Most licensed New York agents work exclusively in residential real estate, but commercial transactions are legally available to any licensee. Understanding the basics of commercial real estate — even if you never specialize in it — makes you a better advisor for clients who own businesses, inherit commercial properties, or ask you questions outside the residential lane.
Key Differences From Residential Transactions
Commercial real estate is valued differently. Residential pricing is driven by comparables; commercial pricing is driven by income. The capitalization rate (cap rate) — net operating income divided by purchase price — is the primary valuation metric. A 6% cap rate on a property generating $60,000 in annual NOI implies a $1,000,000 value. Understanding this math is essential for any client conversation about investment property.
Lease structures are also fundamentally different. In residential real estate, the landlord almost always pays operating expenses. Commercial leases often shift some or all expenses to the tenant: gross leases, net leases, double-net, and triple-net (NNN) all describe different expense-sharing arrangements. A client signing a NNN lease is responsible for property taxes, insurance, and maintenance — something they absolutely need to understand before signing.
When to Refer and When to Engage
Complex commercial transactions — large office buildings, multi-tenant retail, industrial properties — are best referred to a commercial specialist. But small mixed-use properties, single-tenant storefronts, and 1-4 unit investment properties with commercial components are often handled by residential agents on Long Island. Knowing enough to ask the right questions and recognize the limits of your expertise is the real goal.
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