4% per year
Each renewal year
Negotiate the whole concession package, not just the base rate. Free rent, a tenant-improvement allowance, and a CAM cap on a multi-year term often lower your effective cost more than shaving a dollar or two off the per-square-foot rate.
This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Results are estimates and should not be considered professional financial, medical, legal, or other advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making important decisions. UseCalcPro is not responsible for any actions taken based on calculator results.