Successful lease renewal negotiation starts earlier than most tenants expect — and the stakes are higher than they realize. Lease renewal negotiation should begin 12-18 months before expiration for large spaces (5,000+ SF) and 6-9 months for smaller spaces. Renewals offer significant leverage because landlords face vacancy, re-leasing costs, and downtime if you leave. In 2025-2026’s high-vacancy markets, renewal tenants can often secure terms comparable to new tenants: 8-12 months free rent, TI refreshes, and capped escalations. The key is creating competitive tension by exploring alternatives—even if you intend to stay.

 

Key Takeaways

  • Start early: 12-18 months for 5,000+ SF, 6-9 months for smaller spaces
  • Always explore alternatives: Landlords negotiate harder when you have options
  • Landlord’s cost to replace you: 12-24+ months of vacancy, leasing commissions, TI costs
  • Renewals can include: rent reduction, free rent, TI refresh, capped escalations
  • Avoid holdover: Penalties can be 150-200% of rent; negotiate extensions if needed

 

Lease Renewal Timeline

A structured timeline ensures you have leverage and avoid last-minute pressure:

Months Before Expiration Space <5,000 SF Space 5,000-20,000 SF Space >20,000 SF
18-24 months Not necessary Begin planning Formal process starts
12-18 months Begin planning Market survey, alternatives RFPs to alternatives
9-12 months Market survey Negotiate with landlord + alternatives Shortlist, negotiate
6-9 months Initial landlord discussion Final negotiations Final negotiations
3-6 months Finalize terms, sign Finalize terms, sign Finalize, plan TI work
0-3 months Build-out if needed Build-out Major build-out execution

 

 

What to Negotiate in a Renewal

Renewals aren’t just about rent. These concessions are all negotiable:

Concession New Lease Benchmark Renewal Benchmark Negotiation Approach
Free Rent 1 month/year of term 0.5-0.75 months/year Reference new tenant deals in building
TI Allowance $40-80/SF $15-40/SF (refresh) Document needed improvements
Rent Adjustment Market rate 5-15% below new tenant rate Provide market comps
Escalations 2.5-3% annual 2-2.5% or fixed $/SF Cap increases at CPI or fixed amount
Term Length Flexible Shorter terms more available Match to your business needs
Expansion Rights Standard Priority on adjacent space Lock in before renewal
Early Termination Sometimes available Can be added Pay for flexibility with term

 

 

Understanding Landlord’s Renewal Economics

Knowing what it costs your landlord to replace you gives you negotiating leverage:

Cost Category Typical Amount Your Leverage Point
Vacancy Period 6-18 months (market dependent) You eliminate this risk by renewing
Lost Rent During Vacancy $25-50/SF for period vacant Quantify: 10,000 SF × $35 × 12 mo = $420K
Leasing Commission (New) 4-6% of total lease value Renewal commission is lower (2-3%)
TI for New Tenant $40-80/SF Your refresh costs less ($15-40/SF)
Marketing/Downtime $5-10/SF equivalent Hidden costs they’d rather avoid
Total Replacement Cost Often 18-30 months of rent Use this in your negotiation

Example: For 10,000 SF at $35/SF, landlord’s cost to replace you can exceed $500,000. This is your leverage.

 

Lease Renewal Negotiation Tactics

Tactic How to Execute Expected Impact
Explore alternatives first Tour 3-5 competing spaces; get proposals Creates competitive tension
Present competing offers Share redacted proposals with landlord Forces landlord to match market
Quantify your value Document payment history, low maintenance Differentiates you from unknown tenant
Know market conditions Research vacancy, recent deals, trends Justifies your asks with data
Negotiate multiple items Bundle rent, TI, free rent, term Allows trade-offs and wins
Propose first Submit renewal proposal before landlord Anchors negotiation on your terms
Set a deadline State decision date to create urgency Prevents landlord from stalling

 

SVN Denver Perspective on Renewals

Renewal negotiations are where we see tenants leave the most money on the table. Many assume staying is simple—just sign the landlord’s renewal offer. In reality, renewals are full negotiations where you have significant leverage: the landlord knows your reliability, avoids vacancy risk, and saves on leasing costs. In Denver’s current market, renewal tenants are securing 8-12 months free rent, $20-40/SF TI refreshes, and 5-10% rent reductions from previous rates. The key is starting early (12+ months out) and creating competitive tension by exploring alternatives—even if you intend to stay.

 

Common Renewal Mistakes to Avoid

  • Starting too late: Last-minute renewals surrender all leverage
  • Not exploring alternatives: Landlords negotiate harder when you have options
  • Accepting the first offer: Landlord’s initial proposal is never their best
  • Ignoring market changes: Rents and concessions may have shifted since your original lease
  • Forgetting holdover penalties: Missing deadlines can trigger 150-200% rent
  • Negotiating only rent: Free rent, TI, escalations, and flexibility all matter
  • DIY without representation: Tenant rep brokers cost you nothing (landlord pays)

 

Bottom Line

Lease renewal negotiation is a full negotiation, not a formality. Start 12-18 months early for larger spaces, explore alternatives to create competitive tension, and negotiate aggressively on rent, free rent, TI refresh, and escalations. Landlords face significant costs to replace you—use this leverage. In tenant-favorable markets, renewal terms can approach new lease concessions. The worst outcome is signing a renewal offer without negotiating: you’ll likely leave 10-20% on the table.

 

Data Sources: Cresa, JLL, CBRE, Visual Lease, Metro Manhattan Office Leasing