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% Rent Billing Overview
Percentage-rent is based on the gross sales of a tenant
at a particular store. It is commonplace to the retail industry where
tenant revenues are based on sales, rather than services. A formula is
established in the lease to determine the amount of percentage rent. Elements
included in the formula are gross sales, a “breakpoint” and a percentage
rate. Typically, percentage rent is calculated and paid annually.
Percentage-Rent Formula
The
heart of the percentage-rent formula is the definition of “gross sales.”
A well-drafted shopping center lease includes receipts of all types. The
focus is on revenues arising from use of the leased premises. The definition
of gross sales often specifically excludes customer refunds, employee
discounts, accommodation sales (stamps, money orders, etc.), coin-operated
devices, commissions paid to third-party credit card companies, merchandise
exchanged between stores, returns to manufacturers and sales taxes collected.
The traditional method to calculate percentage rent is
to take a percentage of gross sales and deduct annual, fixed-minimum rent.
Tenants sometimes want other expenses that increase (for example, ad valorem
real estate taxes) deducted from percentage rent. The breakpoint method
of calculating percentage rent takes a percentage of gross sales in excess
of a stated dollar amount or breakpoint.
Natural Breakpoint
A “natural” breakpoint is the volume of gross sales a tenant must generate
to pay the fixed minimum rent, at a rate equal to percentage to be used
for percentage-rent calculations. It is calculated by dividing the fixed
minimum rent by the percentage used for percentage-rent calculations.
For example, if the fixed rent is $140,000 per year, and the percentage
for percentage rent purposes is seven percent, then the natural breakpoint
would be $2,000,000. The underlying rationale of a natural breakpoint
is that if it is agreed that the landlord gets seven percent of gross
sales, it should not receive a percentage of gross sales necessary to
generate sufficient revenues (for example, $2,000,000) for the tenant
to pay the minimum rent ($140,000). If the percentage is lower, the natural
breakpoint will be higher.
Use of a natural breakpoint would result in the same percentage rent
as the traditional method.
Artificial Breakpoint
Use of an “artificial” breakpoint can change the result. With the artificial
breakpoint method, fixed-minimum rent and percentage rent can be set independently.
For example, a landlord might agree to reduce fixed-minimum rent if
a tenant agrees to increase percentage-rent with a higher artificial breakpoint.
A high-volume tenant with economic strength may argue for more minimum
rent in exchange for less percentage rent. If the lease term is long,
the landlord may wish to reduce the risks of inflation by greater reliance
on percentage-rent. This will be a function of the respective financial
obligations and expectations of the parties.
Percentage Rate
The final step in calculating percentage rent is to calculate
a percentage of gross sales in excess of the breakpoint. Different percentage
rates are used for different types of stores. The higher the profit margin
on the merchandise, the higher the percentage figures.
For example, the percentage used to calculate percentage
rent typically is lower for a supermarket (higher volume and lower profit
margin) than it would be for a jewelry store (lower volume and higher
profit margin).
Percentage-rent provisions are accompanied customarily
by a requirement that the tenant maintain contemporaneous records of sales,
submit periodic sales reports, allow the landlord to audit books of the
tenant, sell a specific type of merchandise, establish minimum hours of
operation, and not compete. Continuous-operations clauses, which prohibit
a tenant from “going dark,” may also be included.
Typically, a non-competition provision prohibits the
tenant from opening additional stores within a stated radius of the shopping
center. The non-competition clause is intended to prevent the dilution
of sales that would result from an additional store within the same market
area. A common remedy for violation of such non-competition clauses is
to include the sales from any additional stores in the market area in
the gross sales of the store for percentage-rent purposes.
See Also
% Rent
Billing Tab
Report
Details
Rebilling
Introduction