Net leased properties are appealing to a wide variety of buyers, from high net worth individuals to partnerships to large institutional investors like real estate investment trusts, life insurance companies and pension funds. Net leased properties also are very attractive to investors who need to do 1031 tax-deferred exchanges, or 1031 exchanges for short.
Many people consider single-tenant, net-leased properties as bond-like investments because of their stable, predictable returns. Because tenants commit to long-term leases, there's very little re-leasing risk. Moreover, single-tenant, net-leased investments can be tailored to an investor's risk-reward expectations by choosing tenants with different credit profiles. For example, some tenants are rated by national credit ratings agencies while other tenants have only their previous financial performance to recommend them.
Net-leased properties are like all-weather tires. They are good investments in both good and bad economic times and in hot and cold real estate markets. Here's why: a single-tenant net lease is guaranteed by a long-term lease at pre-set rental rates. As an owner, you know exactly who will be a tenant in your building, how long that tenant will be there and exactly how much rent they will pay you. That means you will derive a steady income from your investment, regardless of how the economy or real estate market is performing.
NNN is a stock which is owned by National Retail Properties Inc., which is an investment trust. NNN is an example of the sort of single tenant retail properties that National Retail Properties Inc. invest in.
Yes, a tenant can make improvements to leased property with the landlord's permission.
Unlike traditional real estate investments whose valued is determined exclusively by the real estate itself, a single-tenant, net-leased property's value is determined by a combination of factors including the tenant's credit, the length of the lease and rental escalations over the term, and, last but not least, the real estate. In markets where the real estate experiences wide valuation swings, a single-tenant, net-leased property will maintain its value because of its bond-like, long-term lease and the credit tenant guaranty for the lease.
A TI (Tenant Improvement) Estimate would the estimated cost to "build out", "convert" a space that is being leased or considering to be leased. It is the cost to make the space that the tenant is leasing usable to that tenant for their type of office or retail space.
Provides insurance against legal liability for property damage to business premises leased or rented to the insured.
The tenant will usually be held responsible for broken property, unless it is through no fault of the tenant - e.g. excessive age or wear, or a natural disaster like a flood or an earthquake.
In side the rental unit if an apartment the tenant, Outside the community If a home or Single family the tenant
If you are referring to a subsidised tenancy, the tenant must re-certify every year, before their anniversary, to make the administrator aware of any changes in their income or household. If there are no changes, the tenant still needs to make them aware of that.
Since you are still living on leased property, you must follow the contents of the lease.
If the space is being leased and the tenant is current they really have no business doing so. They have the right to, but as long as they give the tenant a copy of the key they can do what they want. It is their property.