If you abstract a handful of leases a month, the enterprise tools were never built for you
You're an independent CRE broker, a two-person property management shop, or the paralegal who somehow inherited every lease summary on the team's desk. You don't abstract 500 leases a quarter — you abstract maybe 1 to 10 a month. But each one still eats up 90 minutes to 2 hours of flipping through a 40-page PDF hunting for the commencement date, the renewal options, the CAM reconciliation language, and that one buried co-tenancy clause that can blow up the deal.
And the "solution" everyone points you to? CoStar, MRI, VTS — platforms that start in the tens of thousands per year and assume you have an analyst team. For someone closing a few deals or onboarding a few properties, that math never works. So you keep doing it by hand, and you keep dreading it.
What actually goes into a usable lease abstract
Before automating anything, it helps to know what a clean abstract needs. When you're trying to close a deal or onboard a property fast, these are the fields that actually matter:
Parties & premises — tenant, landlord, suite, rentable square footage
Term dates — commencement, expiration, rent commencement (often different)
Base rent schedule — including escalations and bumps
Options — renewal, termination, expansion, ROFR/ROFO
Operating expenses — NNN vs. gross, base year, CAM caps, pro-rata share
Security deposit & guaranties
Use clause, exclusives, and co-tenancy — the stuff that kills retail deals
Assignment & subletting rights
The problem isn't knowing what to look for — you already know. The problem is the manual scavenger hunt across inconsistent lease formats, where a single missed renewal option can cost your client real money or your firm real credibility.
The DIY methods (and why they stall out)
Ctrl+F and a Word template. Works, but it's still you reading every page. Two hours gone, and you're praying you didn't miss an amendment.
Generic ChatGPT. Better, but pasting a confidential 40-page lease into a consumer chatbot is a non-starter for most paralegals and PM firms — and it'll happily hallucinate a commencement date that isn't there.
Hiring it out. Offshore abstracting services exist, but they have minimums and turnaround times that don't fit a broker who needs a summary before tomorrow's tour.
The middle option built for low-volume abstracting
This is exactly the gap Lease Abstract Extractor was built for. You upload the lease PDF, and it pulls the structured fields above into a clean, reviewable summary in minutes — not the two hours you'd spend by hand. No enterprise contract, no per-seat licensing, no analyst team required.
It's designed for the person doing 1–10 abstracts a month: the broker who needs a deal summary to send a client, the PM firm onboarding a new property, the paralegal who just wants the renewal options and base-year language pulled correctly the first time. You still review the output — you're the expert — but you start from a finished draft instead of a blank page and a 40-page scroll.
A faster workflow that fits how you actually work
Upload the executed lease (and any amendments).
Let it extract the key terms into a structured abstract.
Spot-check the high-stakes fields — dates, options, expense structure — against the source.
Export and send. Done before lunch instead of by end of day.
If lease abstracting is the part of your week you keep putting off, try running your next one through Lease Abstract Extractor and see how much of those two hours you get back.
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