A Private Client Guide for Business Owners and Landlords in Southern California
The close of the year is traditionally a time for reflection and optimism. Yet, for many high-net-worth business owners across Southern California, 2025 has been a year of relentless disruption—a prolonged headwind that demands more than just endurance; it demands strategic recalibration.
From the devastating LA wildfires and ensuing reconstruction delays to market shocks from import tariffs, persistent price inflation, policy-driven enforcement actions including significant ice deportation raids and subsequent city-wide protests and curfews, and a general softening of the labor market (with job growth near Great Recession lows), the financial environment has tested operational resilience like few years before.
In a climate where high-productivity sectors are thriving, but others (like retail, leisure, hospitality, and construction) are struggling with elevated input costs and subdued consumer sentiment, many businesses are facing an existential cash flow gap—a gap often dominated by commercial real estate costs.
As a strategic advisor to businesses, we view rent abatement not as a plea for mercy, but as a sophisticated tool for capital preservation and a necessary foundation for a profitable future. This guide provides a comprehensive framework for structuring the strategic ask, designed for both business owners seeking relief and landlords preserving asset value.
I. The Strategic Rationale: Why Abatement is a Holistic Win
For a high-net-worth client, the objective of abatement is not just saving cash this month, but demonstrating control and foresight to the entire business ecosystem (landlords, creditors, partners).
A. For the Business Owner: Capital Preservation as Strategy
In times of economic bifurcation, the goal must be to extend runway and preserve capital for high-ROI investments (e.g., technology, essential staffing). Rent abatement achieves this without diluting equity or incurring debt.
- Avoid Bankruptcy Costs: The cost to a landlord of a tenant vacating the premises (re-listing, brokerage fees, build-out, vacancy period) can easily exceed 6–12 months of abated or reduced rent.
- Maintain Operational Stability: A proactive reduction preserves the tenant’s ability to pay other operational expenses, ensuring the business survives to pay rent in the future.
- Liquidity Management: Freeing up cash flow—even for a short period—provides a flexible, high-impact form of internal financing.
B. For the Landlord: Protecting the Asset and the Relationship
A sophisticated landlord understands that a stable tenant, even one temporarily paying reduced rent, is far more valuable than a vacant property.
- Net Present Value (NPV): The NPV of a short-term reduction is almost always higher than the NPV of a year-long vacancy followed by a costly re-tenanting process.
- Relationship as Value: Keeping a good tenant (especially a high-credit tenant that is simply liquidity-constrained) preserves the reputation and long-term stability of the commercial property.
- California Regulatory Risk: New legislation, such as the Commercial Tenant Protection Act (SB 1103), while targeting smaller tenants, demonstrates a clear trend toward increased tenant protections in California.1 Proactive negotiation insulates landlords from potential future regulatory shocks.
II. The Comprehensive Strategy: How to Structure the Ask
The negotiation is not about hardship; it is about proposing a mutually beneficial financial restructuring. Successful negotiations are built on transparency, data, and a clear proposal structure.
A. Phase 1: Preparation and Data Modeling (The “Why”)
You cannot ask for a discount; you must present a detailed financial model for a restructuring.
- Quantify the Impact: Detail the direct, disruptive revenue loss. Link the current slowdown not just to general economic factors, but to specific regional events (e.g., loss of foot traffic due to curfews, supply chain disruptions from tariff-induced stockpiling, or direct damage/closure from wildfires).
- Model Scenarios (NPV Analysis): Present the landlord with a clear, data-driven choice. Model two scenarios side-by-side:
- Scenario A (Restructure): $\text{6 months of 50% rent abatement} \implies \text{100% rent repayment over the following 18 months}$ (or term extension).
- Scenario B (Default/Vacancy): $\text{Tenant Default} \implies \text{Cost of eviction} + \text{12-month vacancy} + \text{Brokerage/T.I. costs}$.
- The NPV of Scenario A must demonstrably exceed the NPV of Scenario B.
- The “Good Guy” Guarantee: If you have a personal guarantee (common for private clients), leverage it. Offer to keep the personal guarantee active in exchange for the abatement, proving your long-term commitment.
B. Phase 2: Framing the Proposal (The “Ask”)
Frame the request in terms of preserving the landlord’s asset and the lease’s value, not saving your company.
| Abatement Option | Description | Landlord Benefit |
| Rent Deferral | Rent is reduced now (e.g., 50% for 6 months) and the deferred amount is paid back with interest over the remainder of the lease term. | Maintains the face value of the lease; simply restructures the payment timeline. |
| Rent Abatement for Lease Extension | Rent is reduced now (e.g., 50% for 6 months) in exchange for a mandatory, signed 5-year extension at current or escalated rates. | Locks in long-term occupancy and cash flow, which immediately increases the asset’s valuation. |
| Percentage Rent Model | Switch temporarily to a “Percentage Rent” model where the base rent is sharply reduced, but the tenant pays a percentage of its gross monthly revenue. | Landlord participates in any immediate upside if the business recovers sooner than expected. |
C. Phase 3: Documentation and Legal Ratification
All agreements must be legally documented to avoid future disputes and to properly reflect the true value of the lease for both parties’ accounting purposes.
- Formal Lease Amendment: The final agreement must be ratified as a formal Lease Amendment. Avoid informal side letters.
- Waiver of Defenses: Landlords will require a clause stating the tenant waives any prior claims or legal defenses related to the initial hardship in exchange for the abatement.
III. Leveraging Grants & Non-Recourse Capital
While the rent strategy is internal, high-net-worth clients must also be aware of external opportunities that can free up operational cash flow.
A. Los Angeles County Resiliency Fund
Businesses in LA County that have been affected by economic disruption, workforce loss, or property damage (including those operating in areas subject to curfews due to immigration enforcement events) may have been eligible for the Small Business Resiliency Fund (SBRF), which provided grants up to $5,000. 2While the deadline for the recent round has passed, this highlights the critical need for constant monitoring of local county and city programs.
B. Tax Credits and State Incentives
Rather than direct grants, your most powerful source of capital preservation comes from leveraging state-level incentives.
- California Competes Tax Credit: Negotiated, discretionary tax credit available for businesses that are expanding or maintaining a presence in California.
- Research & Development (R&D) Tax Credit: A critical, often underutilized federal and state credit for companies that develop new products or processes.
- Sales and Use Tax Exemptions: Certain manufacturers may qualify for exemptions on manufacturing and R&D equipment.3
By effectively maximizing these credits, your effective tax rate drops, allowing you to reallocate operational capital directly to cover fixed costs like rent.
Strategic Action: Secure Your Foundation for 2026
The complexity of commercial lease restructuring demands a data-driven, legally precise approach that preserves the integrity of your personal guarantee and the valuation of your enterprise.
If your business is facing critical cash flow issues due to recent market disruptions, do not wait until Q1 to act. Our Private Client advisory team specializes in structuring and negotiating these complex commercial real estate solutions as part of a holistic wealth strategy.
Schedule a confidential, year-end strategic review to secure your business’s financial foundation for the new year.
About Arrache Private Client
Arrache Private Client (Arrache PC) serves as a dedicated strategic resource for high-net-worth (HNW) families and business owners. Our approach is that of a “Wealth Architect,” providing sophisticated, authoritative, and holistic strategy across three core pillars: Private Client Real Estate, Corporate Advisory (M&A/Exits), and High-Level Tax Strategy. We look beyond compliance to deliver the why and the complex strategies necessary to build and sustain inter-generational wealth.

About the Author
Michael R. Arrache, CPA & Realtor®
As a Certified Public Accountant (CPA), Enrolled Agent (EA), and licensed Realtor®, I am a tax expert who works closely with small business owners and real estate investors. My firm, Arrache Private Client, provides a range of specialized tax strategy, wealth preservation, and legacy planning for for real estate and business owners. With over 15 years of experience, my mission is to help clients achieve their financial and business goals by providing strategic advice and tailored solutions. I write these articles to serve as a starting point to guide you through the business or real estate process, and I am committed to providing the strategic guidance you need to help preserve and grow your wealth.

