NNN Lease (Triple Net)

A triple net (NNN) lease passes property taxes, insurance, and common area maintenance expenses directly to the tenant, leaving the landlord with a (relatively) passive base rent income stream.

What it means

In a NNN lease, the tenant pays base rent plus three categories of reimbursed expenses: property taxes, building insurance, and common area maintenance (CAM). The landlord's income approximates the base rent with less exposure to expense inflation.

NNN is a spectrum. Classic triple net still leaves the landlord responsible for roof, structure, and some major capex. "Absolute NNN" or "bondable NNN" pushes those responsibilities to the tenant too, giving the landlord the closest thing to a coupon-like real estate investment. Dollar General, Walgreens, and Starbucks ground leases are common absolute-NNN examples.

NNN leases are standard in single-tenant retail, industrial, and many office and medical properties. They command lower cap rates than gross-lease properties because of their operational simplicity.

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