Barbershop Lease Basics: What to Look for Before Signing a Commercial Lease in Canada
Barbershop Lease Basics: What to Look for Before Signing a Commercial Lease in Canada
The commercial lease is the highest-commitment decision in opening a barbershop, ahead of equipment purchases and before the first hire. A bad chair is replaceable. A bad lease can be business-ending. The terms that seem minor during negotiations are the ones that constrain operations and cash flow for the entire lease term. Understanding which terms actually matter for a barbershop operator, and what is negotiable, is essential before signing anything.
Permitted Use
The permitted use clause defines what business activities are allowed in the space under the lease. It must explicitly include personal services or barbershop operations. A clause that says "retail" without specifically covering personal services can be used by a landlord to object to operations at renewal time or if a dispute arises. Get the permitted use language confirmed in writing before executing the lease, not assumed from the landlord's verbal assurance that a barbershop is fine.
Tenant Improvement Allowance (TIA)
A TIA is cash the landlord provides toward leasehold improvements (your build-out costs). TIAs are negotiable, particularly in markets with higher commercial vacancy. In markets where quality commercial space is scarce, TIAs may be minimal or unavailable. Even when a landlord offers a TIA, the terms matter: some TIAs are disbursed after work is complete (requiring the tenant to front the full construction cost), some are structured as rent abatement, and some are conditional on the tenant completing improvements within a specific timeframe. Understand the TIA structure before counting it in your opening budget.
Gross vs. Net Lease
A gross lease includes most costs (property taxes, building insurance, maintenance) in the base rent. A net lease (common for retail in Canada as Triple Net or NNN) charges base rent plus additional proportional costs for property taxes, building insurance, and common area maintenance (CAM). The net costs in a Canadian NNN lease can add $8 to $25+ per square foot per year on top of base rent. Always ask for the total estimated annual occupancy cost (base rent plus estimated net charges) before comparing spaces. Comparing only base rent across gross and net leases is comparing incomparable numbers.
Renewal Options and Rent Escalation
Renewal options give you the right (not the obligation) to extend the lease at the end of the initial term, usually at a predetermined rent or at market rent. Without a renewal option, the landlord can offer completely different terms at renewal or decline to renew. For a barbershop investing significantly in leasehold improvements and client base, losing the renewal option is a business-level risk. Negotiate renewal options into the initial lease, not at renewal time.
Rent escalation clauses increase the base rent over the lease term. Annual CPI-based increases of 2 to 3% are standard and manageable. Fixed step increases (rent increases by a set dollar amount each year) or clauses tied to percentage rent are more complex and should be reviewed with a commercial real estate lawyer before signing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a lawyer to sign a commercial lease for a barbershop in Canada?
Yes. Commercial leases are lengthy, technical documents with provisions that have significant financial consequences. A real estate lawyer reviewing a commercial lease before signing typically costs $500 to $1,500 and can save multiples of that by catching unfavorable provisions, missing clauses, or ambiguous language. Landlords expect tenants to have legal review. A landlord who pressures you to sign without reviewing with a lawyer is a warning sign, not a courtesy.