Most restaurant owners focus on revenue, food cost, labor, and profitability when thinking about selling.
Buyers focus on cash flow.
Lenders focus on debt service coverage.
Landlords focus on risk.
And that last one is where many restaurant deals fall apart.In Restaurant M&A, the lease is often more important than the purchase agreement. A weak lease structure or unrealistic expectations around landlord approval can derail a transaction that otherwise makes financial sense.
That means the landlord must approve the assignment.
Without landlord approval, there is no deal.
Yet many owners assume that if they have been a good tenant for years, the landlord will automatically cooperate. That is not always the case.
Landlords are not evaluating your loyalty. They are evaluating the new tenant’s risk.
One of the most common deal killers in restaurant sales is the personal guaranty.
Most restaurant leases require the tenant to personally guarantee the lease. That means if the business fails, the landlord can pursue the individual owner for unpaid rent.
When it comes time to sell, many owners assume the guaranty will be released once the lease is assigned to the buyer.
Often, it is not.
Landlords may:
From the landlord’s perspective, keeping the original guarantor reduces their risk. From the seller’s perspective, remaining on a lease for a business they no longer control is unacceptable.
This tension alone can stall or collapse a transaction.
Not all landlords operate the same way.
Local landlords who own one or two properties often move quickly and negotiate directly.
Big corporate landlords typically have:
The result is often:
In many cases, larger landlords are also more conservative. They may require stronger financials from the buyer or refuse to release the original guarantor unless the new tenant significantly exceeds their underwriting standards.
Time kills deals. Slow landlord response can exhaust buyer patience or jeopardize financing commitments.
Lenders, particularly SBA lenders, require sufficient lease term remaining.
If the lease does not provide adequate term, often ten years including options, the lender may decline financing.
This creates a chain reaction:
If the landlord is unwilling to extend the lease or clarify option language, value is impacted.
One of the most effective strategies in restaurant sales is engaging the landlord early.
These conversations provide clarity before a buyer is introduced.
If a landlord signals resistance or inflexibility, that information can shape pricing strategy, buyer targeting, and financing structure.
Waiting until after a Letter of Intent is signed to engage the landlord introduces unnecessary risk.
Many sellers assume:
“The landlord has always liked me. This won’t be an issue.”
Or:
“They have to approve it.”
They do not have to approve it. The lease governs the assignment process. In many cases, landlord consent is required and can be withheld if financial standards are not met.
Assumptions cost time and leverage.
If you are considering selling your restaurant, lease strategy should begin early.
Key considerations include:
In some cases, restructuring the lease before going to market strengthens valuation and buyer confidence.
Restaurant transactions are complex, but many deals do not fail because of revenue or food cost.
They fail because of lease friction and landlord risk management.
Personal guaranties, slow approval processes, and inflexible corporate landlords are real obstacles.
The earlier these risks are identified and addressed, the stronger the transaction becomes.
If you are considering selling your restaurant, do not wait until you have a buyer to understand your lease exposure. Clarity on landlord expectations can protect both value and momentum.
To learn more about the author, Mark Joy, Restaurant & Hospitality Business Broker & M&A Advisor at EDGE Business Advisors, and to view his full bio and services, click here.