Triple Net Lease Explained: Complete NNN Guide for Tenants and Investors (2026)

A triple net lease (NNN) shifts most property operating costs from the landlord to the tenant. It's the dominant lease structure in single-tenant retail, fast food, and industrial real estate — but understanding exactly what you're responsible for, how NNN compares to other lease types, and what traps to watch for is essential whether you're signing as a tenant or evaluating as an investor.

In This Guide

  1. What Is a Triple Net Lease?
  2. The Three Nets: Taxes, Insurance, Maintenance
  3. Net Lease Types: Single, Double, Triple, Absolute
  4. NNN vs. Gross Lease: Full Comparison
  5. Who Uses NNN Leases and Why
  6. Tenant Total Cost: What You Really Pay
  7. Investor Perspective: Cap Rates and NNN Valuation
  8. Negotiating NNN Lease Terms
  9. NNN Red Flags to Watch For
  10. Absolute NNN Leases: Maximum Tenant Risk
  11. NNN Lease Review Checklist
  12. FAQ
65%
of single-tenant retail properties in the US use NNN lease structures
5–7%
typical cap rates for investment-grade NNN properties in 2026
10–20yr
typical NNN lease terms for national retail tenants (McDonald's, Dollar General, etc.)
$3–12/sf
typical annual NNN expense range depending on property age and location

What Is a Triple Net Lease?

Definition

Triple Net Lease (NNN Lease)

A triple net lease is a commercial lease structure in which the tenant pays base rent plus the three major operating costs of the property: real estate taxes, building insurance, and maintenance/repairs. In a pure NNN lease, the landlord's only obligation is to receive rent — all property operating risks are transferred to the tenant.

The term "triple net" refers to the three layers of additional cost the tenant bears beyond base rent:

  1. Net of taxes — tenant pays their proportionate share of property taxes
  2. Net of insurance — tenant pays building insurance premiums
  3. Net of maintenance — tenant handles and pays for property maintenance and repairs

These three "nets" on top of base rent mean the landlord receives a predictable income stream with minimal operating risk. That's the core appeal of NNN from the landlord and investor perspective — and the core risk from the tenant's side.

The Three Nets: What Each Means in Practice

Net #1: Real Estate Taxes

The tenant pays their proportionate share of property taxes assessed on the building and land. In a single-tenant NNN property, the tenant pays 100% of taxes. In a multi-tenant building, taxes are allocated by square footage percentage (your leased space ÷ total building area).

What to watch for: Tax assessments can spike significantly when a property is sold and reassessed at the new purchase price. If you're signing a lease on a property that just traded at a premium, ask how the current taxes were calculated and whether a reassessment is pending. Some NNN leases include a "tax protection" clause limiting the tenant's exposure to reassessment spikes in the first year or two.

Net #2: Building Insurance

The tenant pays the cost of insurance on the building itself — fire, liability, casualty, and sometimes flood or earthquake depending on location. Note that this is separate from the tenant's own business insurance and personal property coverage, which you also need regardless of lease type.

What to watch for: Insurance premiums have risen 15–40% in many markets over 2023–2025 due to catastrophe losses and reinsurance market shifts. In coastal or wildfire-prone areas, building insurance costs can be much higher than in stable interior markets. Request three years of historical insurance costs before signing to understand the trend.

Net #3: Maintenance and Repairs

This is where NNN leases vary most dramatically. The maintenance obligation can range from "tenant pays all interior maintenance" to "tenant is responsible for the entire building including roof, structure, and HVAC." The distinction between a standard NNN and an absolute NNN often comes down to what maintenance the tenant is responsible for.

What to watch for: Roof and HVAC are the two biggest surprise costs. A roof replacement can run $5–$20/sf, and a commercial HVAC system can cost $50,000–$200,000+ depending on building size. If your lease makes you responsible for these capital items, you need to know the age and condition of the systems before signing — and either negotiate landlord responsibility for replacements or a capital reserve fund contribution.

Net Lease Types: Single, Double, Triple, and Absolute

Not all "net" leases are created equal. The term "net lease" exists on a spectrum from single-net to absolute net, with different cost distributions at each level:

Single Net (N)

Single Net Lease

Tenant pays base rent + property taxes. Landlord retains insurance and maintenance responsibility. Rare in modern commercial leasing.

Double Net (NN)

Double Net Lease

Tenant pays base rent + property taxes + building insurance. Landlord handles structural maintenance and major repairs. More common in older industrial leases.

Triple Net (NNN)

Triple Net Lease

Tenant pays base rent + taxes + insurance + maintenance/repairs. Landlord typically retains responsibility for structural/foundation issues. Most common NNN structure.

Absolute NNN

Absolute Net Lease

Tenant pays base rent + all taxes + all insurance + all maintenance including roof, structure, and foundation. Maximum risk. Used for national credit tenants only.

⚠ Critical distinction: In practice, the terms "net lease," "NNN," and "triple net" are often used loosely and may not mean the same thing across different markets or landlords. Never assume what's included — always read the specific maintenance, insurance, and tax provisions in the lease document itself.

NNN vs. Gross Lease: Full Comparison

The NNN lease sits at one end of the commercial lease spectrum. At the other end is the gross lease (also called full-service gross), where the landlord bundles all operating costs into the base rent. Between them are modified gross leases with various hybrid structures.

FeatureTriple Net (NNN)Modified GrossFull Gross
Base rentLower (because tenant pays NNN)Market rateHigher (all-in)
Property taxesTenant paysOften split or base-yearLandlord pays
Building insuranceTenant paysOften landlordLandlord pays
Interior maintenanceTenant paysTenant paysLandlord pays
Roof/structureVaries (landlord in standard NNN)Usually landlordLandlord pays
HVACVariesVariesLandlord pays
Cost predictabilityLow (variable NNN costs)ModerateHigh
Landlord's net incomeMost stableModerateMost volatile
Common property typesRetail, industrial, fast foodOffice, medicalOffice, Class A multi-tenant
Typical lease length10–20 years3–7 years3–7 years

The key insight: NNN base rent looks lower than gross rent, but that comparison is meaningless without adding the NNN expenses. Always calculate total occupancy cost — base rent + estimated NNN expenses — when comparing lease options across different structures.

Who Uses NNN Leases and Why

Tenants Who Use NNN Leases

NNN leases are most common for single-tenant retail and service businesses:

Why Landlords Prefer NNN

From the landlord's perspective, NNN leases are the gold standard because:

Understand Every NNN Obligation Before You Sign

Not sure exactly which expenses you're responsible for in your NNN lease? Upload it to LeaseAI and get a structured breakdown of your maintenance obligations, tax and insurance provisions, and CAM structure in 30 seconds.

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Tenant Total Cost: What You Really Pay in a NNN Lease

The biggest mistake NNN tenants make is focusing only on base rent. Here's a realistic picture of total occupancy cost for a 5,000 sf single-tenant NNN retail building:

Cost ComponentAnnual Estimate (5,000 sf)Per-SF RateNotes
Base Rent$60,000$12.00/sfNegotiated rent
Property Taxes$18,000$3.60/sfVaries widely by location
Building Insurance$8,500$1.70/sfRising in coastal/weather markets
Maintenance & Repairs$12,000$2.40/sfAvg year; major replacements spike this
Total Occupancy Cost$98,500$19.70/sf64% more than base rent alone

In this example, the NNN expenses add 64% to the base rent obligation. If you're comparing this NNN space to a gross lease at $18/sf, the gross lease is actually cheaper on a total-cost basis — even though the base rent is $6/sf higher than the NNN base.

The math that matters: When evaluating any commercial lease, calculate the effective rent per square foot by adding all-in annual costs and dividing by total square footage. Then compare apples to apples.

Investor Perspective: Cap Rates and NNN Valuation

For real estate investors, NNN properties are attractive for their predictability and passive income characteristics. Understanding NNN valuation helps tenants understand why landlords structure deals the way they do — and why certain concessions are harder to get.

Cap Rate Basics

NNN properties are valued using cap rates (capitalization rates), calculated as:

Cap Rate = Net Operating Income ÷ Property Value
Or inverted: Property Value = NOI ÷ Cap Rate

For NNN properties, NOI is essentially the tenant's base rent (since the landlord passes all expenses through). This makes NNN valuations straightforward: a property leased at $100,000/year to a creditworthy tenant at a 6% cap rate is worth approximately $1.67 million.

What Drives NNN Cap Rates

FactorLower Cap Rate (Higher Value)Higher Cap Rate (Lower Value)
Tenant credit qualityInvestment-grade national chainLocal or unrated tenant
Remaining lease term15–20 years remainingUnder 5 years remaining
LocationHigh-traffic, irreplaceable locationSecondary or rural market
Rent escalationsAnnual 2% rent bumpsFlat rent, no escalations
Lease typeAbsolute NNN (least landlord risk)Standard NNN with some landlord obligations
GuarantyCorporate parent guaranteeFranchisee or personal guarantee only

Investment-grade NNN properties (think McDonald's, Walgreens, Dollar General) typically trade at 4.5–6.5% cap rates. Local-tenant NNN properties may trade at 7–9% because investors price in higher re-leasing risk if the tenant vacates.

Negotiating NNN Lease Terms

NNN leases are negotiable — especially for smaller or regional tenants. National chains have the leverage to sign pure absolute NNN leases on terms entirely in their favor, but independent tenants have room to negotiate on several fronts:

1. Define the Maintenance Split Precisely

Don't accept vague "tenant is responsible for maintenance" language. Negotiate a specific split:

This prevents disputes over who pays for major capital items and keeps your exposure manageable.

2. Negotiate a Capital Expense Reserve or Cap

If the lease makes you responsible for HVAC and roof, push for a landlord-funded capital reserve at lease commencement (e.g., $20,000 held in escrow for major replacements), or a cap on your annual capital expense obligation (e.g., "Tenant's annual responsibility for capital items shall not exceed $X/sf per year, with Landlord responsible for costs above that threshold").

3. Require Disclosure of Deferred Maintenance

Before signing any NNN lease, conduct a thorough property condition assessment (PCA) or at minimum, request disclosure of known deferred maintenance items. If the roof is 15 years old and near end-of-life, that's a material fact — and a negotiating point. Either the landlord replaces the roof before lease commencement, or the NNN base rent comes down to reflect your assumption of that liability.

4. Audit Rights on NNN Expenses

In multi-tenant buildings where NNN expenses are prorated, the same audit rights you'd negotiate for CAM apply here. Push for the right to audit tax, insurance, and maintenance billings annually, and a landlord-pays-audit-costs clause if overcharges exceed a threshold.

5. Tax Base Year Protection

Negotiate a base year for real estate taxes — meaning you only pay increases above what taxes were in Year 1, not the full tax bill. This is particularly important if the property recently sold and will be reassessed at the new transaction value. Tax base-year protection is standard in many office gross lease structures and worth pushing for in NNN leases too.

NNN Red Flags to Watch For

⚠ Red Flag #1: Vague "all maintenance" language without carve-outs
If the maintenance provision says "Tenant shall maintain the Premises in good condition and repair" with no exclusions for structural items, you may be signing up for roof replacement, foundation repair, and exterior wall maintenance without realizing it. Push for an explicit list of what's excluded from "Tenant's maintenance obligations."
⚠ Red Flag #2: Gross-up provisions that inflate your tax and insurance share
In multi-tenant buildings, landlords sometimes "gross up" NNN expenses — calculating your proportionate share as if the building were 100% occupied, even if it's only 80% occupied. This inflates your NNN bill by 20–25%. Negotiate that your NNN share is calculated based on actual occupancy, not grossed up.
⚠ Red Flag #3: No cap on management fees within NNN
Some NNN leases include a management fee (3–5% of base rent) as a passthrough. This is effectively paying the landlord twice — you're already paying rent, now you're also paying their property management overhead. If management fees are included as a NNN expense, cap them at 3% or push to exclude them entirely.
⚠ Red Flag #4: Responsibility for landlord-controlled capital decisions
Watch for provisions that let the landlord make major improvements to the property and pass the cost to you as a NNN expense. If the landlord decides to repave the entire parking lot or upgrade the building facade, you shouldn't be paying for that without any say in the decision or a cap on your exposure.
⚠ Red Flag #5: Condemnation and casualty provisions that don't protect you
In an absolute NNN lease, some tenants are required to keep paying rent even if the property is damaged, condemned, or partially taken by eminent domain. Read these provisions carefully — at minimum, you should have the right to terminate if more than a certain percentage of the space is rendered unusable.

Absolute NNN Leases: Maximum Tenant Risk

The absolute NNN lease (sometimes called "hell or high water" lease) represents the most extreme form of net lease — the tenant is responsible for literally everything, including events well outside their control. This structure is almost exclusively used for national credit tenants (McDonald's, Walgreens, Dollar General) who have the financial strength to absorb the risk and the negotiating power to get low rents in exchange.

Under an absolute NNN lease, the tenant typically must:

For small tenants: Absolute NNN leases are almost never appropriate and should be rejected. If a landlord is pushing absolute NNN language on a small business, that's a significant red flag. Standard NNN with clear landlord responsibility for structural items is the appropriate structure for non-national tenants.

Is Your NNN Lease Actually Absolute NNN?

Many tenants don't know the difference until they're facing a major repair bill. Upload your lease to LeaseAI and get a clear extraction of your maintenance, insurance, and casualty obligations — know exactly what you signed up for.

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NNN Lease Review Checklist

Before signing any NNN lease, verify:


Frequently Asked Questions

Is a triple net lease good for tenants?

It depends on the property and the terms. NNN base rents are typically lower than gross rents for comparable space, and the structure gives you direct control over maintenance quality. For creditworthy tenants with strong balance sheets who are confident in managing property expenses, NNN can be advantageous. For smaller tenants with limited capital reserves, the unpredictable nature of maintenance costs and the risk of a major repair event (new roof, HVAC replacement) can create serious cash flow problems. The key is understanding total occupancy cost and negotiating appropriate carve-outs for major capital items.

What is the difference between NNN and gross lease in simple terms?

In a gross lease, you pay one number (usually higher) and the landlord handles all the property's operating costs. In a NNN lease, you pay a lower base rent but also pay property taxes, building insurance, and maintenance on top. Think of gross lease as an all-inclusive hotel rate vs. NNN as a room rate with all expenses billed separately.

Can you negotiate a NNN lease?

Yes — NNN leases are negotiable like any commercial lease. The most important things to negotiate are: maintenance scope (particularly roof, HVAC, and structural items), caps on annual capital expense, audit rights on expense allocations, tax base-year protection, and casualty/condemnation tenant protections. National tenants negotiate these terms as a matter of course; smaller tenants should too.

What does NNN mean in a listing?

When a commercial real estate listing shows a rent price "NNN" (e.g., "$15/sf NNN"), it means the listed price is base rent only — you will pay additional amounts for property taxes, insurance, and maintenance on top. The NNN expenses are often estimated in the listing as an additional "estimated NNN" figure, but they're variable and you should request actual historical expense data before signing.

What's the difference between NNN and modified gross lease?

A modified gross lease falls between full gross and NNN. Typically, the tenant pays base rent plus some operating expenses (often interior utilities, janitorial, or above-base-year increases in taxes and insurance), while the landlord retains responsibility for most major building expenses. Modified gross is most common in office and multi-tenant retail properties. NNN is most common in single-tenant retail and industrial.

How do I calculate my total cost in a NNN lease?

Request three years of historical NNN expense data from the landlord. Add the average annual NNN expenses (taxes + insurance + maintenance) to your annual base rent, then divide by your leased square footage to get your all-in rent per square foot. Compare this to gross lease options on the same basis. Don't compare a NNN base rent to a gross rent directly — you'll always think NNN is cheaper before adding the expenses.