Commercial Tenant Creditworthiness: What to Check Before Heads of Terms
A weak tenant covenant erodes the investment value of a commercial letting. Here is what CRE brokers should be checking before recommending a tenant to a landlord client.
Commercial Tenant Creditworthiness: What to Check Before Heads of Terms
For an investor landlord, the value of a commercial property is heavily influenced by the quality of the tenant covenant. A 15-year lease to a FTSE 100 company is a different asset class from the same lease to a newly incorporated company with no track record. Understanding the difference — and communicating it clearly — is part of the CRE broker's value.
This article sets out a practical approach to tenant creditworthiness assessment before heads of terms are agreed.
Why covenant strength matters
Commercial property valuations are primarily income-driven. The capitalisation rate applied to a commercial lease depends on:
- The certainty of the rental income stream
- The length of the remaining term
- The strength of the tenant covenant
A stronger tenant means a lower yield and a higher capital value. A weaker tenant means a higher yield and a lower value — or no value as an investment asset at all, if the property is only worth its vacant possession value.
For a landlord client, recommending a tenant without understanding their financial position is a risk you are passing on without disclosure.
What to check
Companies House — for any UK-incorporated company, the fundamental check is Companies House: accounts, current directors, registered address, any filing anomalies. Look for:
- Filed accounts (abridged accounts tell you less, but their presence confirms a trading company)
- The date of incorporation — a company formed last month for the purpose of entering a lease is a very different proposition from a company with ten years of trading history
- Any previous directors who have been associated with dissolved or insolvent companies
- Charges registered against the company's assets — a company with multiple fixed and floating charges has limited free assets
Credit reference check — specialist commercial credit agencies (Experian Business, Creditsafe, Dun & Bradstreet) produce credit ratings for UK companies based on filed accounts, payment history, and public records. These identify acute risk quickly.
Latest filed accounts — for any tenant taking on a significant rent commitment, review the most recently filed accounts and look at:
- Revenue trend (growing, flat, declining)
- EBITDA margin
- Net cash position
- Net assets (positive or negative)
- Whether the auditor has issued any going concern qualifications
A company with net liabilities and a going concern note is a very high-risk tenant, regardless of what the directors say about their trading prospects.
Personal guarantees — where the tenant entity is a limited company with a thin balance sheet or recent incorporation, landlords frequently require a personal guarantee from a director or shareholder. A guarantee from a director whose personal assets are limited or who has undischarged county court judgments (CCJs) is worth little.
Rent deposit — as an alternative or supplement to a personal guarantee, a rent deposit of three to six months' rent (held in a segregated account, documented by a formal deed) provides immediate security without requiring personal liability.
References — landlord references from previous or current commercial premises confirm trading history and payment behaviour. Former landlords will usually respond honestly if approached directly.
Red flags to escalate to the landlord
- Company incorporated within the last 12 months with no trading history
- Accounts more than 12 months old (late filing is itself a compliance failure)
- Going concern qualification in the audit report
- Director or principal with previous associations with insolvent companies
- Unwillingness to provide accounts or references
- Transaction structured through an intermediate holding company with no assets
None of these is automatically a reason to reject a tenant. But each requires the landlord to make an informed decision about what additional security is needed.
Where AI helps
AI can:
- Summarise Companies House filings and filed accounts into a structured credit assessment
- Flag common red flags in a company's filing history
- Draft a tenant due diligence summary for the landlord client
- Generate a checklist of information to request from a prospective tenant before heads of terms
AI cannot replace a credit reference agency search or a formal financial analysis. But it can triage the publicly available information quickly and help the broker advise the landlord before commitments are made.
A practical process
Before recommending a tenant to a landlord client:
- Run a Companies House check — incorporation date, directors, accounts, charges
- Order a commercial credit report (most agencies charge £5–20 per report)
- Review the most recent filed accounts
- Request landlord references from the tenant's existing or previous premises
- Advise the landlord on the covenant strength and recommended security (guarantee, deposit, or both)
- Document your advice in writing
This process takes less than two hours and protects both your client and your professional position.
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