Real estate tax reconciliations are one of the most reliable sources of unwelcome surprises for office tenants. You signed a lease, agreed to pay your proportionate share of taxes over a base year, and assumed that meant something predictable. Then the bill arrived and it was nothing like what you modeled.
There are several reasons this happens. Some are structural - baked into the building’s economics before you signed. Some are event-driven - triggered by something that happened after. All of them are worth understanding before you sign a lease, and most of them are negotiable if you know to ask.
The clearest illustration of the structural tax problem is 717 Fifth Avenue. The building is split between an office condo and two retail units. The retail - Armani and Dolce & Gabbana at street level - generated over $35 million per year in rent between them. The entire office portion generated less than half that. But the condo by-laws allocated property taxes based on square footage, not on the income each unit produced.
The result: Blackstone’s office tenants were paying property taxes that reflected the building’s total income - driven overwhelmingly by trophy retail rents - while their proportionate share was calculated as if every square foot of the building generated the same revenue. The retail was producing far more than twice the income on roughly a quarter of the space. The office tenants were subsidizing a tax burden driven by an asset class they had nothing to do with.
717 Fifth is an extreme case, but the dynamic is not unusual. It applies anywhere ground-floor or low-floor retail generates rent at multiples of the office rate - which describes most of upper Fifth Avenue, significant portions of Madison Avenue, Times Square, SoHo, and other high-footfall corridors. The city assesses the building on its total income. If the lease doesn’t address how the tax burden is allocated between uses, office tenants absorb their proportionate share of an assessment inflated by retail they can’t see from their floor.
What to push for: a tax exclusion or separate assessment provision that limits your proportionate share to the office portion of the building’s assessed value, or to the income attributable to office use only. Some leases address this explicitly. Many do not. If your building has significant retail - any ground-floor or concourse retail generating materially higher rents per square foot than the office floors - this needs to be in the lease language before you sign.
The retail income problem is one driver. Here are the others that appear most frequently in Midtown office deals.
If you’ve already received an unexpected reconciliation, the first step is reading the lease - specifically the definition of real estate taxes, the base year methodology, any gross-up provisions, and any exclusions. The second is pulling the building’s tax assessment history from the NYC Department of Finance, which is public. You can see exactly what the building was assessed at in your base year, what it’s assessed at now, and whether any reassessment event - sale, leasing activity, renovation - correlates with the increase.
If the increase traces to a structural issue - retail income distortion, abatement expiration, a sale-triggered reassessment - and the lease language is ambiguous, there may be room to dispute the calculation or negotiate a going-forward adjustment. If the language is clear and the landlord calculated correctly, the path forward is making sure the same problem doesn’t follow you into the next lease.
The time to negotiate real estate tax protection is before the lease is signed. After the reconciliation arrives, you’re reading a document that was written against you.
One more thing worth raising: if the tax burden is significant enough, it may create an opening to renegotiate the lease itself. A landlord who knows you’re absorbing an unexpectedly large and growing obligation has an interest in keeping you in the building rather than losing you at expiration or to an early termination discussion. That conversation is worth having - but not before you understand the market. The right sequence is to get your bearings first: what comparable space is trading for today, what concessions are available, what your alternatives actually look like. That context is what determines whether you have leverage, how much, and how to use it. If an unexpected tax bill has you questioning the economics of your current space, connect with a broker to assess the full picture before deciding on a path.