When Should Tenants Hire a Tenant Representative?
Leasing office or industrial space is one of the most significant financial commitments a business makes. Yet many tenants begin the process without professional representation, often because they do not realize it is available or they assume it costs extra.
It does not.
A tenant representative is paid by the landlord through the transaction commission, so the guidance comes at no direct cost to you.
The real question is not whether you can afford a tenant rep. It is whether you can afford to go without one.
What Is a Tenant Representative?
A tenant representative, also called a tenant rep broker, is a licensed commercial real estate professional who works exclusively on behalf of the tenant.
Unlike a listing broker who represents the landlord’s interests, a tenant rep’s job is to find the right space, analyze your options, and negotiate the most favorable terms for you. They are legally and ethically obligated to put your interests first.
When You Should Hire One
The short answer: before you start touring space.
Here are the most common situations where tenant representation is essential.
Your Lease Is Expiring
Most landlords begin preparing renewal offers months in advance, and they are not structuring those offers in your favor.
A tenant rep can analyze your current lease against current market conditions, identify competing alternatives, and use that leverage to negotiate better terms on a renewal or relocation.
Waiting until the last 90 days leaves you vulnerable.
You Are Searching for New Office or Industrial Space
Whether you are relocating, expanding, or launching a new location, the search process is more complex than browsing listings.
A tenant rep brings access to both on-market and off-market availabilities, filters options against your operational requirements, and ensures you are comparing spaces on a true apples-to-apples basis, factoring in rent, operating expenses, build-out costs, and lease flexibility.
You’ve Been Approached Directly by a Landlord or Listing Broker
If a landlord or their listing broker reaches out to you directly, remember that they represent the landlord.
Their goal is to fill the space on the best terms for the property owner. Engaging with them without your own representation puts you at an immediate disadvantage in every negotiation.
You Are Buying or Selling Commercial Property
Tenant representation is not limited to leases.
If your business is considering purchasing office or industrial property, or selling an asset you occupy, a buyer’s representative ensures your interests are protected through due diligence, pricing analysis, and contract negotiations.
Your Business Is Growing or Rightsizing
Significant changes in headcount, operations, or logistics create real estate needs that require careful planning.
A tenant rep helps you model different scenarios, anticipate future requirements, and structure lease terms that accommodate your growth trajectory, including expansion options, early termination rights, and renewal flexibility.
What a Tenant Rep Does for You
Beyond finding space, a qualified tenant representative provides:
- Market analysis and real-time data on available office and industrial properties
- Financial comparison of total occupancy costs across competing options
- Lease review and negotiation of business terms, not just base rent
- Coordination with attorneys, space planners, and contractors
- Guidance through the letter of intent, lease execution, and move-in process
The Cost of Not Having Representation
Tenants who negotiate directly with landlords, or rely on the listing broker, routinely leave money on the table.
They accept above-market rents, miss out on tenant improvement allowances, and sign leases with unfavorable escalation clauses or limited exit options. In office and industrial leases that can run five to ten years, even small concessions can add up to significant dollars.
A skilled tenant rep pays for themselves many times over, and again, their fee comes from the transaction, not from you.
The Bottom Line
Hire a tenant representative as early in the process as possible, ideally 12 to 18 months before your current lease expires or before you begin touring space.
The earlier you engage, the more options you have and the stronger your negotiating position will be.
In commercial real estate, the landlord always has professional representation. You should too.
Talk to a Tenant Representative Today
Commercial Real Estate Group of Tucson has represented tenants and buyers across Southern Arizona for more than 25 years.
We provide responsive, personalized service backed by real-time market data and deep knowledge of the local office and industrial market, so you can make informed decisions and achieve the best possible outcome.
Contact us today for a no-obligation consultation. We work for you, not the landlord.
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