Most revenue leakage in commercial real estate is invisible until a rent roll audit surfaces it. Escalation clauses that were never triggered, CAM caps that were never enforced, recovery structures that were misconfigured at lease commencement, these are not one-off errors. They are systematic failures that persist silently across portfolios, compounding with every billing cycle that passes without correction.
We analyzed lease execution patterns across more than 400 commercial leases, retail, office, and industrial, and found that execution discrepancies are the norm, not the exception. The majority of leases we reviewed had at least one material gap between what the lease required and what was actually being billed or recovered.
Why Execution Gaps Are So Common
The root cause is structural. Commercial leases are complex, negotiated instruments that encode dozens of financial obligations, base rent schedules, escalation triggers, expense recovery structures, CAM contribution caps, percentage rent thresholds, tenant improvement amortization, and more. The people who negotiate these leases are not always the same people who configure them in Yardi or MRI. And the people who configure them are not always checking against the lease document.
That gap, between the lease as a legal instrument and the lease as an operational configuration, is where revenue disappears.
The Four Most Common Execution Discrepancies
Based on our analysis, these are the categories where execution failures most frequently occur:
- Missed rent escalations. Fixed-step escalations, CPI-linked adjustments, and anniversary-based increases are frequently missed when billing configurations are not updated at the trigger date. In multi-tenant retail environments, this is among the most common error type.
- Incorrect CAM recovery structures. Lease documents often contain specific instructions on which expenses are recoverable, how to prorate them, and what caps apply. These structures are frequently oversimplified in property management system configurations, resulting in either under-recovery or overbilling.
- CAM cap violations. Many leases include cumulative or annual caps on CAM contribution increases. When these caps are not correctly modeled operationally, tenants may be overbilled, creating both financial exposure and legal risk.
- Misconfigured base year expense stops. Gross and modified gross leases often rely on base year expense stop calculations. Errors in how the base year is established or applied compound over the life of the lease and are among the most difficult discrepancies to unwind.
Why These Gaps Are Hard to Find Manually
There is no dashboard in Yardi or MRI that surfaces lease execution discrepancies. Property management systems do not compare billing configurations against lease language, they execute the configuration they were given. If that configuration is wrong, the system will bill incorrectly, consistently, and without any warning.
Manual review processes, where lease administrators periodically compare rent rolls to lease abstracts, are the traditional control. But these reviews are expensive, slow, and inherently incomplete. A skilled lease administrator can review a handful of leases deeply in a given week. A portfolio of 200 leases reviewed annually means each lease gets examined once per year at most, and execution errors that emerged between reviews go undetected.
The Compounding Effect
What makes lease execution gaps particularly costly is not any individual error, it is the compounding. A missed escalation that goes undetected for 18 months is not a one-quarter revenue shortfall. It is a permanent reduction in the income profile of that asset, and depending on lease language, may not be recoverable retroactively.
For portfolios valued on NOI multiples, the financial impact extends beyond the revenue shortfall itself. Every dollar of unrecovered income is a dollar removed from the NOI baseline used to underwrite the asset. At a 6% cap rate, a $100,000 annual execution gap reduces asset value by approximately $1.67 million, before accounting for the cost of identifying and resolving the discrepancy.
What Governance Looks Like in Practice
Addressing lease execution risk requires moving from periodic audits to continuous governance, a system that monitors whether obligations are being executed correctly across the portfolio on an ongoing basis, not just during due diligence events.
That means structuring lease obligations in machine-readable form at commencement, connecting that structure to operational billing data, and running ongoing comparisons that surface discrepancies when they occur rather than months or years later. The output is not a report, it is a control layer that operates between the lease document and the property management system, verifying execution continuously.
This is the problem Firststreet was built to solve.
See How Firststreet Identifies Execution Gaps
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