Average CAM-reconciliation overcharge in 2025 NYC office lease audits ran 11.4% across a 212-lease sample per Stratafolio. On a $50,000 annual CAM bill, that's $5,700 per year recoverable. Most leases give you 60 to 90 days from reconciliation receipt to invoke audit rights; after that window closes, no formal dispute is possible.
TL;DR
CAM reconciliation is the year-end true-up of estimated vs actual common area maintenance charges. The landlord computes actual CAM, compares to what you paid via monthly estimates, and bills you for the delta or credits you. It's the single most-overcharged line item in commercial leases per the Stratafolio 2025 NYC audit sample. The five clauses that protect you: audit rights with 60 to 90 day window, controllable expense cap at 5%, capital improvement exclusion or amortization, management fee calculated on CAM costs (not gross rent), and base year reset on renewal.
What CAM reconciliation actually is
The annual mechanics:
- Year start: landlord estimates total CAM for the upcoming year and bills you 1/12 of estimate monthly.
- Year end: landlord computes actual CAM and produces a reconciliation statement (typically delivered Q1 of following year).
- Reconciliation: if actual exceeds estimate, you owe the delta. If actual is below estimate, you get a credit.
- Audit window: 60 to 90 days from receipt of reconciliation, the tenant has the right to audit landlord's books.
- Dispute: if audit reveals overcharges, the tenant negotiates a reduction or escalates to formal dispute.
After the audit window closes, the reconciliation is generally final. This is why the deadline matters.
The five most-overcharged CAM line items
Per the Stratafolio 2025 NYC audit sample (n=212 leases), the five recurring overcharge patterns:
- Management fee on gross rent instead of CAM costs. The single biggest overcharge. A 5% management fee on gross rent (which includes base rent) inflates the fee by 4 to 5x compared to a 10 to 15% fee on CAM costs only. The overcharge can run $2 to $4/SF/yr for Class A office.
- Capital improvements miscoded as CAM. A new HVAC, parking lot resurfacing, or roof replacement gets coded as "repairs and maintenance" rather than capital expenditure. Standard CAM excludes capital improvements unless the lease specifically permits amortization over useful life.
- Admin overhead in excess of cap. Some landlords add a 5% admin overhead on top of the management fee. Total admin/management load above 15% of CAM costs is overcharge territory.
- Affiliate-vendor pricing markup. The landlord's affiliate company provides janitorial or landscaping at above-market rates. Lease should require "competitive bid" or "market rate" pricing language.
- Common-area amenity inflation. Landlord upgrades the lobby coffee bar to a barista program; the cost gets pushed through CAM. Negotiate an exclusion for "discretionary amenity upgrades not approved by tenant majority".
How to audit your reconciliation step-by-step
Step 1: Read the lease's audit rights clause first
Pull your lease and find the "Audit Rights" or "Tenant Right to Audit" section. Note:
- Window for invoking audit (typically 60 or 90 days from reconciliation receipt)
- Format requirements (often in writing, certified mail)
- Cost allocation (typically tenant pays unless overcharge exceeds 5%, then landlord pays)
- Scope (typically last 1 to 3 years; some leases limit to most recent year)
Step 2: Compare actual to budget and to year-over-year
Three quick reads of the reconciliation:
- Actual vs estimate: was actual within 10% of estimate? If actual is 20%+ above estimate without explanation, dig deeper.
- Actual year over year: is total CAM up more than 6 to 8% YoY? If yes, identify the line item driving the increase.
- Per-SF benchmarking: is your CAM/SF in line with regional benchmarks per BOMA Experience Exchange Report? If 20%+ above regional benchmark, dig deeper.
Step 3: Demand line-item detail
Standard reconciliation statements show category totals. Demand the underlying detail:
- Vendor invoices for major categories (janitorial, landscaping, security)
- Property tax bill from county assessor
- Insurance premium statement
- Capital expenditure list (separately, with amortization schedules if applicable)
- Management fee calculation methodology (% of what, not just dollar amount)
The lease's audit rights typically include access to underlying invoices. If the landlord refuses, escalate.
Step 4: Cross-check against the lease's CAM definition
The "Operating Expense" or "CAM" definition in your lease lists inclusions and exclusions. Common exclusions that often get violated:
- Capital improvements (unless amortized)
- Costs related to leasing other tenants (marketing, broker commissions)
- Reserves for future capex
- Penalties paid by landlord (zoning violations, late tax payments)
- Costs paid by other tenants (e.g., a separate metering arrangement)
If any line item violates an exclusion, it's recoverable.
Step 5: Calculate your pro-rata correctly
Your pro-rata = your RSF / building total RSF. Common errors:
- Building total RSF understated, inflating your pro-rata
- Common areas double-counted in building total RSF
- Mid-year occupancy changes not reflected (you should pay reduced pro-rata for months the building had higher vacancy)
Per BOMA RSF/USF measurement standard, buildings should be measured to standard. Many older leases predate BOMA 2017 standard and can be re-measured.
Step 6: Issue the dispute letter
If audit reveals overcharges, draft a dispute letter:
- Cite specific line items and amounts disputed
- Reference the lease section that supports your position
- Demand written response within 30 days
- Note that further escalation goes to formal arbitration or litigation
Most landlords settle on the merits of a well-supported dispute. Litigation is rare.
When to hire a CAM audit firm
Hire if:
- Annual CAM bill exceeds $50,000
- Reconciliation has 20%+ swings YoY without explanation
- You don't have internal accounting bandwidth to do the audit
- Your initial review found multiple potential overcharges
Specialty firms (KBKG, Ryan LLC, RealEstate Lease Services, Hatfield Philips International) work on contingency: 30 to 50% of recovery. Verify references in your specific metro before engaging. The 11.4% average overcharge per Stratafolio means even the contingency fee leaves the tenant net positive on most audits.
The pre-signing prevention checklist
Better to prevent than to audit. Before signing:
- Cap on controllable expenses at 5% annually
- Capital improvements excluded (or amortized over useful life only)
- Management fee on CAM costs only, capped at 15%
- Admin overhead capped at 5%
- Audit rights with 90-day window from reconciliation
- Base year reset on renewal
- Exclusions list (affiliate-vendor markup, discretionary amenity upgrades, reserves)
For full negotiation guidance: How to negotiate a commercial lease. For CAM benchmarks: CAM charges calculator.
Frequently asked questions
What's the deadline to dispute a CAM reconciliation statement?
Most commercial leases give the tenant 60 to 90 days from receipt of the year-end CAM reconciliation to formally object in writing. Check your lease's audit-rights clause for the specific window.
Can the landlord pass capital improvements through CAM?
Standard CAM excludes capital improvements unless the lease specifically permits amortization of capital costs (e.g., a new HVAC) over their useful life. A well-negotiated lease caps capital pass-throughs at amortized cost over useful life, not the full cost in year of installation.
What CAM line items are most often overcharged?
Per the 2025 Stratafolio NYC audit sample, the top three: management fees calculated on gross rent rather than CAM costs, capital expenses miscoded as repairs, and admin overhead in excess of the typical 10 to 15% cap.
Do I have the right to audit my CAM charges?
Only if your lease has an audit rights clause. Most well-negotiated leases include one with a 60 to 90 day window. Without an audit clause, you can't formally dispute. Always negotiate audit rights before signing.
Does my landlord have to share underlying invoices?
If your audit rights clause specifies access to underlying records, yes. If it specifies access to "summary statements" only, the landlord can refuse line-item detail. Negotiate for access to underlying invoices and contracts.
Can a CAM audit recover prior years' overcharges?
Depends on your lease. Many leases limit audits to the most recent year. Some allow look-back over 2 to 3 years. Check your lease's specific language.
How much does a CAM audit cost?
CAM audit firms typically charge contingency: 30 to 50% of recovered overcharges. Hourly engagements run $300 to $500/hr. The 11.4% average overcharge per Stratafolio means most audits leave the tenant net positive even after contingency.
Related guides
- CAM charges calculator
- NNN lease calculator
- Commercial lease negotiation tips and AI coach
- Commercial lease rent escalation clause guide
Sources
- Stratafolio CAM Charges in Commercial Lease Management accessed 2026-05-02
- BOMA Experience Exchange Report accessed 2026-05-02
- BOMA Office Building Standards accessed 2026-05-02
- LoopNet CAM Charges Explained accessed 2026-05-02
Not financial or legal advice. Estimates based on publicly available market data and broker reports. Commercial real-estate is highly local and deal-specific. Consult a licensed commercial real-estate broker and a real-estate attorney before signing any lease.
This is a syndicated post. Original article + interactive calculator: https://commercialleasecost.com/articles/cam-reconciliation-commercial-lease/
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