Contact Us
Categories
- Kentucky Consumer Protection Act
- Judgment creditors
- Fractional Investment
- Section 1031 transactions
- Investment
- Kentucky minimum wage
- Minimum wage
- U.S. Supreme Court
- Arbitration
- Breach
- Closing
- Closing Disclosure
- Condemnation
- Good Faith Estimate
- Home Equity Conversion Mortgages (HECMs)
- HUD-1 Settlement Statement
- Lenders
- Reverse mortgages
- Truth in Lending Act
- Zoning Regulations
- “Know Before You Owe”
- Affordable Housing
- Commercial Real Estate
- Dodd-Frank Act
- Economic Development
- Land Use Law
- Landlord
- Lease
- Mortgage
- Planning and Zoning
- Property Titling
- Purchase Contract
- Real Estate Law
- Rescission
- Same-Sex Couples
- Tenant
- URLTA
- Agritourism
- Deed
- Drones
- Homeowners Association
- Land Surveys
- LBAR
- National Association of Realtors (NAR)
- Overlay Zoning
- Plat
- Property Lines
- Property Survey
- Real Estate Agents
- Rural Areas
- Trulia
- Uncategorized
- Zillow
- "Right-of-Way Agents"
- Benningfield v. Zinmeister
- Bluegrass Pipeline
- Boards of Adjustment
- Boilerplate Language
- Building Inspection
- Co-Signing
- Code Enforcement
- Commercial Lease
- Conditional uses
- Condominium
- Conservation Easement
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“CFPB”)
- Credit Report
- Credit Score
- Deeds
- Dog owners
- Easement
- Emergency Preparedness
- Eminent Domain
- Emotional Support Animals
- ESIGN
- Exclusive Use Clause
- Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
- FICO
- General Forms
- Homebuyers
- Horizontal Property Law
- Inspection
- Insurance Companies
- Insured
- Kentucky Condominium Act
- Kentucky landowners
- KRS 383.500
- KRS §258.235(4)
- KRS §383.580
- Loans
- Multi-unit properties
- Natural Disasters
- Occupancy Fraud
- Power of Attorney ("POA")
- Screening
- Security Deposit
- Servicers
- Steenrod v. Louisville Yacht Club Association
- The Loan Estimate form
- Title Insurance Policies
- Truth in Lending Statement
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
- Variances
- Zoning Ordinance Text Amendment
Showing 1 post in Exclusive Use Clause.
Why Use an Exclusive Use Clause?
If you are a business owner and in the process of negotiating the terms of your commercial lease, you will want to be sure to include an exclusive use clause to the document and negotiate the terms with the landlord. Exclusive use clauses are intended to protect a tenant’s business by ensuring that the named tenant is the only tenant in a particular shopping center that can sell or offer to sell specific products or services. In some cases (generally, where a tenant has more bargaining power), an exclusive use clause may extend to any other properties owned by the landlord or an affiliate of the landlord within a certain radius. More >

