Real Estate Services

Sale-Leasebacks

Most founder-operators of businesses that own their real estate are sitting on capital they cannot see. The building you own at book value sits on the balance sheet appreciating modestly. The same building sold to a real estate investor — and leased back to your operating business under a long-term agreement — can produce capital at full market value, freeing equity that was trapped in walls.

In the right situation, the cash released funds an acquisition, pays down debt, supports a recapitalization, or fuels growth that delivers materially higher returns than the building ever could. In the wrong situation, the sale-leaseback creates lease obligations the business cannot service and accounting complications that move lenders. The structural details determine which outcome occurs.

 

Parkland Capital Partners is a lower middle market M&A advisory firm with deep sector focus across business services, residential and industrial services, real estate services, infrastructure services, manufacturing, and the broader commercial ecosystem. Sale-leaseback advisory is one of our real estate services capabilities, typically used within or alongside M&A transactions, recapitalizations, and capital structure work for founder-led businesses we serve.

A Note on Specialist Net Lease Advisors

Where Parkland Fits — and Where a Specialist Is Better

The sale-leaseback market has dedicated specialist advisors and capital providers. The major commercial real estate services firms maintain dedicated net lease and sale-leaseback groups that lead the largest standalone sale-leaseback transactions. Major net lease REITs and institutional capital providers are the primary buyers of single-tenant net lease real estate.

For standalone, large-scale sale-leaseback transactions on premium real estate, a specialist net lease advisor is typically the right call, and we will tell you that directly. Where Parkland adds value is in sale-leasebacks that sit inside or alongside M&A transactions — using the sale-leaseback as a financing tool within an acquisition, recapitalization, or sale of a founder-led business — and in sale-leasebacks for the kinds of mid-sized owner-occupied properties that fall below the threshold where specialist net lease groups concentrate. Our role is integrating the sale-leaseback into the broader transaction structure and helping founder-operators understand how the real estate decision fits within their larger capital and ownership strategy.

Mechanics

How Sale-Leasebacks Actually Work

Straightforward in concept and consequential in structure. The seller becomes the tenant; the buyer becomes the landlord. The economic mechanics that determine whether the transaction creates or destroys value.

Cap rate determines both proceeds and rent

The single most important economic concept in any sale-leaseback. The investor underwrites the transaction at a target capitalization rate — annual rent divided by purchase price. A property generating $400,000 in annual rent at a 6% cap rate produces a $6.67M purchase price; at a 7% cap rate, $5.71M. Lower cap rates mean higher proceeds and lower effective cost of the embedded financing. The cap rate is the central negotiation in every sale-leaseback because it sets both how much capital you release and how much rent you pay going forward.

Net lease structure

Sale-leasebacks are almost always structured as absolute net or triple-net (NNN) leases. The tenant (your operating business) is responsible for all property expenses — taxes, insurance, maintenance, capex, structural repairs. The investor receives clean, predictable rent without operating responsibilities, which is precisely what net lease investors want. Operationally, you continue managing the property substantially as you did when you owned it.

Up to 100% of value, vs. 70–80% LTV on debt

Traditional mortgage debt typically provides 70–80% LTV against commercial real estate. A sale-leaseback monetizes 100% of the property’s market value because you are selling the asset, not borrowing against it. The trade-off: you no longer own the building or capture future appreciation, and you carry the rent obligation for the lease term.

Tenant credit and lease term drive the cap rate

Investor underwriting focuses on the durability of the rent stream — tenant credit quality, lease term, and lease structure. Strong-credit tenants on long leases (15–20+ years) command lower cap rates (better proceeds). Weaker-credit tenants on shorter leases command higher cap rates (worse proceeds). Deal economics turn substantially on these factors.

Lease accounting under ASC 842

Operating sale-leaseback obligations are reported as right-of-use assets and lease liabilities on the balance sheet under current lease accounting standards. The accounting treatment affects financial ratios, lender covenants, and reported leverage in ways that warrant careful evaluation alongside specialty accounting and tax counsel before any transaction.

Strategic Use Cases

Why Founder-Operators Consider Sale-Leasebacks

The strategic situations where a sale-leaseback creates real value.

Unlocking trapped equity in M&A and recap transactions

The most common Parkland angle. When a founder-operator is selling their business or executing a majority recapitalization, owned real estate can be separated from the operating business through a sale-leaseback executed at or near close. Proceeds can fund part of the acquisition (reducing the buyer’s required equity and debt), provide additional liquidity to the founder, support the operating company’s go-forward capital structure, or be distributed as part of the broader transaction. The structural integration of M&A and sale-leaseback is genuinely powerful when done well.

Funding acquisitions and growth

A founder-operator with significant equity trapped in owned real estate can use a sale-leaseback to fund an acquisition, expand operations, open new locations, or invest in equipment and technology. The math works when the business generates higher returns on invested capital than the building generates as a real estate asset. A business yielding 20% ROIC funded by capital extracted from a building yielding 6–7% as real estate creates immediate value, provided the lease obligations are sustainable.

Paying down expensive debt

Sale-leaseback proceeds can retire debt that costs more than the embedded financing in the lease, improving overall cost of capital. Particularly relevant in environments where traditional debt is expensive or where lender covenants are restrictive.

Diversifying personal wealth

For founders whose net worth is heavily concentrated in their business and its real estate, a sale-leaseback executed at the right point in the business lifecycle provides liquidity without selling the operating business. The cash can be deployed into diversified investments, estate planning, or other personal wealth objectives.

Avoiding the cost and complexity of property ownership

Owning, maintaining, and managing operational real estate is a discipline distinct from running an operating business. Some founders simply do not want to be landlords to their own company. A sale-leaseback transfers ownership and capital responsibility to a professional real estate investor while the operating business continues using the property under a long-term lease.

Restructuring the balance sheet at close

In leveraged transactions, sale-leasebacks executed at close can reduce the equity check the acquirer needs to write, support the senior debt structure, or provide flexibility on the broader capital stack. Sophisticated transaction structuring that requires careful coordination across M&A counsel, real estate counsel, lenders, and the net lease investor.

When sale-leasebacks do not fit

Each of these situations requires careful analysis before executing.

Market

The 2026 Sale-Leaseback Environment

The 2026 environment is genuinely favorable for sale-leaseback transactions for several reasons.

Capital markets stabilizing

The Federal Reserve continued its easing cycle through 2025, with forecasts calling for rates moving toward a neutral 3% by late 2026. Ten-year Treasury yields settled around 4%, down from the mid-to-high fours earlier in 2025. The stabilization is improving net lease investor cost of capital and enabling more competitive cap rates for potential tenants.

Institutional capital returning to net lease

Net lease investors and institutional buyers have re-emerged with strong appetite for single-tenant net lease assets, particularly in industrial and other favored asset classes. Cap rates appear poised to compress as competition for quality net lease investments increases.

Broader CRE investment activity rebounding

Commercial real estate investment activity is forecast to increase meaningfully in 2026, with institutional and cross-border capital reentering the market. The rising tide of CRE capital deployment supports net lease and sale-leaseback activity specifically.

Industrial and single-tenant net lease are favored

Investors continue to favor industrial assets and stable, income-producing single-tenant net lease properties. Office faces headwinds in many markets, particularly older Class B and C space, which compresses the buyer universe and increases cap rates for those properties.

Cap rates remain elevated vs. 2021–2022 peak

Even with the improving environment, sale-leaseback cap rates have not fully returned to recent-cycle lows. For sellers, proceeds may be somewhat below what was achievable at the recent peak, but stability and capital availability are materially better than in the 2023–2024 reset.

Strategic urgency for owner-operators

Bank debt remains expensive in absolute terms and traditional financing is tighter than in cheaper-money cycles. For owner-operators with capital trapped in real estate and acquisition or growth objectives requiring funding, the sale-leaseback as a 100% LTV alternative remains attractive even with cap rates above prior peaks.

Founders considering sale-leasebacks in 2026 face a market that is genuinely active, with institutional capital returning and cap rates expected to compress as the cycle progresses. The honest read for any specific transaction depends on the property, the credit, the market, and the strategic use of proceeds.

Our Approach

How We Approach Sale-Leaseback Engagements

When sale-leasebacks fit within a broader Parkland engagement, the major workstreams.

Strategic evaluation

Whether a sale-leaseback fits the founder’s situation depends on the use of proceeds, the cost of the embedded financing (cap rate translated into effective rent), the operating business’s ability to support long-term rent obligations, property characteristics, and strategic alternatives. Early-stage analysis determines whether to proceed.

Property and lease structuring

Lease term, renewal options, rent escalations, expense responsibilities, capex obligations, sublease and assignment rights, purchase options, and other key lease terms materially affect both the cap rate the investor will accept and the operating business’s flexibility going forward. The structural negotiation is as important as the headline cap rate.

Investor universe construction and outreach

The net lease investor universe includes major net lease REITs, private equity real estate funds, specialty net lease investors, and family offices investing in net lease. The right approach depends on property type, geography, credit quality, and transaction size. For M&A-integrated transactions, timing and structure of outreach matter because M&A is the dominant deal and the sale-leaseback is the supporting structure.

M&A integration

For sale-leasebacks within M&A transactions, integration with the operating business sale is the central work. Coordination across M&A buyer, lender, lease investor, and the founder selling-side determines whether the transaction closes cleanly. Sequencing, conditions, and definitive document interactions all require careful management.

Tax and accounting coordination

Sale-leasebacks have specific tax implications (gain recognition, depreciation recapture, like-kind exchange opportunities under certain structures) and accounting implications (lease liability on the balance sheet, income statement impact). Coordination with tax counsel and accounting advisors is essential.

Diligence and closing execution

Standard real estate diligence (title, environmental, property condition, zoning) plus lease negotiation, lender consents (if applicable), and closing mechanics. For integrated M&A transactions, the closing coordination is particularly complex.

For pure-play, large-scale standalone sale-leasebacks of premium real estate, a specialist net lease advisor will typically be better positioned than Parkland. For sale-leasebacks integrated with M&A transactions, mid-sized owner-occupied properties, or transactions where the founder-operator wants the real estate work integrated with their broader transaction and ownership strategy, our involvement creates real value.

Common Questions

How much can I get from a sale-leaseback?

Up to 100% of the property’s market value, depending on the cap rate the investor underwrites. The cap rate is driven by tenant credit quality, lease term and structure, property characteristics, asset class, location, and current market conditions. Strong-credit tenants on long-term net leases command the lowest cap rates (highest proceeds). The specific proceeds for any property require analysis of these factors.

Rent is determined by the cap rate the investor applies to the purchase price. If you sell the property for $10M at a 7% cap rate, your annual rent will be $700,000. The cap rate negotiation simultaneously determines proceeds and rent — the two are mathematically linked.
No. The defining feature of a sale-leaseback is that you continue occupying the property under a long-term lease, typically 10–20 years with renewal options. Operationally, the business continues as before; the only change is that you pay rent rather than capturing ownership economics.
Depends on the situation. Traditional mortgage debt provides 70–80% LTV at current interest rates, which may be expensive in absolute terms but maintains your ownership of the asset (and its appreciation). A sale-leaseback provides up to 100% LTV but transfers ownership and creates long-term rent obligations. For founders with specific use cases (M&A funding, debt paydown, growth capital, wealth diversification) where 100% LTV materially exceeds what debt would provide, sale-leaseback is often the better structure. For founders who want to retain ownership and capture appreciation, debt may be more appropriate.
Sale-leasebacks trigger gain recognition on the property sale, with potential depreciation recapture. Specific structures (including like-kind exchange opportunities in certain transactions) can defer or restructure tax exposure. The tax implications warrant careful analysis with tax counsel before executing, particularly when integrated with M&A transactions where additional tax considerations apply.
Yes, and this is one of the most powerful use cases. When you are selling your business and own the real estate, a sale-leaseback executed at or near close separates the operating company from the property, releases the embedded real estate capital, and can support the acquirer’s capital structure or provide additional liquidity to you. The structural integration requires careful coordination but is often materially beneficial to both sides.
Standalone sale-leasebacks typically run 90 to 180 days from initial structuring to close. Sale-leasebacks integrated with M&A transactions are calibrated to the broader transaction timeline. Property due diligence, lease negotiation, and investor underwriting drive the timeline.
For pure-play, large-scale sale-leasebacks of premium real estate where competitive process among major net lease REITs and institutional capital is the primary value driver, a specialist net lease advisor is typically the right call. For sale-leasebacks integrated with M&A transactions, mid-sized properties, or situations where you want the real estate work coordinated with broader transaction and ownership strategy, Parkland’s involvement creates value. We are honest about which fits your specific situation.
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Considering a Sale-Leaseback?

Complimentary consultations are available for founder-operators considering sale-leaseback transactions, whether as standalone capital strategies or integrated with M&A, recapitalization, or other transactions. The first conversation is a candid read on whether a sale-leaseback fits your specific situation, the realistic range of structural outcomes, and how it would integrate with your broader transaction or capital strategy.