It’s becoming increasingly challenging to keep costs low when managing a veterinary clinic; controlling expenses should be a high priority. Reducing overhead by improving efficiency, maximizing revenue, and cutting unnecessary expenses is a good place to start; but what happens if you’ve already addressed these areas?

Most veterinarians aren’t aware of the potential cost-drivers and expensive risks hiding in the details of their veterinary office lease. A vet could save hundreds of thousands of dollars over the life of their tenancy by taking the time to review these details before signing their lease. Amendments can typically be made to the lease at startup or renewal time to control costs and protect your clinic from financial traps in the long run.

Veterinary Office Lease Costs and Other Fees

Looking at the Veterinary Office Lease“Annual Base Rent” in the lease is the amount a veterinary tenant agrees to pay the landlord for occupying the space. Securing reasonable rates initially will allow you to remain profitable as your practice grows. Aim to protect rental rates and unreasonable escalations by negotiating a cap on the annual escalation.

You should also do your due diligence by researching rental rates for competing spaces in the area; and learn what the landlord is asking for other comparable vacant spaces in the building/plaza to ensure that the proposed lease rates are fair.

Operating Costs

Operating costs are the expenses related to the operation and running of the building. Due to the fact that occupancy costs such as property taxes or insurance are fixed in nature, an explicit veterinary office lease outlining the impact of these costs plays a key role. Non-fixed costs (i.e. maintenance), must be closely audited to ensure you are not overpaying for your proportionate share.

Know What You’re Being Charged For

Many landlords have been known to back charge expenses by filing them under the term “operating costs.” It’s important to ensure you have the “right to review statements of operating costs” included in your veterinary office lease in order to determine exactly what you’re being charged for.

There are a number of operating expenses that are unreasonable for the landlord to pass along to their tenants, including:
Vet with a Cat

  • Improvements made to increase property value
  • Building repairs or replacement of structural components
  • Real estate broker commissions
  • Professional fees not relating to your space
  • Interest or principle payments on mortgages or debt costs, unless it is your debt or “Tenant Improvement Allowance” (TIA)
  • Marketing association fees that are not driving traffic to the building or helping your business

Keep in mind that operating costs can often be controlled or reduced at office lease negotiation time by setting up percentage formulas or by capping costs at certain thresholds.

Common Area Maintenance (CAM) Charges

CAM charges fluctuate from year-to-year depending on factors such as insurance premiums and property taxes. It is critical to ensure you have the legal right to audit CAM charges and that your veterinary office lease clearly states the landlord is responsible for paying the CAM charges on vacant space in the building.

Administration Fees

Ensure that you are not paying high administration fees to your landlord (anything over 5% is unreasonable). Also, be aware that “administration fees” and “management fees” mean the same thing; ensure you’re not being charged twice.

Tracking Critical Office Lease Dates

Tracking Critical Lease DatesTake proactive measures to avoid unexpected financial disasters by tracking and managing your critical dates aggressively. If you miss your veterinary office lease expiry date, you are automatically a month-to-month or “overholding” tenant and have lost the security of your practice location.

When in overholding, your landlord has the right to terminate the lease and evict you by providing only 30 days’ notice. The cost to demolish, renovate, relocate, and rebuild a veterinary clinic from scratch can easily cost $200,000 or more; not to mention any clinic downtime faced and lost customers as a result of the move.

Double the Monthly Rent

Many lease agreements state that as soon as your lease expires, the landlord has the right to charge you twice the normal monthly rent. Check the “overholding” clause in your lease to see what your penalty rent will be.

The “Option to Renew” Provision

The “option to renew” provision in the lease provides the ability for tenants to extend their tenancy in the building. The “extension deadline” is the last day that you may exercise your option to extend the lease term. Negotiating “options” into your lease is beneficial because they can protect you from rental escalations and provide you with the flexibility to stay even if the landlord has other plans for the space at the end of your term.

The Power of Negotiation Time and Lease Language

It is always a challenge to control occupancy costs for a veterinary clinic; and language in the lease can easily drive costs up. Veterinarians can save hundreds of thousands of dollars over the life of their tenancy by tracking critical dates, taking action at least 18-24 months before renewal time, and reviewing the details of their veterinary office lease at startup time.

The best way to ensure that your lease is set up with fair and affordable terms is to have the agreement reviewed professionally by veterinary office leasing experts before you sign it.

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