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Business & Corporate Law

PA Commercial Leases: Key Terms & Traps

Last updated March 2026
4 min read
βœ“ Verified Jun. 2026

A commercial lease is nothing like a residential lease. There is no implied warranty of habitability, no security deposit limits, and very few statutory protections for the tenant. The lease itself is the entire universe of rights and obligations. If it is not in the lease, it does not exist. Every term matters, and the negotiation happens before you sign.

Types of Commercial Leases

Gross lease (full service): The tenant pays a fixed monthly rent, and the landlord covers operating expenses: property taxes, insurance, and maintenance. Common in multi-tenant office buildings. The simplicity is the appeal, but the rent is higher to account for the landlord's expenses.

Net lease: The tenant pays base rent plus some or all of the property's operating expenses:

Percentage lease: The tenant pays base rent plus a percentage of gross sales above a defined threshold ("breakpoint"). Common in retail, especially shopping centers. The breakpoint calculation and the definition of "gross sales" are heavily negotiated.

CAM Charges: The Hidden Cost

Common Area Maintenance (CAM) charges in multi-tenant properties cover landscaping, parking lot maintenance, snow removal, security, and shared utilities. These can add $3–$10+ per square foot to your annual occupancy cost. Key negotiation points:

Terms Every Tenant Should Negotiate

Confession of Judgment Clauses

Pennsylvania is one of the few states that enforces confession of judgment clauses in commercial leases. This means the landlord can obtain a judgment against you without prior notice or a hearing, simply by filing a complaint with an attached lease. The judgment can include the entire remaining rent for the lease term. You can petition to open or strike the judgment under Pa.R.C.P. 2959, but you are already in a defensive posture with a judgment on your record.

If you are signing a commercial lease in PA, pay attention to the confession of judgment clause. You may not be able to remove it entirely, but you can sometimes negotiate limitations: requiring notice before confession, limiting the judgment amount, or restricting the landlord's ability to confess after the tenant has vacated.

⚠ Read Before You Sign

Most commercial lease disputes I see arise from terms that the tenant did not read (or read but did not understand) before signing. A 10-year lease with a personal guarantee and a confession of judgment clause can expose you to hundreds of thousands of dollars in liability. Having an attorney review a commercial lease before you sign costs a tiny fraction of litigating a lease dispute after something goes wrong.

Statutory content on this page was last verified against Pennsylvania statutes (20 Pa.C.S.; 72 P.S. Art. XXI): Jun. 2026. If you are reading this significantly after that date, confirm key provisions with current statute text or contact our office.

Marc Lynde Β· 12+ years as a licensed attorney Β· Cardozo School of Law Β· Licensed in PA & NY Β· Full bio β†’

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