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Should You Buy Your Building? Here’s How to Think Through It.

For many business owners, the idea of purchasing their own building sits somewhere between a long-term goal and a passing thought — something worth exploring “someday.” But someday has a way of either never arriving or arriving on someone else’s terms. Whether it’s a landlord deciding to sell, a lease expiration creating urgency, or simply the right market conditions aligning, the buy-versus-lease decision deserves a serious, structured analysis long before it becomes pressing. It’s a question we work through with clients regularly, and the answer is rarely one-size-fits-all.

The Core Question: What Does Occupancy Actually Cost You?

The starting point of any buy-versus-lease analysis is total cost of occupancy over time. Leasing feels straightforward — you write a check every month and the landlord handles the building. But what you’re also doing is funding someone else’s equity, absorbing rent escalations over time, and operating without control over your own space. Ownership flips that equation. Your monthly debt service builds equity, your occupancy cost is largely fixed, and you control the asset. The question is whether the math works given your capital position, your financing options, and what comparable properties are trading for in your target market.

We model this out for clients in an analysis that looks at projected lease costs versus projected ownership costs over a defined horizon — typically five, ten, and fifteen years. In many cases, the crossover point where ownership becomes the more cost-effective path arrives sooner than business owners expect, particularly in markets where rents have risen steadily and available product is limited.

Owner-User Purchases

The most common scenario we work through is the straightforward owner-user acquisition — a business that wants to own the building it operates out of. Beyond the financial analysis, these transactions require a clear-eyed look at your long-term location needs. Owning is a commitment, and if your business has a reasonable chance of outgrowing the space or relocating within five years, the flexibility of leasing often outweighs the financial upside of ownership. But for businesses with stable space needs and a long-term connection to a market or submarket, ownership can be one of the best wealth-building decisions an operator makes.

On the acquisition side, we evaluate the physical and financial profile of target properties with the same diligence we’d apply to any leased space — clear height, dock configuration, mechanical systems, deferred maintenance, and zoning for industrial users; floor plate, parking, HVAC, and building systems for office users. A building that pencils well financially can still be a poor operational fit, and we make sure those two lenses are applied together before a client moves forward.

Sale-Leaseback Structures

For business owners who already own their real estate, a sale-leaseback can be a compelling way to unlock capital without disrupting operations. In a sale-leaseback, you sell your building to an investor and simultaneously execute a long-term lease to remain as the occupant. The result is a significant capital event — often used to fund growth, reduce debt, or diversify holdings — while retaining full operational continuity in your existing space. These transactions require careful structuring, particularly around lease terms, rent escalations, and any options to repurchase, and we work closely with legal and financial advisors to make sure our clients’ interests are protected throughout.

Our Commitment to an Honest Answer

What we tell every client who raises the buy-versus-lease question is this: we don’t care which direction you go. Our job is to give you a clear, honest picture of your options — what the market supports, what the numbers look like, and what the risks are on both sides. Sometimes the analysis points clearly toward ownership. Sometimes leasing is the smarter play given where you are in your business cycle. And sometimes the right answer is to pursue ownership as a goal while negotiating a shorter-term lease that preserves your flexibility in the interim.

Whatever the outcome, you deserve to make that decision with complete information — not because a landlord’s deadline forced your hand.

Bart Allen is an exceptional broker who truly knows the submarket and the landlord landscape. His expertise helped us secure favorable renewal terms for our office lease and his communication was excellent from start-to-finish. We felt supported throughout the entire process and would gladly work with him again.
I’ve partnered with Jason Bollhoefner and his team at Benchmark Commercial on multiple deals over the past five years, and they have consistently delivered exceptional service—regardless of the size or complexity of the assignment. Jason is professional, highly knowledgeable, and always provides straightforward, honest guidance. He treats my clients as if they were his own, which is why I trust him with every referral in the Denver market. I highly recommend Jason and Benchmark Commercial to anyone seeking a dependable and results-driven commercial real estate partner.
Response from the owner:Thank you David! It's always a pleasure working with you and your clients. We value the trust you place with us get the job done right, for the right facility solutions here in Denver.
Huge shoutout to Bart Allen with Benchmark Commercial Real Estate! He helped us renegotiate our lease for our pediatric office and absolutely came through. Bart got our monthly payments lowered and even made sure we got some amazing upgrades throughout the whole space. The office looks completely refreshed and feels brand new; our patients and staff love it! Bart really went above and beyond for us, and I couldn’t be more thankful. If you need someone who knows how to get things done and truly has your back, he’s the one to call.
Tanner, I appreciate all of your help with our updated lease agreement. We feel more confident about this stuff knowing we have you in our corner. Thank you! - Jeremy Lacy, Ideations, Inc.
Very helpful and communicative. Would recommend.
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