Restaurant Leases: The Risk Profile
Restaurant leases are among the highest-risk commercial leases for tenants. The typical exposure ratio is 12–18x monthly rent. Common lease length: 10 years. Personal guaranty required: 90% of leases. A restaurant at $8,000/month creates $960,000 in total exposure before you open.
60% of restaurants close within their first year; 80% close within 5 years (National Restaurant Association)
Unique Risks in This Industry
- Grease trap installation, hood systems, and exhaust venting create $40–80/sq ft restoration costs
- Health code violations can result in closure while the lease obligation continues uninterrupted
- Percentage rent clauses take a share of revenue above a natural breakpoint — the more you succeed, the more you pay
- Co-tenancy clauses tied to anchor tenants can affect foot traffic without reducing rent
The Biggest Mistake in This Industry
Signing a 10-year lease with an unlimited personal guaranty before proving the location — then discovering the kitchen build-out created $200,000 in restoration liability that can't be subleased to a non-restaurant tenant.
Negotiation Priorities
- Burn-down personal guaranty reducing to zero after 3–4 years of timely payment
- Subletting rights that explicitly allow assignment to food-service tenants without landlord approval
- Early termination option at year 5 with a defined penalty — not full remaining-rent acceleration
Restaurant Lease Risk by State
State law significantly affects how restaurant leases are enforced — from personal guaranty remedies to health-code closure protections. Select your state for a detailed analysis.