A simple commercial space lease contract in the Philippines should do more than state the monthly rent. It should clearly answer the questions that usually cause disputes later: Who owns or controls the space? What exact area is being leased? Can the tenant use it for the intended business? How much is the rent, deposit, VAT, withholding tax, utilities, and association dues? Who repairs what? What happens if rent is late, permits are denied, the building is sold, or the tenant needs to leave early?
For small shops, kiosks, clinics, salons, offices, cafés, warehouses, and similar businesses, the best lease contract is usually short, specific, and practical. It should be simple enough for both parties to understand, but complete enough to be enforceable if a problem reaches the barangay, the Metropolitan Trial Court or Municipal Trial Court, or the Bureau of Internal Revenue.
What Is a Commercial Space Lease Contract?
A commercial space lease contract is an agreement where the owner or lessor allows another person or business, called the lessee or tenant, to use a space for business purposes in exchange for rent.
Under Article 1643 of the Civil Code, a lease of things exists when one party gives another the enjoyment or use of a thing for a certain price and for a definite or indefinite period. The same article states that no lease for more than 99 years is valid. (Lawphil)
In everyday Philippine practice, a commercial lease may cover:
- A retail stall in a mall or commercial building
- A small office unit
- A warehouse or storage space
- A restaurant, café, salon, clinic, or service shop
- A portion of a building, shophouse, or mixed-use property
- A bare commercial lot, if the tenant will build or install improvements
A commercial lease is different from a residential lease. The Rent Control Act of 2009, Republic Act No. 9653, is framed as a law regulating rent of certain residential units, so a business tenant should not assume that residential rent-control protections apply to a commercial shop or office. (Lawphil)
Legal Basis: Why the Written Contract Matters
Philippine law gives parties wide freedom to set their lease terms, but that freedom has limits.
Article 1305 of the Civil Code defines a contract as a meeting of minds where one party binds himself to another. Article 1306 allows parties to establish stipulations, clauses, terms, and conditions, provided they are not contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order, or public policy. (Lawphil)
A lease contract also has the force of law between the parties and must be complied with in good faith under Article 1159 of the Civil Code. (Lawphil)
For a commercial lease, this means the parties can generally agree on:
- The rental rate and escalation
- The lease term
- Security deposit and advance rent
- Permitted business use
- Renovations and improvements
- Sublease and assignment restrictions
- Penalties for late payment
- Grounds for termination
- Turnover and restoration obligations
However, unclear wording often becomes expensive. For example, “tenant shall pay utilities” may sound simple, but it does not answer whether the tenant pays common area charges, generator fuel, air-conditioning charges, property taxes, association dues, garbage fees, or building insurance.
Is a Commercial Lease Valid Without Notarization?
A lease may be binding between the parties even if it is not notarized, as long as the essential requisites of a contract are present: consent, a certain object, and a lawful cause or consideration. Article 1318 of the Civil Code lists these requisites. (Lawphil)
But in real life, notarization is still strongly useful because it:
- Makes the document easier to present as evidence
- Helps prove that the parties personally acknowledged the contract
- Is usually required by banks, malls, government offices, and some LGUs
- Is needed if the lease will be registered or annotated
- Helps avoid later claims that a signature was forged or unauthorized
For leases longer than one year, a written contract is especially important because Article 1403 of the Civil Code includes an agreement for leasing for more than one year under the Statute of Frauds, meaning it must be in writing to be enforceable by court action unless legally ratified. (Lawphil)
Notarization also requires proper identity verification. Philippine notarial rules and Supreme Court decisions emphasize that a notary should not notarize a document unless the person who signed personally appeared before the notary and was properly identified through competent evidence of identity. (Lawphil)
Essential Clauses in a Simple Commercial Space Lease Contract
A good simple commercial lease does not need to be 30 pages long. But it should cover the points below clearly.
1. Complete Names and Authority of the Parties
State the full legal names, addresses, and identification details of the lessor and lessee.
If the lessor or lessee is a corporation, partnership, cooperative, or OPC, the contract should identify the authorized representative and attach proof of authority, such as:
- Secretary’s Certificate
- Board Resolution
- Special Power of Attorney
- Partnership authority
- Government-issued ID of the signatory
This matters because many lease disputes start with a basic authority problem: the person who signed was not the owner, not the registered representative, or not authorized to bind the company.
2. Exact Description of the Commercial Space
Do not describe the space vaguely as “the unit beside the road” or “the stall near the entrance.” Use a precise description.
Include:
- Building name
- Unit number
- Floor level
- Street address
- Approximate floor area in square meters
- Parking slots, if included
- Storage area, if included
- Common areas the tenant may use
- Exclusions, such as roof deck, hallway, façade, driveway, or back area
For a lot or stand-alone building, attach a sketch, tax declaration, title details, or vicinity map if available.
3. Permitted Business Use
This clause should state the exact business allowed. For example:
The leased premises shall be used only as a milk tea shop and for no other purpose without the prior written consent of the lessor.
This protects both sides. The lessor may not want a high-risk, noisy, food-related, hazardous, or heavily regulated business in the space. The lessee also needs assurance that the space can legally and practically be used for the intended business.
Before signing, the tenant should check:
- Zoning or locational clearance requirements
- Barangay clearance
- Mayor’s permit or business permit requirements
- Fire safety requirements
- Sanitary permit, if food, beauty, clinic, or health-related
- Building or occupancy restrictions
- Mall or condominium house rules
- Restrictions on signage, exhaust, grease trap, noise, and operating hours
A lease contract does not automatically guarantee that the LGU will issue a business permit. If permits are critical, the lease should say what happens if the tenant cannot secure them despite complete and timely application.
4. Lease Term, Renewal, and Turnover Date
State the start date and end date clearly.
Avoid this wording:
The lease shall be for one year starting upon opening.
Better wording:
The lease shall be for one year beginning on 1 March 2026 and ending on 28 February 2027.
Also state:
- Date of physical turnover
- Fit-out or renovation period
- Whether rent is free during fit-out
- Renewal procedure
- Deadline to notify renewal or non-renewal
- Whether renewal is automatic or subject to a new agreement
If the contract ends and the tenant stays for 15 days with the lessor’s acquiescence, Article 1670 of the Civil Code may create an implied new lease, not for the original term but for the period fixed under the Civil Code, with the other terms revived. (Lawphil)
If the lease has no fixed period and rent is paid monthly, Article 1687 generally treats it as month-to-month. The same article allows courts, in proper cases, to fix a longer term after the lessee has occupied the premises for more than one year. (Lawphil)
5. Rent, Escalation, VAT, Withholding Tax, and Official Receipts
The rental clause should answer at least five questions:
| Item | What the Contract Should Say |
|---|---|
| Base rent | Exact monthly amount |
| Due date | Example: every 5th day of the month |
| Payment method | Bank deposit, check, GCash, cash, or other method |
| Tax treatment | VAT-inclusive, VAT-exclusive, non-VAT, or subject to withholding |
| Proof of payment | Official receipt, invoice, acknowledgment receipt, or other document |
For commercial leases, confusion often happens when the contract says “₱50,000 per month” but does not say whether that amount already includes VAT. If the lessor is VAT-registered, the tenant may later be billed an additional 12% VAT. If the tenant is a withholding agent, withholding tax issues may also arise.
A practical clause should say whether rent is:
- Inclusive or exclusive of VAT
- Subject to expanded withholding tax, if applicable
- Payable net or gross of withholding
- Covered by official receipts or invoices
- Separate from utilities, common charges, dues, and taxes
6. Security Deposit and Advance Rent
A commercial lease should clearly distinguish advance rent from security deposit.
Advance rent is rent paid ahead of time. Security deposit is usually held to answer for unpaid rent, utilities, damage, penalties, or restoration costs.
State:
- Amount of advance rent
- Months covered by advance rent
- Amount of security deposit
- Whether the deposit earns interest
- Whether the deposit may be applied to the last month’s rent
- When the balance will be returned
- What deductions are allowed
- Documents needed before refund, such as final utility bills and keys
A common fair arrangement is to return the remaining deposit within 30 to 60 days after turnover, after deducting documented unpaid amounts. For small spaces, this is often more practical than an open-ended refund clause.
7. Repairs, Maintenance, and Improvements
The Civil Code gives default rules, but parties may modify many repair obligations by contract.
Article 1654 obligates the lessor to deliver the leased thing fit for the intended use, make necessary repairs to keep it suitable unless there is a contrary stipulation, and maintain the lessee in peaceful and adequate enjoyment of the lease. Article 1657 obligates the lessee to pay rent, use the property with proper diligence for the stipulated use, and pay expenses for the deed of lease. (Lawphil)
A commercial lease should divide responsibility for:
- Structural repairs
- Roof leaks
- Electrical main lines
- Plumbing main lines
- Air-conditioning units
- Glass doors and windows
- Floor tiles and interior finishes
- Grease trap, exhaust, and ducting
- Pest control
- Fire extinguishers and safety equipment
- Damage caused by tenant, employees, customers, suppliers, or contractors
The contract should also say whether tenant improvements become the property of the lessor at the end of the lease or must be removed by the tenant.
8. Utilities, Association Dues, and Common Charges
State who pays:
- Electricity
- Water
- Internet
- Garbage collection
- Common area maintenance
- Security charges
- Air-conditioning charges
- Generator or backup power charges
- Condominium or association dues
- Real property tax pass-through, if any
If the tenant has no separate meter, the formula for computing utilities should be written in the contract. Avoid “tenant shall pay proportionate share” without stating how the share will be computed.
9. Sublease, Assignment, and Change of Ownership
Under Article 1649 of the Civil Code, a lessee cannot assign the lease without the lessor’s consent unless there is a stipulation to the contrary. But under Article 1650, subleasing is allowed if the contract does not expressly prohibit it, without releasing the original lessee from responsibility to the lessor. (Lawphil)
This is one of the most overlooked clauses in small commercial leases.
The contract should say whether the tenant may:
- Sublease the space
- Assign the lease to another person
- Let a franchisee or affiliate operate there
- Use the space under a different business name
- Share the unit with another business
- Transfer rights if the tenant sells the business
If the lessor wants control, the lease should expressly prohibit assignment and subleasing without prior written consent.
10. Default, Termination, and Ejectment
Article 1673 of the Civil Code allows the lessor to judicially eject the lessee when the agreed period has expired, rent is unpaid, lease conditions are violated, or the lessee uses the property for an unstipulated purpose causing deterioration or fails to use it properly. (Lawphil)
A good termination clause should state:
- What counts as default
- How many days the tenant has to cure the default
- How notices must be served
- Whether penalties and attorney’s fees apply
- When the lessor may terminate
- How the tenant must vacate
- What happens to abandoned property
- How unpaid rent and utilities will be computed
Avoid vague threats such as “lessor may immediately evict tenant.” In practice, landlords should be careful with padlocking, cutting utilities, removing property, or using force. Ejectment cases are generally filed in the first-level courts, and the Supreme Court’s Rules on Expedited Procedures include forcible entry and unlawful detainer cases under summary procedure. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)
For unlawful detainer based on nonpayment or breach, Rule 70 practice commonly requires a demand to pay or comply and to vacate. The Supreme Court has discussed the requirement of prior demand and the 15-day period for land or 5-day period for buildings under Rule 70, unless the case falls within recognized exceptions such as expiration of the lease term. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Step-by-Step Guide Before Signing a Commercial Lease
1. Verify the lessor’s right to lease the property
Ask for proof that the lessor owns, administers, or is authorized to lease the space. Depending on the property, this may include:
- Transfer Certificate of Title or Condominium Certificate of Title
- Tax declaration
- Contract with the building owner
- Authority from co-owners
- Special Power of Attorney
- Board or secretary’s certificate
- Property management authority
If the lessor is not the registered owner, do not rely on verbal assurances alone.
2. Inspect the space with your intended business in mind
Check whether the space can support your actual operations. A food business may need water pressure, drainage, exhaust, grease trap, fire safety clearance, and waste disposal. A clinic may need permits and layout requirements. A warehouse may need truck access and floor loading capacity.
Take photos and videos before turnover. Attach a condition report to the contract or have both parties sign a punch list.
3. Confirm permit feasibility before heavy spending
Many tenants sign quickly, pay deposit, renovate, and only then discover that the space is not suitable for their permit. Before paying major sums, check with the barangay, city or municipal business permit office, building administration, and Bureau of Fire Protection requirements.
For businesses with special regulations, such as restaurants, pharmacies, clinics, schools, pawnshops, money service businesses, or alcohol-related businesses, permit feasibility should be handled before major fit-out expenses.
4. Put all money terms in one section
Rent disputes often happen because the contract scatters payment terms across several clauses. Put all money obligations in a table or one clear section:
- Monthly rent
- VAT
- Withholding tax
- Association dues
- Utilities
- Parking
- Security deposit
- Advance rent
- Penalties
- Fit-out charges
- Notarial fee
- Documentary Stamp Tax
5. Sign multiple originals and notarize
Prepare enough originals for:
- Lessor
- Lessee
- Notary
- Building administration, if needed
- Bank, permit office, or other institution, if needed
Each signing party should initial every page and sign the acknowledgment page before the notary.
6. Pay Documentary Stamp Tax if applicable
Lease agreements are generally subject to Documentary Stamp Tax under Section 194 of the Tax Code, as amended by the TRAIN Law and implemented in Revenue Regulations No. 4-2018. The rate stated in the regulation is ₱6.00 for the first ₱2,000, or fractional part, plus ₱2.00 for every ₱1,000, or fractional part, in excess of the first ₱2,000 for each year of the lease term. (Supreme Court E-Library)
BIR Form No. 2000 is the Monthly Documentary Stamp Tax Declaration/Return, and BIR’s form guidance states that the return is filed within five days after the close of the month when the taxable document was made, signed, issued, accepted, or transferred. (Bureau of Internal Revenue)
For a small commercial lease, parties often agree who will shoulder DST and notarial fees. If the contract is silent, Article 1657 of the Civil Code says the lessee is obliged to pay expenses for the deed of lease. (Lawphil)
Practical Checklist of Documents
| Purpose | Common Documents |
|---|---|
| Prove lessor’s authority | Title, tax declaration, SPA, board resolution, secretary’s certificate, property management authority |
| Prove lessee’s identity or authority | Government ID, DTI certificate for sole proprietors, SEC documents for corporations, secretary’s certificate |
| Identify the space | Unit layout, floor plan, vicinity map, photos, turnover checklist |
| Support permits | Lease contract, notarized authorization, barangay clearance, occupancy documents, building admin clearance |
| Tax compliance | TIN, BIR registration details, official receipts or invoices, BIR Form 2000 proof if DST is paid |
| Security deposit refund | Final utility bills, clearance from building admin, key turnover acknowledgment, restoration checklist |
Common Problems in Philippine Commercial Leases
The tenant signs before checking permits
This is common with food carts, salons, clinics, and small restaurants. The tenant pays deposit and renovation costs, then discovers the LGU or building will not allow the intended use.
A practical solution is a permit clause stating that if the tenant is denied required permits despite timely and complete application, the parties will agree on cancellation, refund, or conversion of the lease start date.
The lease says “one year renewable” but does not explain renewal
“Renewable” does not automatically mean the tenant can force another year at the same rate. The clause should say:
- Who has the option to renew
- When written notice must be given
- Whether rent will increase
- Whether renewal needs a new contract
- Whether the lessor can refuse renewal
The security deposit is treated as last month’s rent
Many tenants assume they can stop paying near the end because the lessor holds a deposit. Lessors usually object because the deposit is meant to cover damage, utilities, and unpaid charges after turnover. The contract should expressly state whether the deposit can or cannot be applied to rent.
The tenant renovates without written approval
Commercial tenants often install partitions, signage, plumbing, air-conditioning, exhaust, kitchen equipment, or electrical upgrades. Without written approval, the lessor may later require removal or restoration at the tenant’s cost.
A good lease requires written plans, approval before work starts, permits where needed, and a rule on who owns improvements after termination.
The lessor sells the property during the lease
Article 1648 of the Civil Code says every lease of real estate may be recorded in the Registry of Property, and unless recorded, it is not binding upon third persons. Article 1676 also gives rules on a buyer’s ability to terminate an unrecorded lease, subject to exceptions such as stipulation or the buyer’s knowledge of the lease. (Lawphil)
For ordinary short-term leases, registration is not common. For long-term, high-value, or location-critical commercial leases, annotation or registration should be considered in the drafting stage.
The tenant is a foreigner or foreign-owned company
Foreigners may lease commercial space in the Philippines, but leasing is not the same as owning land. The 1987 Constitution restricts transfer or conveyance of private land to those qualified to acquire or hold lands of the public domain, subject to limited exceptions. (Lawphil)
For foreign investors leasing private land for approved investments, Republic Act No. 12252 amended the Investors’ Lease Act and allows an aggregate lease period of up to 99 years, subject to the law’s conditions. (Lawphil)
For a simple office, shop, or mall unit lease, the more practical issues are usually identity, authority to sign, business registration, visa or corporate structure, tax registration, and whether the business activity is allowed for foreign ownership under Philippine law.
If a party signs abroad, the document may need proper foreign notarization and apostille or authentication depending on where it was executed and where it will be used. The DFA Apostille office notes that foreign documents should be attested first by the issuing country’s embassy or consulate for certain certification processes, and Philippine apostille services apply to Philippine public documents for use abroad. (Apostille Philippines)
Simple Commercial Lease Contract Outline
A practical simple commercial lease in the Philippines may follow this structure:
Parties Full names, addresses, civil status if individuals, corporate details if entities, and authority of representatives.
Leased Premises Exact address, unit number, floor area, inclusions, exclusions, and attached layout or photos.
Purpose Specific business use and prohibition on other uses without written consent.
Term Start date, end date, turnover date, fit-out period, and renewal terms.
Rent and Taxes Monthly rent, due date, payment method, VAT treatment, withholding tax treatment, invoices or receipts.
Deposit and Advance Rent Amount, purpose, application, refund timeline, and allowed deductions.
Utilities and Charges Electricity, water, internet, common charges, association dues, garbage, and other fees.
Repairs and Maintenance Lessor’s repairs, tenant’s repairs, urgent repairs, and damage caused by tenant’s operations.
Improvements and Signage Approval process, permits, ownership of improvements, removal, and restoration.
Rules and Compliance LGU permits, fire safety, sanitation, building rules, noise, waste, and operating hours.
Assignment and Sublease Whether allowed, prohibited, or subject to prior written consent.
Default and Termination Late payment, violation, notice period, cure period, termination, penalties, and turnover.
Notices Addresses, email, registered mail, personal delivery, and when notice is considered received.
Dispute Process Barangay conciliation if required, venue, court, and attorney’s fees if awarded.
Signatures and Acknowledgment Signatures, witnesses, notarial acknowledgment, IDs, and document details.
What Happens If the Tenant Stops Paying Rent?
For nonpayment, the usual practical sequence is:
- Review the lease for grace periods, penalties, and notice requirements.
- Send a written demand to pay and vacate or comply and vacate, if required.
- Go through barangay conciliation if the parties and dispute fall within Katarungang Pambarangay rules.
- If unresolved, file an unlawful detainer case in the proper first-level court.
- Present the lease, proof of default, demand letters, receipts, account statement, and proof of service.
Supreme Court Administrative Circular No. 14-93 explains that prior barangay conciliation is a pre-condition for many disputes, with exceptions such as disputes involving juridical entities like corporations or partnerships, parties residing in different cities or municipalities, or real properties located in different cities or municipalities unless the parties agree to submit to the Lupon. (Lawphil)
The Supreme Court’s Rules on Expedited Procedures include forcible entry and unlawful detainer cases under summary procedure. They also increased the small claims threshold to ₱1,000,000 and expressly include money owed under contracts of lease among claims that may fall under small claims, subject to the rules. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a commercial lease contract in the Philippines need to be notarized?
Not always for validity between the parties, but notarization is highly practical. It helps prove execution, is often required for permits or institutional requirements, and is usually needed if the lease will be registered or relied on as a public document.
Can a landlord increase rent anytime for a commercial space?
Only if the contract allows it or the parties agree. Unlike covered residential leases, commercial leases are mainly governed by the Civil Code and the contract terms. The lease should state the rent escalation clearly, such as 5% annually starting on the second year.
Who pays Documentary Stamp Tax on a commercial lease?
The parties may agree who pays. If the contract is silent, Article 1657 of the Civil Code states that the lessee pays the expenses for the deed of lease. In practice, some lessors and tenants split notarial and DST costs, but that should be written.
Can the tenant sublease the commercial space?
Yes, if the lease does not expressly prohibit subleasing. Article 1650 of the Civil Code allows subleasing when there is no express prohibition, but the original lessee remains responsible to the lessor. Assignment is different: under Article 1649, the lessee generally cannot assign the lease without the lessor’s consent unless the contract says otherwise. (Lawphil)
What if the lease term expired but the tenant stayed?
If the tenant continues using the space for 15 days after the end of the contract with the lessor’s acquiescence and without prior notice to the contrary, Article 1670 of the Civil Code may create an implied new lease. This is why lessors who do not want renewal should send a clear written notice before or immediately upon expiration. (Lawphil)
Can the landlord padlock the premises if the tenant does not pay?
A lease may contain remedies for default, but lessors should be careful with self-help measures such as padlocking, cutting utilities, or removing property. Article 1673 speaks of judicial ejectment for grounds such as expiration, nonpayment, or violation of lease conditions. In practice, written demand and proper court procedure reduce the risk of counterclaims and conflict. (Lawphil)
Can a foreigner lease commercial space in the Philippines?
Yes. A foreigner may lease commercial space, but leasing is different from owning land. The Constitution restricts private land ownership by foreigners, while special laws such as RA 12252 govern long-term private land leases by qualified foreign investors. For ordinary shop or office leases, the key issues are usually authority to sign, business registration, taxes, permits, and foreign ownership limits for the intended business activity. (Lawphil)
What should a tenant check before paying deposit?
The tenant should check ownership or authority of the lessor, permitted use, building rules, zoning, business permit feasibility, utility capacity, repair condition, VAT and tax treatment, parking, signage, and whether there are unpaid charges or restrictions affecting the unit.
What is the safest lease term for a small business?
For a new small business, one year with a clear renewal option is common because it limits risk while giving the business time to test the location. For businesses with heavy fit-out costs, such as restaurants or clinics, a longer term may be needed to recover investment, but renewal, rent escalation, early termination, and restoration clauses should be carefully written.
Key Takeaways
- A simple commercial space lease contract in the Philippines should be clear, written, and specific.
- The Civil Code governs the basic rights and obligations of lessors and lessees.
- A lease longer than one year should be in writing to avoid Statute of Frauds problems.
- Notarization is not always what makes the lease valid, but it is very useful for evidence, permits, registration, and practical enforcement.
- State whether rent is VAT-inclusive or VAT-exclusive, and clarify withholding tax, receipts, utilities, association dues, and common charges.
- Security deposit and advance rent are different; the contract should say how each is applied and refunded.
- Subleasing is allowed if not expressly prohibited, while assignment generally needs the lessor’s consent unless the contract says otherwise.
- Do not rely on verbal promises about permits, repairs, renewal, or refund of deposit; put them in the lease.
- For nonpayment or breach, written demand, barangay conciliation when required, and proper court procedure are safer than self-help eviction.
- Foreigners may lease commercial space, but foreign land ownership restrictions and business ownership rules should be considered when the lease is tied to a foreign-owned business.