Billboard Business

A bad billboard lease

You can’t be too careful when you negotiate a billboard location lease.  I want to tell you about one of the worst billboard leases I’ve ever seen.  It’s a lesson in what not to do and here’s why:

  1. The lease term is 9 years versus a 20 year norm in the industry.
  2. The lease has high fixed minimum payments with an annual trueup payment which lifts the cost of the lease to 40% of the sign’s gross revenue.  The industry norm is lease costs of 10-20% of revenue.
  3. The trueup payment must be certified by “an annual report, certified by an independent certified public accountant, detailing such gross income.”  This is a ridiculous waste of money for something that a landlord can easily verify with cancelled checks and invoices.
  4. The lease requires the outdoor company to keep a $3 million public liability insurance policy.  $1 million is the industry norm.
  5. The lease may be cancelled with 60 days notice if the landlord sells the property.  Good outdoor leases are binding on successors and assigns.

Comments are closed.