Purpose of Rent Review

The purpose of rent review is threefold:

1) to enable the landlord to review the rent payable;

2) for the tenant to ensure the rent payable is no more or less than it should be;

3) for both parties to monitor the performance of the location and trading position.

Reviewing the rent payable is all very well for landlords but for tenants ensuring it is no more or less than it should be is not how most tenants would view a rent review. For many tenants, the only way the business can remain profitable is when costs are below the going rate. Even so, despite the tenant's perspective, a rent review is for the benefit of both parties.

In
United Scientific Holdings v Burnley Borough Council (1978)*, Lord Salmon said: “To my mind, it is totally unrealistic to regard such clauses (rent review) as conferring a privilege upon the landlord or as imposing a burden upon the tenant. Both the landlord and the tenant recognise the obvious, viz., that such clauses are fair and reasonable for each of them. I do not agree with what has been said in some of the authorities, namely, that a rent revision clause is for the benefit of the landlord alone and not at all for the benefit of the tenant. It is plainly for the benefit of them both. It is for the benefit of the tenant because without such a clause he would never get the long lease which he required; and under modern conditions it would be grossly unfair that he should. It is for the benefit of the landlord because it ensures that for the duration of the lease he will receive a fair rent instead of a rent far below the market value of the property which he demises.”

Tenants do have a point, however, in the context of rent payable. Generally, a rent review is not about the rent payable but about the rent at the review/valuation date. The rent payable is the amount payable after the rent is agreed or ascertained. Therefore, there are, in fact, two rents at rent review: 1) the review rent in accordance with the review clause and 2) the rent payable regardless.

The difference arises because of what is known as 'upward-only' rent review. 'Upward-only' does not mean the review rent necessarily has to go up. The review rent might be more or the same or less than the rent payable. 'Upward-only' refers to the rent payable after the review rent is agreed or ascertained as not usually less than the rent payable before the review. (I say 'usually' because there are circumstances where the rent payable could differ; you can find more about that here. (link awaited).

It might be thought unlikely to be cost-effective for either landlord or tenant to review the rent if the rent payable would be more than the review rent. In some instances, however, it might be beneficial for the landlord or the tenant to review the rent regardless, such as, for example, for monitoring performance.

Location is the underlying driving force for both property performance and tenant-demand. Property performance is the measure of rental and capital growth; both factors are needed to counteract and outpace what would otherwise be a depreciating asset. No increase on review is often symptomatic of a location that is static or in decline.

Property is a depreciating asset whose rate of depreciation can be outpaced by rental and capital growth. Rental growth is a product of demand by tenants according to the supply and availability of premises that would satisfy and fulfil the tenant's business operational requirements.

Tenant-demand is a driver for growth, but a premises-supply-shortage which leads to higher rents will challenge the economical rental for those businesses whose presence in the locality is part of the attraction; there is a cut-off point at which the more successful businesses will baulk at any further increase in rent. Although a rent review might be thought a private matter between actual landlord and actual tenant and of no concern to anyone else, any extra rent will increase the insurance premium cover for loss of rent and affect the Rateable Value (hence business rates payable). Also for the tenant the money has to come from somewhere and when an increase exceeds the tenant's economical rent the tenant will have to make savings elsewhere. (In my opinion, the first sign of a location entering decline is when the tenancy of a shop previously let to a multiple retailer is assigned or the premises re-let to a non-multiple retailer.)

In theory, a rent review should be a straightforward matter of the landlord and tenant agreeing the rent for the review period. In practice, it is not as simple as that. In business tenancy law, the review rent is not about how much the actual tenant could afford or how much the actual landlord wants to get a return on the investment, but the rent others would agree. And the rent that others would agree is arrived at by evaluating the evidence in the light of the terms and conditions of the lease.

Rent does not exist in isolation. Rent is the product of the terms and conditions of the tenancy upon which the premises are let, or to let. Whenever a new lease is granted, the parties and their advisers will agree the terms and conditions for the letting. There is no standard form of lease for all business premises. Consequently, the terms and conditions of each individual lease will affect the review rent.

Usually, a review is to market rent, unless the parties have agreed another basis as specified in the lease. Where rental valuation has regard to evidence, the hierarchy for best evidence is a new letting in the open market but the premises are let already (even if unoccupied) so the market cannot be tested. The alternative, which is the basis of rent review, is to assess the rent objectively: in other words, assuming the premises are available to let on a specified date at the rent that would be agreed between a hypothetical willing landlord and a hypothetical willing tenant, on the terms and conditions in the existing lease.