Leasing Incentives and 'claw-backs'
Category: , Property Law, Victoria (VIC)
Date: 21 August 2024
Author: Steve Aitchison - Genuine People
If you are a tenant or an owner of commercial or retail premises, you will be familiar with the idea of leasing incentives provided to secure tenant commitments.' Leasing incentives are a relatively modern device designed to induce prospective tenants to sign leases for rentals higher than they might otherwise have been prepared to agree to.
There is an upfront capital cost to the owner, but the higher rental lifts the value of the property and helps to support borrowings secured against the property.
Over the past few decades leasing incentives have become a permanent part of the market for commercial and retail leases, with the value of the incentive dependent on local market conditions and on the length of the lease term commitment, among other things.' The market, and the law, now recognises 'face rent', being the actual rent paid by the tenant under the lease, and 'effective rent' being the net amount paid after factoring in the value of the incentives.
Incentives can be provided 'up front' '€“ such as paying for a tenant's fit out or providing a rent-free period at the beginning of the term '€“ or 'spread' over the term, such as by way of an equal monthly rental discount for the duration of the lease.
Over the years a practice developed of drafting clauses that provided for a 'claw-back' of incentives, where the lease was terminated as a result of the tenant's default, or insolvency.' Lawyers justified this by arguing that the incentive was consideration for the tenant agreeing to pay the higher rent for the full term, and if that did not happen, the 'consideration' should be returned.' Many leases and incentive deeds include language to this effect.
This approach has modified over time and most leases and incentive deeds today provide only for a 'pro-rata' claw-back of incentives paid up front.' For example, if an upfront incentive of $300,000 was paid for a 5-year term and the lease was terminated after year 3, then the repayment liability would be $120,000.' Sounds reasonable.
But this approach was rejected by the Queensland Supreme Court in 2014 (GWC Property Group Pty Ltd v Higginson & Ors) which was followed earlier this year by the NSW Supreme Court in Alamdo Holdings Pty Limited v Croc's Franchising Pty Ltd (No 2).' In each case the claw-back was held to be a penalty and unenforceable.
Two questions need to be asked:
Date: 21 August 2024
Author: Steve Aitchison - Genuine People
- Can the claw-back requirement be characterised as a threat against the tenant failing to comply, or a punishment for permitting that circumstance to arise?
- Does the requirement guard the legitimate interest of the owner, or is it out of all proportion to that interest and not reflective of a genuine pre-estimate of the damages that would be suffered as a result of the default?

