Triple Net Lease (NNN): The Complete Guide for Property Investors
A triple net lease (often abbreviated as NNN) is one of the most popular investment structures in commercial real estate. For investors seeking stable, predictable income with minimal landlord responsibilities, NNN properties represent the closest thing to truly passive real estate investing.
In a triple net lease, the tenant pays for virtually all operating expenses — property taxes, insurance, and maintenance — on top of base rent. The landlord collects a check each month with almost no management obligation. It's why NNN investing attracts everyone from first-time commercial investors to billion-dollar REITs.
This guide covers everything you need to know: how triple net leases work, the pros and cons, how to evaluate NNN deals, tenant credit quality, cap rates, and common pitfalls to avoid.
What Is a Triple Net Lease?
A triple net lease is a commercial lease agreement where the tenant is responsible for three major expense categories in addition to base rent:
- Property taxes — The tenant pays all real estate taxes directly or reimburses the landlord
- Insurance — The tenant carries and pays for property insurance (building coverage, liability, etc.)
- Maintenance — The tenant covers all maintenance, repairs, and sometimes even structural/roof expenses
This stands in contrast to a gross lease, where the landlord pays all operating expenses and wraps them into a higher rent amount. With a triple net lease, the landlord's income is "net" of all major expenses — hence the name.
Types of Net Leases
There are actually several variations of net leases, and the terminology matters:
| Lease Type | Tenant Pays | Landlord Pays |
|---|---|---|
| Gross Lease | Base rent only | Taxes, insurance, maintenance |
| Single Net (N) | Base rent + property taxes | Insurance, maintenance |
| Double Net (NN) | Base rent + taxes + insurance | Maintenance |
| Triple Net (NNN) | Base rent + taxes + insurance + maintenance | Roof/structure (sometimes) |
| Absolute Net (Bondable) | Everything — including roof and structure | Nothing |
A true absolute net lease (also called a bondable lease) shifts every conceivable expense to the tenant, including roof replacement and structural repairs. These are the gold standard for passive income. Most NNN leases fall somewhere between triple net and absolute net — always read the lease carefully to understand exactly who pays for what.
💡 Key distinction: In most NNN leases, the landlord retains responsibility for roof and structural repairs. In absolute/bondable NNN leases, even those costs shift to the tenant. The cap rate difference between the two can be 25-75 basis points.
How Triple Net Leases Work in Practice
Here's what a typical NNN lease looks like from the investor's perspective:
The Income Side
Your tenant (say, a Walgreens pharmacy) signs a 15-year NNN lease at $150,000/year base rent. This amount is yours — no deductions for operating expenses because the tenant handles all three nets directly.
Rent Escalations
Most NNN leases include built-in rent increases, typically structured as:
- Fixed increases: 1.5-2% per year or 7.5-10% every 5 years
- CPI-linked: Tied to Consumer Price Index, often with a floor and ceiling
- Flat (no increases): Less common and less desirable — your real income shrinks with inflation
Lease Term and Options
NNN leases typically run 10-25 years with renewal options. A common structure is a 15-year primary term with three 5-year renewal options, giving a potential 30-year tenancy. Longer lease terms mean more predictable income and higher property values.
A Real NNN Example
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | $2,500,000 |
| Annual base rent (NNN) | $150,000 |
| Cap rate | 6.0% |
| Lease term remaining | 12 years |
| Rent escalations | 10% every 5 years |
| Annual expenses (landlord) | ~$0 (NNN) |
| Property taxes (paid by tenant) | $30,000/year |
| Insurance (paid by tenant) | $8,000/year |
| Maintenance (paid by tenant) | $12,000/year |
| Net income to landlord | $150,000/year |
Compare that to a multifamily property purchased at a 6% gross cap rate — after paying taxes, insurance, maintenance, management fees, and vacancy costs, your net income might be 40-50% of gross rent. With NNN, what you see is what you get.
Tenant vs. Landlord Responsibilities
One of the biggest advantages (and potential pitfalls) of NNN investing is the clear division of responsibilities. Here's a detailed breakdown:
What the Tenant Handles
- Property tax payments — Paid directly to the municipality or reimbursed to the landlord
- Building insurance — Tenant carries the policy and names the landlord as additional insured
- All interior maintenance — HVAC, plumbing, electrical, fixtures, equipment
- Exterior maintenance — Parking lot, landscaping, signage, snow removal
- Compliance with laws — ADA compliance, environmental regulations, building codes
- Utilities — All utility costs for the property
What the Landlord Handles
- Roof and structural repairs — In standard NNN (not absolute net)
- Mortgage payments — Obviously the landlord's responsibility
- Income tax — On the rental income received
- Oversight — Ensuring the tenant maintains the property per lease terms
🔑 Pro tip: Always negotiate for "absolute net" or "bondable" lease terms where the tenant handles roof and structural repairs. This eliminates the one remaining variable expense that can surprise NNN landlords — a $150K roof replacement on a property generating $120K in annual rent.
Pros and Cons of Triple Net Lease Investing
Advantages
1. Truly Passive Income
NNN properties are the closest thing to a bond in real estate. You collect rent checks without managing tenants, handling maintenance calls, or dealing with property management companies. Many NNN investors never visit their properties.
2. Predictable Cash Flow
With a creditworthy tenant on a long-term lease, your income is as predictable as it gets in real estate. No vacancy surprises, no fluctuating expenses. This makes NNN properties ideal for retirement income, 1031 exchanges, and portfolio diversification.
3. No Management Required
Unlike residential rental properties, you don't need a property manager. The tenant handles everything. Your "management" consists of cashing rent checks and reviewing annual expense reports.
4. Hedge Against Expense Inflation
Since the tenant pays taxes, insurance, and maintenance, rising costs don't eat into your returns. If property taxes double, that's the tenant's problem — your net income stays the same.
5. Bankable Financing
Lenders love NNN properties because the income stream is predictable and backed by creditworthy tenants. You can often get favorable loan terms — lower rates, higher LTV, and interest-only periods.
Disadvantages
1. Lower Returns Than Active Investing
You're trading management headaches for lower returns. NNN cap rates are typically 4.5-7%, compared to 8-12% for value-add multifamily or BRRRR properties. The tradeoff is less risk and less work.
2. Tenant Concentration Risk
With a single-tenant NNN property, you're 100% reliant on one tenant. If they go bankrupt or don't renew, you go from full occupancy to zero overnight. This is the biggest risk in NNN investing.
3. Limited Upside
Unlike value-add properties, there's limited ability to increase income beyond the built-in rent escalations. You can't renovate and raise rents. Your returns are largely locked in at purchase.
4. Residual Value Risk
If your tenant leaves after the lease expires, you may be stuck with a purpose-built building (like a fast-food restaurant) that's difficult to re-tenant. The building was designed for one specific use, and converting it is expensive.
5. Opportunity Cost
Capital tied up in a 5% cap rate NNN property could potentially earn more in a real estate syndication or actively managed portfolio. NNN is about stability, not maximum returns.
Understanding NNN Cap Rates
The capitalization rate (cap rate) is the single most important metric in NNN investing. It represents your annual return on investment if you paid all cash. For a refresher, see our complete cap rate guide.
Cap Rate = Annual Net Operating Income ÷ Purchase Price
In NNN investing, cap rates vary dramatically based on several factors:
| Factor | Lower Cap Rate (Higher Price) | Higher Cap Rate (Lower Price) |
|---|---|---|
| Tenant credit | Investment-grade (Walgreens, McDonald's) | Non-credit (local franchisee, small business) |
| Lease term | 15+ years remaining | Under 5 years remaining |
| Location | Major metro, high-traffic | Rural, secondary market |
| Rent escalations | 2%+ annual increases | Flat or minimal increases |
| Lease type | Absolute net / bondable | Modified net (landlord has expenses) |
| Building condition | New construction | Older building, deferred maintenance |
Current NNN Cap Rate Ranges (2026)
| Property Type | Typical Cap Rate Range |
|---|---|
| Investment-grade pharmacy (Walgreens, CVS) | 4.5% – 5.5% |
| Fast food (McDonald's, Chick-fil-A) | 4.0% – 5.5% |
| Dollar stores (Dollar General, Dollar Tree) | 5.5% – 7.0% |
| Auto parts (AutoZone, O'Reilly) | 5.0% – 6.5% |
| Convenience stores (7-Eleven, Wawa) | 4.5% – 6.0% |
| Medical/dental offices | 5.5% – 7.0% |
| Non-credit local tenants | 7.0% – 9.0%+ |
A lower cap rate means you're paying more per dollar of income — but you're getting a more secure income stream. Think of it like the bond market: Treasury bonds pay less than junk bonds because they're safer.
Credit Tenant vs. Non-Credit Tenant NNN
This distinction is fundamental to NNN investing and affects everything from pricing to financing.
Credit Tenants (Investment-Grade)
A credit tenant is a company with an investment-grade credit rating from S&P, Moody's, or Fitch. These are large, publicly traded companies with strong balance sheets:
- Walgreens Boots Alliance (BBB rating)
- McDonald's Corporation (BBB+ rating)
- Dollar General (BBB rating)
- 7-Eleven (AA rating)
- FedEx (BBB rating)
- Starbucks (BBB+ rating)
Why it matters: An investment-grade tenant is extremely unlikely to default on their lease. The rent is essentially guaranteed by a company with billions in revenue. Lenders will offer better terms, and the property will be easier to sell.
Non-Credit Tenants
A non-credit tenant is any tenant without an investment-grade rating. This includes:
- Local franchisees (a person who owns 3 Subway locations)
- Regional businesses (a dental practice or medical office)
- Small national chains without public credit ratings
- Private companies
Why it matters: Non-credit tenants carry higher default risk. A local franchisee with 5 locations is far more likely to close than Walgreens corporate. However, non-credit NNN properties trade at higher cap rates (7-9%), which means higher returns if the tenant performs.
💡 Many experienced NNN investors deliberately target non-credit tenants in strong locations. The logic: even if the tenant fails, the location's fundamentals (traffic count, visibility, demographics) make it easy to re-lease. You earn a higher return during tenancy and have a solid fallback if it ends.
How to Evaluate NNN Properties
Before you buy a triple net lease property, here's the due diligence framework you should follow:
1. Analyze the Tenant
- Credit rating: Is this an investment-grade company? If not, what's their financial health?
- Industry trends: Is the tenant's industry growing or declining? (Example: pharmacy retail is under pressure from online pharmacies and PBM changes)
- Unit economics: Is this specific location profitable for the tenant? A profitable store is far less likely to close.
- Guarantor: Is the lease guaranteed by the corporate parent, or just the local franchisee? Corporate guarantees are much stronger.
2. Evaluate the Lease
- Remaining term: Longer is better. Under 5 years remaining = significantly higher risk.
- Rent escalations: What are the built-in increases? Flat leases lose real value to inflation.
- Renewal options: How many options exist, and at what rent? Strong renewal options add value.
- Expense responsibilities: Is it true NNN or modified net? Who pays for roof and structure?
- Termination clauses: Can the tenant exit early? Under what conditions? Kick-out clauses are deal-killers for some investors.
3. Assess the Location
- Traffic counts: Higher traffic = more valuable location, easier to re-tenant
- Visibility and access: Corner lot, signalized intersection, easy ingress/egress
- Demographics: Population growth, household income, population density
- Competing locations: Is the area saturated with similar businesses?
- Zoning: What alternative uses does the zoning allow if the tenant leaves?
4. Inspect the Building
Even though the tenant handles maintenance, you still own the building. Get a Phase I environmental assessment, roof inspection, and general building inspection. Deferred maintenance becomes your problem when the lease expires or the tenant leaves.
5. Run the Numbers
Use our rental property investment calculator to model the deal with different scenarios. Key metrics to calculate:
- Cap rate: What return are you buying?
- Cash-on-cash return: After debt service, what's your actual cash yield?
- Debt coverage ratio: Does the rent comfortably cover the mortgage? (Target 1.25x+)
- IRR: What's your total return including appreciation and rent escalations?
Single-Tenant vs. Multi-Tenant NNN
NNN investing broadly falls into two categories, each with distinct risk profiles:
Single-Tenant NNN
One building, one tenant. Examples: a standalone Walgreens, a Dollar General, a Chick-fil-A.
- Pros: Simple to analyze, truly passive, easy financing, clean 1031 exchange target
- Cons: Binary occupancy risk (100% or 0%), tenant-specific location risk, limited diversification
- Best for: Investors seeking simplicity and passive income
Multi-Tenant NNN (Strip Centers)
A small retail center with multiple NNN tenants. Example: a 15,000 SF strip center with Dollar Tree, Great Clips, a pizza restaurant, and a dentist.
- Pros: Diversified tenant base (losing one tenant doesn't mean zero income), higher cap rates, more management control
- Cons: More management-intensive, higher vacancy risk on individual units, more complex leasing
- Best for: Investors comfortable with light management who want higher returns and diversification
| Factor | Single-Tenant NNN | Multi-Tenant NNN |
|---|---|---|
| Management effort | Nearly zero | Light-moderate |
| Typical cap rate | 4.5% – 7% | 6% – 9% |
| Vacancy risk | All or nothing | Gradual, diversified |
| Financing | Easier (predictable income) | Standard commercial terms |
| 1031 exchange suitability | Excellent | Good |
Best Industries for NNN Investing
Not all NNN tenants are created equal. Here are the most common industries and what makes each attractive (or risky):
Pharmacies (Walgreens, CVS)
Long the gold standard of NNN investing — investment-grade tenants with 20-25 year leases. However, the pharmacy retail model is under pressure from mail-order prescriptions, Amazon Pharmacy, and PBM reimbursement squeezes. Walgreens has been closing hundreds of stores. Approach with caution and focus on strong locations.
Fast Food and QSR (McDonald's, Chick-fil-A, Taco Bell)
Excellent NNN tenants. Fast food is recession-resistant, locations are high-traffic, and corporate-guaranteed leases are common. Chick-fil-A and McDonald's ground leases (where you own the land, not the building) are among the most sought-after NNN investments. Cap rates are often the lowest in the space (4-5%).
Dollar Stores (Dollar General, Dollar Tree, Family Dollar)
The workhorses of NNN investing. Dollar General alone operates 20,000+ locations and continues to expand aggressively. These are typically in rural/suburban areas with lower land costs, yielding higher cap rates (5.5-7%). Lease terms are usually 15 years. The risk: locations are often in lower-income areas with limited re-tenanting options.
Auto Parts (AutoZone, O'Reilly, Advance Auto Parts)
Strong NNN tenants with investment-grade credit. The auto parts industry benefits from an aging US vehicle fleet. Cap rates are moderate (5-6.5%), and locations are typically on high-traffic commercial corridors that re-tenant well.
Medical and Dental
Healthcare tenants provide recession-resistant income. Dental practices and medical offices often sign long-term NNN leases. The downside: these are usually non-credit tenants (individual practices), so you're relying on the specific operator rather than a corporate guarantee.
Convenience Stores and Gas Stations
7-Eleven, Wawa, and major gas station brands offer strong NNN deals. However, environmental liability is a significant concern — underground storage tanks can create costly contamination issues. Always require a Phase I (and potentially Phase II) environmental assessment.
Financing NNN Properties
NNN properties generally have favorable financing options due to their predictable income streams. For a broader overview, see our rental property financing guide.
| Loan Type | Typical Terms | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| CMBS (conduit) | 25-30 year amortization, 5-10 year term, 65-75% LTV | Credit-tenant deals $2M+ |
| Bank/credit union | 20-25 year amortization, 5-7 year term, 70-80% LTV | Smaller deals, local relationships |
| SBA 504 | 25 year fully amortizing, 90% LTV | Owner-occupied or small investor deals |
| Life company | 25-30 year amortization, 10-year term, 65% LTV | Premium credit-tenant deals $5M+ |
| Seller financing | Negotiable | When traditional financing is difficult |
Many NNN investors use DSCR loans that qualify based on the property's income rather than the borrower's personal income. This makes it possible to scale a NNN portfolio without W-2 income limitations.
NNN Properties and 1031 Exchanges
Triple net lease properties are the most popular 1031 exchange replacement property for a reason: investors who sell an actively managed property (like an apartment building) often want to "exchange into" something more passive. A NNN property lets them defer capital gains taxes while dramatically reducing management burden.
Common 1031 exchange scenarios involving NNN:
- Apartment building → NNN property: Swap management headaches for passive income
- Short-lease NNN → Long-lease NNN: Reduce risk by extending your income certainty
- Multiple NNN properties → One larger NNN: Consolidate and simplify
- NNN → DST (Delaware Statutory Trust): Go completely passive with fractional NNN ownership
Common Mistakes in NNN Investing
1. Ignoring Lease Expiration Risk
Buying a NNN property with only 3-4 years left on the lease is fundamentally different from buying one with 15 years remaining. As the lease winds down, the property's value shifts from "income stream" to "real estate fundamentals" — and many NNN buildings have limited alternative use value.
2. Overpaying for the Brand
A 4.5% cap rate on a Starbucks might feel safe, but you're paying an enormous premium for that safety. At $3 million purchase price on $135K annual rent, it takes over 22 years to earn your investment back (ignoring financing). Make sure the return justifies the price.
3. Ignoring Location Quality
The tenant may leave eventually. When they do, will the location attract a new tenant? A Dollar General on a rural highway with declining population is a very different proposition than a Dollar General on a growing suburban corridor. Always invest in the real estate, not just the lease.
4. Not Understanding the Lease
The devil is in the lease details. Some "NNN" leases still leave the landlord responsible for significant expenses. Others have early termination clauses, below-market renewal options, or exclusivity provisions that limit re-tenanting. Hire a commercial real estate attorney to review every lease before purchasing.
5. Neglecting Environmental Due Diligence
Gas stations, dry cleaners, and some industrial NNN tenants create environmental contamination risk. A Phase I Environmental Site Assessment is mandatory — and if it flags potential issues, a Phase II (soil and groundwater testing) is essential. Environmental cleanup can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Frequently Asked Questions About Triple Net Leases
What does NNN mean in commercial real estate?
NNN stands for "triple net" and refers to a lease structure where the tenant pays all three major operating expenses — property taxes, insurance, and maintenance — in addition to base rent. The landlord receives "net" income with no deductions for these costs. It's the most common lease type for single-tenant commercial retail properties.
How much can you make from a triple net lease investment?
Returns on NNN investments typically range from 4.5% to 9% cap rate, depending on tenant credit quality, lease term, and location. With financing, cash-on-cash returns often range from 7-12%. For example, a $2M NNN property at a 6% cap rate generates $120,000 in annual net income. With a 30% down payment ($600K) and a 6.5% mortgage, your cash-on-cash return would be approximately 8-9%.
What happens when a NNN lease expires?
When a NNN lease expires, the tenant may exercise renewal options (if they exist) at predetermined or market-rate rent. If the tenant doesn't renew, the landlord must find a new tenant. This is the biggest risk in NNN investing — re-tenanting costs, downtime, and potential building modifications can significantly impact returns. Properties with strong locations, flexible building layouts, and favorable zoning handle lease expirations much better than purpose-built structures in weak locations.
Is triple net lease investing better than owning apartments?
Neither is universally "better" — they serve different investment goals. NNN properties offer passive income, predictability, and simplicity. Apartments typically offer higher returns but require active management (or management fees), deal with tenant turnover, and have more variable expenses. Many investors start with apartments to build wealth through value-add strategies and later exchange into NNN properties for passive income.
Can you use an FHA or residential loan to buy NNN properties?
No. NNN properties are commercial real estate and require commercial financing. This means higher down payments (typically 25-35%), shorter loan terms (5-10 years with 25-year amortization), and qualification based on property income rather than personal income. SBA 504 loans offer up to 90% LTV for qualifying deals, which is the closest you'll get to residential-style leverage in commercial real estate.
What is a ground lease in NNN investing?
A ground lease is when you own only the land and lease it to a tenant who builds and owns the structure. When the lease expires, the building reverts to the landowner. Ground leases are extremely popular with fast-food chains (McDonald's, Chick-fil-A) and offer the ultimate passive investment — you have zero building maintenance responsibility. The tradeoff is lower cap rates and longer lease terms (often 20-50 years).
How do I find triple net lease properties for sale?
The best sources include: LoopNet and Crexi (the two largest commercial real estate listing platforms), The Boulder Group (NNN-focused brokerage with market research), Stan Johnson Company (net lease specialists), and local commercial real estate brokers. For off-market deals, build relationships with 1031 exchange intermediaries who often know sellers before properties hit the market.
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