Healthcare Sale-Leaseback Underwriting Checklist
A practical, shareable decision tool for physician groups, emergency centers, urgent care operators, and specialty health care owners evaluating whether to sell their real estate and lease it back.
The simple definition
A sale-leaseback lets an owner-operator sell real estate to an investor, receive sale proceeds, and continue occupying the property under a long-term lease.
The real decision
The transaction is not only a property sale. It is a capital-structure decision that converts owned real estate into liquidity and creates a long-term rent obligation.
The health care twist
Medical real estate is often operationally specialized. Clinical use, licensing, patient access, buildout, referral patterns, and local demand all affect buyer confidence.
Use this checklist before accepting a healthcare sale-leaseback offer
The highest price is not always the best transaction. The right transaction leaves the health care business stronger after closing, not just richer on closing day.
Mini case study: Texas emergency-center real estate
A publicly visible Texas emergency-center sale-leaseback signal illustrates the core underwriting issue. The asset type may be attractive because emergency-center real estate can be mission-critical and specialized, but the transaction should still turn on rent coverage, lease control, guaranty, buyer fit, and alternate-use value.
Without confirmed public details on price, cap rate, lease term, escalations, or guaranty, the responsible takeaway is not to overstate the deal economics. The useful lesson is simpler: for a health care owner, the sale-leaseback is only successful if the business can safely live with the lease after the sale.
What a buyer is really underwriting
| Real estate | Location, access, visibility, replacement cost, medical buildout, alternate-use value, and depth of the local buyer or tenant pool. |
| Operator | Revenue durability, payor exposure, physician alignment, facility-level profitability, management quality, and rent coverage. |
| Lease | Term, rent, escalations, renewal options, assignment rights, repair obligations, reporting, default rights, and guaranty. |
| Capital use | Whether proceeds fund growth, debt reduction, partner buyouts, equipment, acquisitions, or simply mask operating stress. |
Best use
Use this brief before signing a letter of intent, comparing buyer offers, or deciding between a sale-leaseback and refinancing.
Fact-check notes and sources
Sale-leaseback mechanics: The definition used here reflects the common commercial real estate structure: a property owner sells an asset and leases it back for continued occupancy.
Tax caution: Tax treatment depends on entity structure, gain, depreciation history, and transaction design. Owners should review after-tax proceeds with tax counsel and a qualified CPA before signing.
Lease accounting caution: Lease-accounting treatment depends on the specific lease and applicable accounting standards. Operators should review the transaction with accounting advisers before closing.
No unsupported deal economics: This asset intentionally does not state a sale price, cap rate, lease term, rent escalations, or guaranty for the Texas example because those details were not confirmed from a reliable public source during preparation.
Related Investment Grade resources
Healthcare Sale-Leaseback Advisory
