Abogados de Commercial Real Estate
553 abogados de Commercial Real Estate encontrados. Filtre por estado y ciudad.

Law Offices of Kenneth P. Milner

Davis Legal

Hubbs Law Group

Ganser Legal

Khalid Hasan, Attorney at Law

The Colom Firm

Colom Law Office

Law Offices of Kimberly Ann Mouratides

Law Offices of Kirsten Bennett

The Kochosky Firm

Evans & Associates

Gardiner Trial Lawyers

Shirley Legal

Pereira Law Office
Commercial Real Estate Lawyers in the United States
Commercial real estate transactions involve large sums of money and complex agreements that can expose buyers, sellers, and investors to significant financial risk. A commercial real estate lawyer protects your interests whether you're acquiring a retail center, developing raw land, or negotiating a long-term lease. According to the National Association of Realtors, commercial real estate transactions in the U.S. exceeded $800 billion in recent years, and disputes arise in roughly 10-15% of deals.
What Commercial Real Estate Law Covers
This practice area spans every legal aspect of buying, selling, leasing, developing, and financing non-residential property. That includes office buildings, industrial warehouses, shopping centers, hotels, and mixed-use developments.
Lawyers in this field handle purchase and sale agreements, commercial lease negotiations, title examinations, zoning and land use approvals, and environmental compliance reviews. They also manage 1031 exchanges, construction contracts, and disputes between landlords and tenants. If a deal involves financing, your attorney will review loan documents, negotiate terms with lenders, and ensure liens are properly recorded.
When to Hire a Commercial Real Estate Lawyer
- You're purchasing or selling commercial property and need contracts reviewed before signing
- A zoning dispute or permit denial is blocking your development plans
- You're entering a commercial lease worth significant annual rent and need favorable terms
- A tenant or landlord has breached a lease agreement and you're facing financial losses
- You're structuring a joint venture or partnership to acquire investment property
How the Process Works
Your lawyer begins with due diligence — reviewing title records, existing leases, environmental reports, and survey data. Any red flags get flagged early so you can renegotiate or walk away before closing.
Next comes contract drafting and negotiation. Every term matters: purchase price adjustments, contingency periods, representations and warranties, indemnification clauses. Your attorney will coordinate with lenders, title companies, and opposing counsel to move toward a closing date. Most straightforward transactions close within 60 to 90 days, while complex developments can take six months or longer.
How Financial Outcomes Are Determined
- Fair market value assessments based on comparable sales, income capitalization, and replacement cost methods determine property pricing
- Lease disputes typically result in damages calculated from lost rental income, tenant improvement costs, and remaining lease obligations
- Breach of contract claims may yield the difference between the agreed price and the property's actual value at the time of breach
- Title defect claims can produce compensation covering diminished property value, costs to cure the defect, and related transaction expenses
- Environmental contamination liability often includes cleanup costs, diminished property value, and lost business income during remediation
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a lawyer if I already have a real estate agent?
Yes. Agents handle marketing and finding deals, but they aren't trained to review contract language, identify hidden liabilities, or protect you from unfavorable legal terms. A lawyer catches problems an agent won't see — like title defects, undisclosed environmental issues, or one-sided indemnification clauses.
What's the difference between commercial and residential real estate law?
Commercial transactions involve fewer consumer protection regulations, meaning there's more room for negotiation — and more risk. Contracts are longer, financing structures are more varied, and issues like CAM charges, tenant build-outs, and use restrictions don't typically appear in residential deals. The financial stakes are also significantly higher, making thorough legal review a smart investment.



