Rent free period
A rent free period is often offered by landlords under the terms of a commercial lease in the UK with a view to encouraging a prospective tenant to sign a new lease, or to encourage an existing tenant to remain in occupancy of premises. In existing leases, rent free periods are often linked to the non-exercise of a break clause. i.e by not exercising a break clause a tenant is rewarded with a rent free period.
Rent free periods are particularly common in times of economic difficulty when incentives become necessary to encourage tenants to sign leases.
It is interesting to consider why, instead of offering rent free periods, a landlord does not reduce the level of rent so that over the period of the lease the income to the landlord is broadly the same. The answer lies in the fact that the 'headline rent' being paid is used as a valuation metric to value the property producing the rent. This is, in turn, based upon the rental yield and for this purpose the presence of a rent free period is ignored.
To take an example:
If the headline rent is £40 per square foot and the estimated yield for the property in question is 5% then the capital value is £800 per square foot.
The fact that a rent free period may reduce the 'effective rent' earned over the period of the lease to, say £37 per square foot does not affect the capital valuation of the property although, at first sight, it would suggest a reduction in capital value to £740 per square foot. i.e a reduction of 7.5%.
This fact is of vital importance to institutional investors and funders whose interests could be adversely affected by a consequent reduction in capital values if the lower effective rent was to be used.
So whilst the offer of a rent free period is attractive to a tenant and costly to a landlord it does not impact on the capital valuation of the leased property.
The relationship is cyclical
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
Featured articles and news
Future Homes Standard Essentials launched
Future Homes Hub launches new campaign to help the homebuilding sector prepare for the implementation of new building standards.
Building Safety recap February, 2026
Our regular run-down of key building safety related events of the month.
Planning reform: draft NPPF and industry responses.
Last chance to comment on proposed changes to the NPPF.
A Regency palace of colour and sensation. Book review.
Delayed, derailed and devalued
How the UK’s planning crisis is undermining British manufacturing.
How much does it cost to build a house?
A brief run down of key considerations from a London based practice.
The need for a National construction careers campaign
Highlighted by CIOB to cut unemployment, reduce skills gap and deliver on housing and infrastructure ambitions.
AI-Driven automation; reducing time, enhancing compliance
Sustainability; not just compliance but rethinking design, material selection, and the supply chains to support them.
Climate Resilience and Adaptation In the Built Environment
New CIOB Technical Information Sheet by Colin Booth, Professor of Smart and Sustainable Infrastructure.
Turning Enquiries into Profitable Construction Projects
Founder of Develop Coaching and author of Building Your Future; Greg Wilkes shares his insights.
IHBC Signpost: Poetry from concrete
Scotland’s fascinating historic concrete and brutalist architecture with the Engine Shed.
Demonstrating that apprenticeships work for business, people and Scotland’s economy.
Scottish parents prioritise construction and apprenticeships
CIOB data released for Scottish Apprenticeship Week shows construction as top potential career path.
From a Green to a White Paper and the proposal of a General Safety Requirement for construction products.
Creativity, conservation and craft at Barley Studio. Book review.
The challenge as PFI agreements come to an end
How construction deals with inherited assets built under long-term contracts.
Skills plan for engineering and building services
Comprehensive industry report highlights persistent skills challenges across the sector.
Choosing the right design team for a D&B Contract
An architect explains the nature and needs of working within this common procurement route.
Statement from the Interim Chief Construction Advisor
Thouria Istephan; Architect and inquiry panel member outlines ongoing work, priorities and next steps.
























