Forget what your rent roll says. Forget what CoStar or the appraiser says. If you really want to know what the market rent is—get in your car, drive your market, and talk to other leasing agents.
When I buy a shopping center, I don’t guess rents. I do the homework:
• I identify my competition.
• I walk their centers.
• I peek inside the vacancies.
• I evaluate visibility, parking, signage, frontage, and foot traffic.
• I stalk their websites for quoted rents and CAMs.
• Then—I talk to the agents. I ask what’s leased, what’s not, and what’s real.
Visibility alone can justify a $10 PSF bump! A 1,200 SF endcap on Main Street with 65,000 cars/day? That’s a different animal than a deep-in-the-back space in an 800,000 SF center.
Want higher rents? Build the case. Understand the vacancy rates, the comps, the demand, and the foot traffic. Then test the market. Start quoting $26 instead of $22 and see who bites.
Own a multimillion-dollar property? Act like it. Be the most informed landlord in your market. And remember—if your tenants are crushing sales and paying 2% in occupancy cost, they can likely afford more rent.