There's a version of growth that feels completely under control — new locations opening on schedule, revenues climbing, the team expanding, momentum building. And then there's what's happening in the background: occupancy costs rising faster than anyone expected, for reasons nobody can quite explain.
This is one of the most consistent patterns we see in multi-unit operators who are scaling well by most measures. Growth is happening. But occupancy cost management hasn't kept pace with it. And by the time someone notices, the gap has been building for a while.
Every new location adds more than just rent to the equation. It adds a new landlord relationship, a new set of lease terms, a new CAM exposure, a new set of critical dates, a new AP obligation. At five locations, this is genuinely manageable. At 25, it starts getting complicated. At 50 or 100, it becomes genuinely complex — and the systems and processes that worked at 25 are usually not equipped to handle it.
The math is simple: more locations equals more occupancy cost surface area. But the management capacity required to keep that surface area clean doesn't scale linearly with headcount or software subscriptions. It requires intentional process design — and most operators don't make that investment until the problem is already visible.
Three Things That Happen Simultaneously When Portfolios Grow Fast
These three things happen at the same time, which means the problem compounds. Data gets worse as volume increases and as alignment decreases. And by the time someone looks closely at the occupancy cost line, there's usually more than one issue contributing to it.
If organic growth creates complexity, acquisition accelerates it dramatically. When you acquire a portfolio, you're also acquiring however that portfolio was managed — which is almost never to the same standard as your own.
Incomplete lease abstracts. Unchallenged CAM histories. Undocumented amendments. Missing critical date tracking. These are the lease management debts that acquisitions transfer along with the P&L. And they don't always show up on the balance sheet — they show up in operational performance six to twelve months after close, when someone finally looks at what was actually inherited.
High-performing operators at scale share a common characteristic: they treat lease operations as a function, not an afterthought. That means they have:
This isn't a technology checklist. It's an operational model. And it scales because it's designed to — because the people and processes behind it are built for volume, not just for managing a handful of leases.
Growth doesn't have to mean occupancy cost leakage. But it does require that lease operations scale with the business — and that almost never happens automatically.
If you're in growth mode and you haven't recently asked 'is our lease management capability growing as fast as our portfolio?', it's worth asking. The answer might be more revealing than you expect.
What causes occupancy costs to rise during portfolio growth?
Each new location adds CAM obligations, critical dates, and AP touchpoints. Without intentional process design, that volume outpaces the team's ability to manage it accurately.
What is CAM exposure?
CAM (Common Area Maintenance) charges are landlord-billed costs tenants are contractually required to share. At scale, even a small error rate across many locations adds up to significant financial leakage.
How do acquisitions affect occupancy cost management?
Acquisitions transfer not just properties but the lease management practices behind them — often incomplete or inconsistent — which typically surface as financial exposure six to twelve months post-close.
Is this a technology problem or a process problem?
Primarily process. Operators who manage occupancy costs well at scale have consistent operational models keeping AP, real estate, and finance aligned — not necessarily the most sophisticated software.