How Exit Strategy Works in Pre-Leased Property

When you invest in a pre-leased commercial property, most people focus only on rental income and ROI. But the real smart move is planning your exit strategy from day one.

Here’s how exit strategy works in pre-leased property, in simple terms.


1. What Is an Exit Strategy?

An exit strategy means how and when you plan to sell the property to book profit.

In pre-leased property, buyers usually invest for:

  • Stable monthly income
  • Capital appreciation
  • Selling at a better yield later

Your exit depends on lease terms, tenant profile, and market conditions.


2. Exit During Lock-in Period

If your tenant has:

  • 9-year lease
  • 6-year lock-in

Example: A property leased to a brand like SBI Life Insurance

During lock-in:

  • Tenant cannot vacate easily
  • Income is secure
  • Property demand is high

This is the best time to sell because buyers prefer guaranteed rent with no vacancy risk.

👉 You can sell at a lower yield and higher price.


3. Exit After Rent Escalation

Most commercial leases have:

  • 15% rent increase every 3 years

After escalation:

  • Monthly rent increases
  • ROI improves
  • Property valuation increases

Example:
Rent ₹1,00,000 becomes ₹1,15,000 after 3 years.
Your selling price can increase because yield calculation improves.

Many investors exit just after escalation for maximum gain.


4. Exit Before Lease Expiry

As lease nears expiry:

  • Risk increases
  • Buyer negotiation power increases
  • Price may reduce

If tenant renewal is uncertain, it is better to exit 1–2 years before lease expiry.


5. Exit Based on Yield Compression

Commercial property price depends on yield.

If market yield reduces from:

  • 9% to 8%

Your property value automatically increases even if rent stays same.

This is called yield compression.

Smart investors track:

  • Interest rates
  • Demand for pre-leased assets
  • Corporate expansion in area

6. Exit by Tenant Upgrade Strategy

Some investors:

  • Buy property leased to a small brand
  • Wait for brand upgrade or lease transfer
  • Sell when bigger brand takes over

For example, if property later gets leased to a brand like HDFC Bank, valuation increases significantly.


7. Ideal Exit Timeline

Most common holding period:

  • 3 to 6 years

Why?

  • One rent escalation cycle
  • Strong remaining lease period
  • Good appreciation window

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