Emma Greyson

Commercial Property Purchase in Australia: The Due Diligence Checklist (What to Review Before You Sign)

A successful commercial property purchase is rarely about finding the “best-looking” property. It’s about understanding what you’re actually buying – income, risk, obligations, and future upside before you commit. Due diligence is where good deals are confirmed and bad ones are avoided.

Here’s what every buyer should review before signing a contract.

1. Core Documents You Must Review

At a minimum, a commercial property purchase should include access to:

  • The lease (or leases) including all variations
  • Outgoings statements showing what is recoverable
  • Disclosure statement from the seller
  • Title search and plans
  • Zoning certificate

If any of these are missing or incomplete, that’s a red flag in itself.

2. Lease Red Flags That Catch Buyers Out

In commercial property, the lease is the asset.

Key items to scrutinise include:

  • Incentives – rent-free periods or fit-out contributions that reduce real income
  • Make-good clauses – costly obligations at lease end
  • Options – who controls them and at what rent
  • Rent review clauses – fixed, CPI, or market (and how they’re structured)

A lease that looks strong on the surface can fall apart once incentives or weak review mechanisms are factored in.

3. Tenant Checks: Who Is Actually Paying the Rent?

Tenant quality matters more than almost anything else.

Before proceeding, review:

  • Financial statements (where available)
  • Trading history and years in operation
  • Industry risk and demand for the business type
  • Guarantors or security in place

A long lease means little if the tenant can’t sustain the rent.

4. Building and Compliance Checks

Commercial buyers often underestimate compliance risk.

Key checks include:

  • Asbestos reports (especially for older buildings)
  • Fire safety and essential services compliance
  • Accessibility requirements
  • Zoning and permitted use

Non-compliant buildings can trigger unexpected costs, insurance issues, or leasing restrictions.

5. Finance and Tax Questions to Clarify Early

Before exchanging contracts, buyers should confirm:

  • Whether GST applies to the purchase
  • Land tax exposure and thresholds
  • Ownership structure suitability (individual, trust, company)
  • Lender requirements tied to the lease and tenant

These items can materially impact cash flow and borrowing capacity.

6. Settlement Timeline: Who Does What and When

A commercial property purchase typically involves:

  • Contract review and negotiation
  • Finance approval
  • Due diligence period
  • Exchange
  • Settlement

Understanding who is responsible for each step -solicitor, broker, accountant, buyer’s agent – keeps the process smooth and avoids costly delays.

Final Thoughts

Due diligence isn’t about slowing a deal down – it’s about making sure the numbers, risks, and structure stack up. A well-executed commercial property purchase is built on clarity, not assumptions, and the best buyers are the ones who ask the right questions early.

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