Square footage and dimensions can easily become the focus of a dispute, which is why some owners try to keep them out of a lease or attached floor plans. If you have to include square footage or dimensions in certain circumstances—for example, if you’re dealing with a highly desirable prospective tenant that demands this inclusion, or the fixed rent or a rent escalation is governed by a formula that includes the square footage number, make protective changes to two standard lease clauses. These changes can help shield you from a misrepresentations claim by the tenant if the square footage or dimensions you include are wrong.
For Model Language you can use to make these sections of your lease less likely to give rise to lawsuits over square footage, see “'Deem' the Square Footage Numbers in Your Lease,” available to subscribers here.