Absolute Net
An absolute net (or absolute NNN) lease is the purest form of net lease: the tenant pays all expenses, including roof, structure, and capital items, leaving the landlord with the least operational burden.
What it means
In a classic triple net lease, the landlord retains obligations for roof, structural components, and sometimes parking lot repaving. An absolute net lease shifts those obligations to the tenant as well, making the landlord's role approximate a bondholder collecting scheduled rent.
Absolute NNN is most common with credit tenants on long-term leases (15–25 years) — Walgreens, CVS, Chick-fil-A ground leases, and similar. Cap rates are tight because the operational simplicity and credit rent command a premium.
"Bondable" is sometimes used synonymously but usually implies no landlord obligations whatsoever plus rent continues under casualty or condemnation.
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