Retail Real Estate Glossary
Exclusive Use
A lease clause that restricts the landlord from leasing other space in the center to competing uses.
Why it matters in Orange County
Exclusive-use language can protect a tenant’s sales, but overly broad exclusives can limit landlord flexibility and future tenant mix.
How it shows up in a retail deal
Exclusive Use should be translated into plain business language before the lease draft starts. In a retail deal, that means naming who is responsible, when the obligation starts, what evidence is required, and what remedy applies if the assumption is wrong. A tenant comparing spaces in Irvine, Costa Mesa, Mission Viejo, or a coastal market can lose the benefit of a lower rent if this term shifts cost, timing, or operating rights back onto the business. A landlord can also weaken a center by accepting language that sounds harmless in one lease but creates conflicts with future leasing, financing, tenant mix, or property operations.
Tenant question
Is the exclusive narrow enough to be enforceable but strong enough to protect the core revenue stream?
Landlord question
Will the requested exclusive block future leasing categories that the center may need?
Diligence before signing
Before signing, both sides should tie Exclusive Use to the actual property conditions, not just a standard form. Review the site plan, existing leases, title or association limits when relevant, city approval path, construction schedule, and the operator's real use case. For restaurants, fitness, medical, beauty, pet, grocery, and service retail, small wording differences can affect signage, parking, patio use, utility capacity, transfer rights, exclusive rights, or opening deadlines. Parker & Associates uses this kind of term review to decide whether a location is clean enough to pursue or whether the negotiation needs a narrower, more protective structure.
Brokerage note
Parker & Associates helps retail tenants and landlords turn terms like Exclusive Use into practical deal decisions: what to ask for, what to resist, and what needs to be settled before a lease moves forward.
Ask a retail broker