About this episode
Key Takeaways:LOIs are non-binding but criticalThey set the main business terms (price, timing, responsibilities) before you spend money on attorneys and full contracts.You must clearly state “non-binding”Put non-binding language in multiple places, plus a paragraph saying it is only a basis for preparing a formal contract.Use “and/or affiliated assigns” for the buyerThis lets you assign the contract to a new entity later and helps manage liability without having to rewrite the deal.Due diligence is your escape hatchDuring the DD period, you can terminate for almost any reason and get your earnest money back; after DD, you usually can still walk but lose the deposit.Commercial deals are priced on income and riskYou rely on NOI, actual financials, and realistic rent/expense assumptions, not “price per door” or emotional comps.Landlord–tenant responsibilities must be explicitSpell out who handles roof, structure, HVAC, TIs, fees tied to the tenant’s specific use, and how much the tenant’s costs are capped, to avoid ugly surprises later.