What Commercial Real Estate Buyers Get Wrong Before They Sign

Most buyers entering their first commercial transaction assume the process works like a residential closing, just with bigger numbers. It does not. The rules, the timeline, the documents, and the risks are categorically different, and the gap between what buyers expect and what actually happens is where deals fall apart.

The Timeline Is Longer Than You Think

Commercial closings regularly run 45 to 120 days, and some stretch further. That timeline exists because due diligence in a commercial deal covers far more ground than a home inspection. Buyers reviewing vacant land need environmental phase one reports, and if those flag concerns like the presence of gopher tortoises, a phase two follows. Rezoning applications move on the municipality’s schedule, not the buyer’s. Each item stacks on top of the last, and buyers who budget their time based on residential experience tend to get caught off guard.

Due Diligence Means More Than an Inspection

In a commercial transaction, the due diligence period covers financing, title, zoning, environmental reports, lease review, and survey analysis, all under one deadline. Buyers purchasing tenant-occupied properties also have to account for estoppel certificates from those tenants, which confirm that the landlord is not in default and that deposit amounts on record are accurate. Discrepancies surface regularly. A tenant who reported a $10,000 deposit once required a full audit of the landlord’s records before the correct figure of $5,000 could be confirmed. Getting these details resolved before closing matters because they directly affect what transfers, and at what cost.

Commercial Loan Documents Are Negotiable

Buyers with residential experience often assume loan documents are standard government-regulated forms. In commercial lending, that assumption is wrong and expensive. Commercial loan documents are drafted to protect the lender, often broadly. A common provision allows the lender to call the note if they feel “insecure” for any reason, which is a sweeping default trigger that most borrowers do not catch until it is too late to negotiate. The time to push back is before signing the commitment letter, not three days before closing when contingencies have already passed.

Entity Structure Creates Closing Complexity

When an LLC or corporation is buying or selling, identifying who actually has authority to sign is a task that can take days. A deed signed by someone without proper authority produces an invalid transfer and a title defect that follows the property. In transactions involving layered entities, a Florida LLC owned by a Wyoming entity owned by a Delaware entity, each operating agreement requires review before a single document gets executed. Lenders add another layer by requiring not only the property-holding entity to guarantee the loan, but also the operating business generating the income that will service it.

Slow Down Before You Sign

The single point where buyers consistently lose ground is the contract stage. A client recently signed a commercial contract believing the property came fully furnished because the language stated “all personal property owned by the seller will convey.” Furniture can be leased. Equipment can be leased. The seller’s personal property could have been a jar of pens. Fortunately, that situation was resolved, but it required legal intervention after the fact.

The contract is the place to get everything in writing, in enforceable language, before pressure from agents, sellers, or excitement about the deal makes careful review feel like an obstacle. Getting legal eyes on a contract before signing costs far less than litigating what a sentence meant after closing.

If you want to learn more about Closing with Confidence, check out https://metkalawfirm.com/commercial-real-estate-closing-process-florida 

Chelsea Metka