Barbershop owner reviewing a commercial lease document at a desk showing the careful review process required before signing an Ontario commercial lease that will commit the business to significant fixed monthly costs for three to five years

Barbershop Commercial Lease: What to Negotiate and What to Watch Out For in Ontario

July 11, 2026

Barbershop Commercial Lease: What to Negotiate and What to Watch Out For in Ontario

A commercial lease is the most significant long-term financial commitment most barbershop owners make, and it is the most commonly misunderstood. Unlike residential leases, Ontario commercial leases have almost no statutory protections for tenants. The Residential Tenancies Act does not apply. The Commercial Tenancies Act provides only a minimal framework. What you sign is what you are bound by, often for 5 to 10 years. The terms are heavily negotiable before signing; they are not negotiable after.

The Terms That Matter Most for Barbershops

Base rent versus gross rent. Many Ontario commercial leases are "net" or "triple net" leases: you pay a base rent plus your proportionate share of the building's property taxes, common area maintenance (CAM), and building insurance, collectively called TMI or additional rent. The TMI component can equal 30 to 60% of the base rent figure, meaning the rent you see advertised is not the rent you will actually pay. Always ask for the TMI estimate for the current year and confirm whether it is capped or escalates. A $2,000/month base rent in a net lease can be $2,800 to $3,200/month in actual occupancy cost.

Rent escalation. Most commercial leases include annual rent increases: either fixed percentage increases (1 to 5% per year) or CPI-linked increases. On a 5-year lease starting at $3,000/month with 3% annual escalation, year 5 rent is $3,476/month. Model the full lease cost over its term, not just the starting number.

Landlord's work and tenant improvement allowance. If the space requires build-out (plumbing for barber chairs, electrical upgrades, partition walls), negotiate who pays. Landlords in spaces that need significant work to be tenantable often offer a tenant improvement allowance (TIA) in exchange for a longer lease term. The TIA is not free money; it is amortized into the lease economics. However, it allows you to avoid the full upfront capital requirement for build-out. Confirm in writing exactly what work the landlord will complete before your occupancy date and what constitutes your responsibility.

Permitted use clause. This clause defines what business activities are allowed in the space. It should explicitly permit barbershop services, retail product sales, and any other services you plan to offer. An overly narrow permitted use clause can prevent you from adding services as the business evolves; an overly broad one may conflict with exclusivity provisions other tenants hold.

Exclusivity clause. If you can negotiate it: a clause preventing the landlord from leasing to another barbershop in the same plaza or strip mall. This is most achievable in negotiations where you are taking a long-term lease in a large space; it is less likely to be granted for shorter leases or smaller spaces. Even a limited exclusivity clause (no other barbershop within 300 feet of your unit) provides meaningful protection.

Personal guarantee. Almost all Ontario commercial landlords require a personal guarantee on the lease: if the business cannot pay rent, you are personally liable. This is standard and largely non-negotiable for smaller tenants. Be aware of what you are signing; a personal guarantee on a 5-year lease means personal liability for the full remaining lease term if the business fails.

What Is Negotiable

More than first-time commercial tenants typically expect: free rent periods (1 to 3 months rent-free at the start of the lease while you build out and launch), TIA amounts and scope, permitted use clause breadth, exclusivity provisions, renewal option terms (the right to renew at a defined rent or formula), assignment and subletting rights (important for eventual business sale), and the landlord's build-out obligations.

What to Do Before Signing

Have a commercial real estate lawyer review the lease. This is not optional for a 5-year commitment with personal guarantee exposure. Legal review of a commercial lease in Ontario typically costs $500 to $1,500. The cost of a single lease clause oversight that costs you money or limits your business over a 5-year term exceeds that by multiples.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is a typical barbershop lease in Ontario?

3 to 5 years is most common for first-time shop owners. Shorter terms (1 to 2 years) exist but typically come with higher per-square-foot rates as the landlord prices in the lower certainty. Longer terms (7 to 10 years) can produce lower per-square-foot rates but increase personal guarantee exposure and reduce flexibility if the business needs to relocate or change size. For a first location with uncertain demand projections, a 3 to 5 year term with renewal options balances flexibility against cost.

Can you break a commercial lease in Ontario?

Ontario commercial leases can be broken, but the consequences are significant. Breaking a commercial lease exposes the tenant to the landlord's actual damages: unpaid rent for the remainder of the lease term, less any rent the landlord recovers from a replacement tenant. With a personal guarantee, those damages are recoverable from the business owner personally. The realistic paths to exit a commercial lease before its term are: negotiate a lease buyout with the landlord, sublease the space with landlord's consent, or sell the business to a buyer who assumes the lease. Consult a commercial real estate lawyer before attempting any lease exit.

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