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sublease

Sublease is a rental arrangement in which a tenant (the sublessor) rents out all or part of a leased property to another person (the subtenant) for a portion of the remaining term of the original lease. In a sublease, the original tenant generally remains responsible to the landlord for rent and compliance with the lease, and the subtenant does not usually have a direct contract with the landlord. This differs from an assignment, where the tenant transfers all rights and obligations under the lease to the new occupant, typically ending the original tenant’s liability to the landlord.

Consent and restrictions are common elements. Most leases require the landlord’s written consent to sublease, and

A sublease contract typically spells out the term, rent amount, and the division of responsibilities for utilities,

Filing a sublease usually involves reviewing the original lease, obtaining written consent, drafting a sublease agreement,

some
leases
prohibit
subleasing
altogether.
Consent
may
be
conditioned
on
factors
such
as
the
subtenant’s
credit,
income,
and
ability
to
comply
with
the
lease
terms,
as
well
as
on
rent
amounts
and
the
length
of
the
sublease.
maintenance,
and
repairs.
It
may
address
the
handling
of
the
security
deposit,
access
rights,
rules
for
the
use
of
the
premises,
and
conditions
for
renewal
or
termination.
The
sublessor
remains
primarily
liable
to
the
landlord,
while
the
subtenant
is
liable
to
the
sublessor;
the
landlord’s
direct
recourse
is
usually
against
the
sublessor.
and
ensuring
terms
align
with
the
master
lease.
Legal
considerations
vary
by
jurisdiction,
so
parties
should
confirm
applicable
laws
and
lease
provisions
before
proceeding.