CAM Charges
CAM Charges in Practice
A 100,000 square foot shopping center runs $500,000 in annual common area costs. A tenant occupying 10,000 square feet has a 10% pro rata share, so its CAM charge is $500,000 x 10% = $50,000 per year, or $5.00 per square foot. If the center is only 80% occupied and the leases lack gross-up provisions, the landlord absorbs the vacant space's 20% share, $100,000 in this case, straight out of NOI.
CAM Charges: What the Market Actually Requires
CAM economics turn on three lease mechanics. First, the split between controllable costs, like landscaping, security, and management, and uncontrollable costs, like snow removal and utilities: tenants routinely cap controllable CAM growth at 3% to 5% per year, and whether that cap is cumulative or compounding changes recoveries meaningfully over a 10-year lease. Second, administrative fees of 10% to 15% that landlords add to the CAM pool. Third, fixed CAM deals, where a tenant pays a flat per-square-foot charge with fixed bumps regardless of actual costs, trading reconciliation friction for expense risk.
Underwriters treat recoveries as earned income only when the leases and the collections both support it. The standard test is the recovery ratio, reimbursement income divided by recoverable expenses, rebuilt lease by lease. Slippage shows up everywhere: anchors that negotiated fixed CAM below their pro rata share, caps that have fallen behind actual cost growth, vacant space whose share nobody pays when leases lack gross-up provisions. Every unrecovered dollar is an NOI dollar, and at an 8% cap rate each recurring dollar of slippage erases $12.50 of value. CMBS and life company underwriting demands documented recovery schedules and reconciliation history; banks are more forgiving on rent roll hygiene when the sponsor signs recourse, but the NOI math is the same.
For buyers and refinancing owners, the playbook is to reconcile three documents before the lender does: what the leases permit, what was billed, and what was collected. Estoppel certificates confirming tenant CAM obligations, current reconciliations, and defensible gross-up language are the difference between recoveries that survive underwriting and a quiet 5% NOI haircut that compounds into a proceeds cut.
Why It Matters for Your Loan
CAM recoveries are net operating income, and NOI is proceeds. At an 8% cap rate, a recurring $50,000 of recovery slippage erases $625,000 of value and, at 65% LTV, $406,250 of loan proceeds. Sloppy reconciliations and missing gross-up language are among the most common and most avoidable NOI haircuts in retail and office underwriting. Commercial Lending Solutions reconciles recovery income against actual lease language before going to market, so lenders credit the reimbursements instead of discounting them.
Related Terms
CAM Charges: FAQ
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