Debt increases pressure. It reduces flexibility. And if cashflow tightens, and or sales fall it can quickly become a problem.
So, when property investors talk comfortably about leverage, it often sounds reckless or at least disconnected from how real businesses operate.
The confusion comes from assuming all debt behaves the same.
Debt secured against a well-structured commercial property behaves very differently from debt inside an operating business. Understanding that difference is the key to using leverage deliberately, rather than avoiding it by default.
Inside a business, debt relies on future performance. Revenue can fall. Costs can rise. Customers can leave. When that happens, debt doesn’t adjust, repayments still need to be made.
That’s why most business owners associate debt with:
• Pressure on cashflow
• Loss of flexibility
• Personal stress
• Risk to the core business
Paying debt down quickly feels like reducing risk, because in that context, it usually is.
This mental model makes sense inside the business. Problems arise when the same model is applied to commercial property without adjustment.
Commercial property debt is not repaid by hope or future effort. It’s serviced by contracted income.
A well-leased building typically has:
• A long-term lease
• Defined rent review mechanisms
• A tenant contractually obligated to pay rent
This means the debt is supported by an asset that:
• Produces predictable income
• Adjusts rent over time
• Can often be refinanced independently of the business
That doesn’t make property debt “safe”, but it does make it structurally different.
The risk shifts away from “will I perform well enough?” and towards:
• Lease quality
• Tenant strength
• Interest rate structure
• How much margin exists between rent and debt cost
Leverage doesn’t make a property better. It changes how much of your own capital is tied up.
Instead of using 100% of your own money to control a building, leverage allows you to:
• Use a portion of equity
• Control the full asset
• Let rental income service the debt over time
If the building’s income comfortably exceeds the cost of debt, the remaining cashflow, and all future value growth, is generated on your equity, not the full property value.
That’s the mechanism investors care about. Not because they like risk, but because they like capital efficiency.
Leverage only works when one condition is met: the return from the property must exceed the effective cost of debt.
When that’s true:
• Returns on equity increase
• Capital stays more flexible
• Equity can compound over time
When it’s not true:
• Leverage reduces returns
• Cashflow tightens
• Risk increases unnecessarily
This is why experienced investors are selective about:
• Purchase price
• Yield
• Lease structure
• Debt terms
Leverage is a tool that only works in the right conditions, not a strategy.
Many business owners instinctively want to eliminate property debt as quickly as possible. That reduces exposure, but it also has a hidden cost.
Aggressively paying down property debt means:
• More capital locked into a single asset
• Less flexibility for growth or opportunity
• Lower capital efficiency over time
In property, time and income growth do most of the work.
Maintaining sensible leverage allows:
• Rent increases to improve coverage
• Inflation to reduce the real cost of debt
• Equity to grow without additional capital injections
This doesn’t mean high leverage is always right. It means automatic conservatism deserves to be questioned.
Leverage amplifies outcomes, both good and bad.
It is not appropriate when:
• Business cashflow is already strained
• The building is highly specialised with limited alternative tenants
• Lease terms are short or weak
• Interest rate risk hasn’t been thought through
• All risk is concentrated in one asset
Owning and leasing a building back to your own business concentrates risk by default. That doesn’t make it wrong, but it does mean leverage decisions need to be conservative and deliberate.
This is where business-owner caution is an asset, not a weakness.
The most useful question isn’t “How quickly can I pay this debt down?” It’s “What level of leverage allows this asset to carry itself, without putting the business under pressure?”
That question sits in the overlap between business discipline and investor logic, which is where the best decisions are usually made.
Commercial property builds wealth slowly, not dramatically. The advantage doesn’t come from speculation. It comes from:
• Contracted income
• Modest growth
• Sensible leverage
• Time
Once you understand why property debt behaves differently, leverage stops feeling reckless and starts becoming a capital allocation decision, just like any other long-term investment.
Every situation is different. If you’re considering owning or developing a facility and want to understand what a sensible leverage structure looks like for your business, the team at Attika can help you model it properly in the context of your cashflow, risk tolerance, and long-term goals. Get in touch to start a conversation.