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What Are Office Move-Out Restoration Obligations? The Costs, Scope, and Negotiation Strategies Businesses Should Know

Explains office rental restoration-to-original-state obligations, burden scope, cost estimates, and cost reduction strategies from the business perspective.

About 1 min read

When an office relocation is decided, many companies are troubled by restoration-to-original-state costs upon move-out. Unlike residential rentals, commercial rentals have a broad scope of tenant burden and are structurally prone to high-cost claims. Let's accurately understand the mechanism of restoration-to-original-state obligations to proceed smoothly with the move.

What Are Restoration-to-Original-State Obligations for Offices?

Restoration-to-original-state obligation is the obligation to return rented property to the state at the time of move-in. It was codified in the revised Article 621 of the Civil Code enacted in 2020, clarifying that deterioration from normal use (age-related deterioration and normal wear) is excluded from restoration obligations.

However, in commercial properties (offices), clauses requiring restoration to original state are included in contracts with nearly 100% frequency. The reality is that tenants often bear costs for items that would normally be considered age-related deterioration, such as wallpaper, flooring, and lighting fixtures.

How Is the Scope of Office Restoration Obligations Determined?

Damage the Tenant Should Bear

Scratches and stains caused by intentional acts or negligence are the tenant's burden. This includes wall scratches visible from afar, holes opened carelessly, and mold from poor cleaning.

Damage the Tenant Does Not Bear

Sun-faded wallpaper, rubber deterioration from humidity — these are age-related deterioration — and floor depressions from furniture, electrical burns behind appliances — these are normal wear — are in principle the landlord's burden. However, exceptions apply if there are special clauses.

Office-Specific Restoration Items

  • Removal of partitions and partition walls
  • Replacement of light bulbs and fluorescent lights
  • Moving out furniture and equipment (everything installed must be removed)
  • Removal of OA wiring

3 Important Points to Note in Restoration

Always Check the Lease Contract in Advance

If a contractor is specified, there is less room for price negotiation. Check in advance whether competitive bids from multiple contractors are possible, and when there is no specification, reduce costs through competitive bidding.

Consult with the Landlord in Advance

If the property shows little wear and wallpaper/floor replacement is unnecessary, the landlord may waive construction. Requesting a condition check from the landlord before move-out and eliminating unnecessary construction leads to cost reduction.

Allow Plenty of Time in the Schedule

Construction must be completed before the contract term expires, or daily rent will accrue. Start planning 6 months before move-out, and proceed with contractor selection, construction scheduling, and moving preparations in parallel.

Cost Estimates and Reduction Strategies

Construction ItemEstimated Cost (per tsubo)
Wallpaper replacement3,000–8,000 yen
Floor tile carpet replacement5,000–15,000 yen
Partition removal10,000–30,000 yen/panel
Lighting fixture replacement5,000–20,000 yen/unit

FAQ

Q. Does the scope of restoration differ between residential rentals and offices?

They differ greatly. In residences, age-related deterioration and normal wear are largely the landlord's burden, but in offices, tenants generally bear a wide range of costs through special clauses.

Q. Can I resist excessive restoration cost claims?

First scrutinize the contract contents, and costs not included in special clauses may be negotiable. Consider consulting a lawyer or real estate specialist.

Q. By when must office move-out restoration be completed?

In principle, it must be completed by the contract end date. If exceeded, daily rent accrues, so setting a schedule with ample time is important.

Q. What should I do if I cannot choose the construction contractor myself?

Even when only a designated contractor is allowed, confirming detailed estimates for multiple items and negotiating to eliminate unnecessary construction can sometimes reduce costs.

Daisuke Inazawa, President & CEO of INA&Associates Inc.

Author

President & CEOINA&Associates Inc.

Daisuke Inazawa is the President and CEO of INA&Associates Inc., a Japanese real estate firm headquartered in Osaka with a Tokyo branch. He leads the company's three core businesses — real estate sales brokerage, rental leasing, and property management — across the Greater Tokyo Area and the Kansai region.

His areas of expertise include investment strategy for income-generating real estate, profitability optimisation of rental operations, real estate advisory for ultra-high-net-worth individuals (UHNWIs) and institutional investors, and cross-border real estate investment. He provides data-driven, long-horizon advisory to investors in Japan and overseas.

Under the management philosophy "a company's most important asset is its people," he positions INA&Associates as a "people-investment company" and is committed to sustainable corporate-value creation through talent development. He also writes and speaks publicly on leadership and organisational culture in times of change.

He holds eleven Japanese professional qualifications: Licensed Real Estate Broker (Takken), Certified Real Estate Consulting Master, Licensed Condominium Manager, Licensed Building Management Supervisor, Certified Rental Housing Management Professional, Gyōseishoshi Lawyer (administrative scrivener), Certified Personal Information Protection Officer, Class-A Fire Prevention Manager, Certified Auctioned Real Estate Specialist, Certified Condominium Maintenance Engineer, and Licensed Moneylending Operations Supervisor.

  • Licensed Real Estate Broker (Takken)
  • Certified Real Estate Consulting Master
  • Licensed Condominium Manager
  • Licensed Building Management Supervisor
  • Certified Rental Housing Management Professional
  • Gyōseishoshi Lawyer (Administrative Scrivener)
  • Certified Personal Information Protection Officer
  • Class-A Fire Prevention Manager
  • Certified Auctioned Real Estate Specialist
  • Certified Condominium Maintenance Engineer
  • Licensed Moneylending Operations Supervisor