Owner-Occupied Commercial Real Estate: Why Owning Your Building Is Usually Better Than Leasing
Right now, as you're paying rent on your commercial space, someone else is building equity in that property. Their mortgage is getting paid down. The building is appreciating. The rents — including yours — are generating a return on their investment. And you're providing the income that makes all of that possible.
This isn't a criticism of leasing. Sometimes leasing is the right choice. But for businesses that have been operating long enough to qualify for commercial real estate financing, and whose location needs are stable enough to justify a long-term commitment, owning your commercial space is usually the better long-term financial decision.
Let me show you the math and the reasoning.
The Rent vs. Own Comparison: The Numbers
Consider a small business that leases 5,000 square feet of commercial space at $15 per square foot per year — $75,000 per year, or $6,250 per month.
Now consider buying a comparable property for $750,000 with an SBA 504 loan (10% down = $75,000).
SBA 504 loan of $675,000 at a blended rate of approximately 7% over 25 years: monthly payment roughly $4,780.
Monthly ownership cost: $4,780 mortgage + $625 property taxes (estimated) + $500 insurance + $200 maintenance reserve = $6,105.
The ownership cost ($6,105/month) is lower than the lease ($6,250/month), even before accounting for the equity you're building.
And that equity: after 25 years, the property is paid off. The $750,000 building has likely appreciated to $1.2-1.5 million or more (commercial real estate historically appreciates at 2-3% per year). The business owner who leased for 25 years has $0 in real estate equity and has spent $75,000/year × 25 years = $1.875 million in rent. The owner has a paid-off building worth well over $1 million.
The Equity Accumulation Effect
The ownership advantage compounds over time in ways that pure payment comparisons don't capture.
Every mortgage payment has a principal component that reduces the loan balance and increases your equity. In the SBA 504 example above, by year 10, you've paid down perhaps $130,000 in principal. By year 20, you may have $300,000+ in equity built purely through amortization — on top of any appreciation.
That equity is a real asset on your personal balance sheet. It can be borrowed against for business capital (see the article on using commercial real estate equity for business growth). It can be sold when the business is sold. It's part of what makes the business worth more as an ongoing concern.
Tax Benefits of Ownership
The tax picture for commercial real estate ownership is favorable in several ways:
Mortgage interest deduction: Interest paid on commercial real estate loans is deductible as a business expense, reducing your taxable income. In the example above, the first several years of mortgage payments are heavily interest-weighted, creating significant deductions.
Depreciation: Commercial real estate is depreciated over 39 years (residential is 27.5 years). Each year, you deduct approximately 1/39th of the building's purchase price (not including land) as a depreciation expense — a non-cash deduction that reduces taxable income without requiring you to spend any money.
Cost segregation: For more sophisticated real estate owners, a cost segregation study can accelerate depreciation on specific components of the building, front-loading the tax benefits.
1031 exchanges: When you eventually sell the property, if you reinvest in a like-kind property through a 1031 exchange, you defer capital gains taxes indefinitely — a powerful wealth-building tool not available to tenants.
The SBA 504 Program: Specifically Designed for Owner-Occupants
The SBA 504 program is one of the best-designed commercial financing tools in existence specifically because it is designed for exactly this situation: a small business owner who wants to own the commercial real estate they operate from.
Key 504 features for owner-occupants:
- 10% down payment (15% for special use properties, new businesses)
- Long-term fixed rate on the CDC portion (20 or 25-year term)
- The business must occupy at least 51% of the building
- Can be used for purchase, construction, or major renovation
- Available for manufacturing, retail, office, medical, service, and other commercial uses
As an SBA Preferred Lender, W. Reynolds Commercial Capital, Inc. processes 504 applications in-house, reducing approval timelines significantly compared to non-preferred lenders.
The 504 is available through the commercial financing page at reynoldscomcap.com/commercial-financing.
When Leasing IS the Right Call
I said at the beginning that sometimes leasing is right, and I mean it. Here are the situations where leasing makes more sense than owning:
Short-term or uncertain location needs. If your business is growing fast and you're not sure where you'll be in 5 years, a 5-year lease with renewal options is more flexible than owning a building you might outgrow.
Early-stage businesses. If you're not sure your business will survive — or if you're still validating the concept — preserving capital is more important than building real estate equity.
High-cost markets where owning doesn't pencil. In some commercial real estate markets, cap rates are so compressed that the monthly ownership cost significantly exceeds lease cost. This is more common in major metros.
Business that depends on a specific type of space. If your business requires highly specialized built-out space (clean room, cold storage, heavy manufacturing) that only certain buildings have, finding the right building to own may be too restrictive.
The Refinancing Path: Converting Appreciation to Working Capital
For business owners who already own their commercial space with significant accumulated equity — through appreciation and loan paydown — the commercial real estate equity is a potential source of working capital.
A cash-out refinance or commercial equity line can release that equity for business investment. A business owner who bought a building for $500,000 that is now worth $900,000, with a paid-down loan balance of $300,000, has $600,000 in equity. Refinancing at 75% LTV against the $900,000 value produces a $675,000 loan — repaying the existing $300,000 loan and providing $375,000 in cash.
That's $375,000 of business capital released from an asset that was sitting there, working but not deployed.
Your First Step
If you're currently leasing and wondering whether ownership makes sense for your business and location, the first step is a simple calculation: what would ownership actually cost compared to your current rent, after factoring in taxes, insurance, and maintenance?
That's a calculation I can run with you. And in most cases for established businesses in stable locations, the answer is that owning is financially superior.
Are you still renting space you could own? Run the numbers before you sign another lease. The math usually favors ownership more clearly than people expect.
For a complete breakdown of the SBA 504 program — the primary tool for owner-occupied commercial real estate — see SBA 504 for First-Time Commercial Property Buyers. For current rate context, SBA 7(a) and 504 Rates in April 2026 gives you the real numbers.
John Reynolds Weaver, CEO — W. Reynolds Commercial Capital, Inc.
(325) 440-5820 | john@reynoldscomcap.com | reynoldscomcap.com
Disclaimer
While this article accurately reflects the combined capabilities of all lenders and technology partners with whom W. Reynolds Commercial Capital, LLC has a relationship, not every lender will have all of these capabilities. Not all lenders will have the same services, technology platforms, pricing structures, or program features, and this article in no way guarantees the availability of any specific feature, advance rate, same-day funding, 24/7 portal access, proprietary early-pay software, insurance-backed protection, fuel card integration, or any other service for any individual borrower or transaction.
All financial solutions are subject to credit review, underwriting, due diligence, and final approval by the respective funding partner. Actual terms, conditions, and availability may vary based on the client, invoice quality, industry, collateral, and the policies of the selected lender.
This article is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute a commitment, offer, or guarantee of funding or any particular terms.
For a no-obligation review of your business financing needs and the options currently available through our network, please contact us directly.
Comments
Post a Comment