What Is Common Area Maintenance? 

Common area maintenance (CAM) is the cost your business pays for the areas in a commercial building that are common to all tenants. Look at it this way: When you lease a commercial building, you are paying for two separate areas, the usable area and the common area. 

Usable Area

Usable area is the space you are leasing, meaning the square footage in a building that you specifically use as a tenant. This area can include restrooms within the space, closets, break rooms, and a reception area, in addition to individual offices or other facilities your business needs. 

Common Area

Common areas of the building are outside your leased space, but available to you and other tenants. These areas include common restrooms, lobbies, walkways, parking lots, and landscaping. The common area in a multi-story building might include elevators, electrical rooms, and public corridors.  Sometimes the term “rentable building area” or “gross building area” is used to include the leased space plus the common areas.

How Does Common Area Maintenance Work? 

CAM fees are part of the terms in a commercial real estate lease agreement, so it’s important to understand how they work. 

Typical Fees in a Common Area

The CAM fee you pay is for the upkeep of these common areas, including maintenance, repairs, and operating costs like snow removal and landscaping. Other common areas covered by CAM fees include the roof, structural elements, walkways, and common restrooms. 

Other Costs Included in CAM Fees

Look for other CAM costs in your lease agreement. All of these costs must be paid by either the landlord/property manager or the tenant.

Security systems or salaries of security personnelPermits, taxes, insurance, or any legal costsAdvertising, signs, or other operating expensesUtilities, rent, or costs of maintaining a separate leasing office space

CAM costs are usually quoted on a per-square-footage (pro-rata) basis, shown as a fraction:  Leasable floor area


Some or all of leased or leasable floor area in the building, strip mall, or shopping center

Common Area Maintenance in Your Lease Agreement

A commercial lease agreement will also include several sections that refer to common areas and CAM fees. 

A list and description of all common areasA statement that CAM areas are under the exclusive control of the managementA statement that the landlord will keep all common areas in good repair and condition and in a manner consistent with comparable buildings in the surrounding area A statement by the landlord that it has unlimited access to common areasRules for the use of common areas  An allowance for rent abatement (reduction or stoppage) if you can’t use the premises or common areas as a result of casualty damage  

CAM Payment Options in Commercial Leases

Commercial leases include other confusing terms that specify who pays what costs—the tenant or the landlord. You might see one of these terms, listed from having the landlord paying all costs to the tenant paying all costs.

Gross (or Full Service) Lease: The tenant’s monthly payment includes everything, including all operating costs, taxes, and CAM costs.Modified Lease (or Gross): Expenses are divided between tenant and landlord (different for each lease).Net Lease: The tenant pays a share of operating expenses in addition to the stipulated rent.Triple Net Lease (sometimes called net-net-net or NNN): The tenant pays all of the operating expenses, taxes, and insurance. The landlord is responsible for the building, roof, and sometimes the parking lot.

Negotiating CAM Costs 

Some issues to consider when you are negotiating CAM costs in a commercial lease include additional fees, scope, and depreciation 

Additional Fees

Some landlords charge an administrative fee as a percentage of CAM costs. This cost is for accounting services, processing payments, etc. Some may also add third-party management fees, but these are basically the same thing. You shouldn’t have to pay for both. 

Cost Clarification

Does the CAM fee include “maintenance” and “replacement,” and are these costs defined? Some landlords include replacements in CAM because they are less costly than continued maintenance, while tenants would argue that replacements are an extra cost.

System Depreciation

Replacements of major systems, like a heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) system, for example, are costs that the landlord can depreciate, and updating these systems improves the saleability of a property. So, it makes sense that the landlord—not the tenants—should pay for this.