Sale-Leaseback

A sale-leaseback is a transaction in which an operating company sells its real estate to an investor and simultaneously signs a long-term lease to continue occupying the property.

What it means

Sale-leasebacks let a corporate occupier unlock real estate equity (for expansion, dividends, or debt paydown) while continuing to use the property. The investor gets an income-producing property with a bond-like long lease, typically NNN or absolute NNN structure.

Sale-leaseback pricing is driven by the tenant's credit, the remaining useful life of the property, and the lease term and rent escalation structure. Deals are commonly 15–25 year initial terms with 1.5–2% annual bumps or 10% bumps every five years.

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