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This form is used by a leasing agent or prospective tenant when negotiating a rental or lease agreement, to provide in an addendum the landlord’s grant to the tenant of a right of first refusal to purchase the leased premises.

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Your use of RPI Form 579

Seller’s motives

In a right of first refusal agreement, also called a preemptive right to buy, the decision to sell or not to sell is entirely within the seller’s discretion. Until the seller makes the decision to sell, the buyer has no right to purchase the property.

Once triggered by the seller’s affirmative decision to sell their property, the first refusal right results in a purchase option no different from any other. The buyer has the unconditional right to either buy or not buy the property within a fixed period, called an acceptance or exercise of the right of first refusal.

The seller’s reasons for granting the buyer a first refusal may vary. Possible motives for delaying the decision to sell include:

  • tax benefits, such as wishing to delay the reporting of profit from a sale until a year when the profit can be offset by losses on the sale or operation of other properties;
  • financial imperatives, such as wanting to delay the sale of the property to attain the highest price possible due to a rising market, leasing negotiations, rehab or rezoning;
  • legal problems, such as a lis pendens or toxic cleanup hindering the sale of the property; and
  • personal concerns, such as not being ready to sell the property for health, family or personal reasons.

Finally, the owner may simply have no intention to ever sell the property. Here, the buyer might request a right of first refusal on the theory the owner may someday change their mind as their needs and preferences evolve.

Ultimately, the right of first refusal allows the seller to avoid an enforceable commitment to sell or buy real estate.

Exercising the right of first refusal

The period following the notice of the seller’s intent to sell controls the buyer’s actions. Until notice of the seller’s intent to sell is given to the buyer, the buyer does nothing but wait to see whether the owner decides to sell.

Most disputes concerning the right of first refusal arise when the seller accepts another buyer’s offer. When another buyer makes an offer on the property which the seller accepts or counters, the seller is required to notify the holder of the first refusal right of the terms of the sale.

The holder of the preemptive right then either agrees to match the backup offer within the fixed period or waive the right of first refusal.

The right of first refusal is not the same as an option. Under an option, the buyer may require the seller to sell the property, but the right of first refusal only gives the buyer a chance when the owner decides to sell.

Similarly, a landlord subject to a right of first refusal held by a tenant is obligated to notify the tenant of the terms of any sales listing, option to buy, offer to purchase, counteroffer or acceptance of an offer to purchase which triggers the tenant’s right to buy under the right of first refusal provision. [See RPI Form 579]

A tenant who decides to purchase the property needs to then agree to match the sales term within the time period set in the right of first refusal provision. Failure to do so is a failure to exercise their right of first refusal, resulting in a loss of their right to buy.

The tenant’s performance under the right of first refusal does not need to be identical in all aspects to the buyer’s offer. However, the tenant’s offer needs to be financially equivalent to the buyer’s offer.

To exercise the right of first refusal, the tenant needs to agree to match the sales terms set by the landlord within the time period set in the right of first refusal provision.

Analyzing the Right of First Refusal to Buy

A leasing agent or prospective tenant uses the Right of First Refusal to Buy form published by RPI (Realty Publications, Inc.) when negotiating a rental or lease agreement. It allows the individual to provide, in an addendum, the landlord’s grant to the tenant of a right of first refusal to purchase the leased premises. [See RPI Form 579]

Within the Right of First Refusal to Buy, the tenant and landlord both agree to the following:

  • the commencement and expiration of the term in which the right of first refusal to purchase the leased premises transpires, which may cease on termination of the tenant’s right of occupancy or on a specific date [See RPI Form 579 §2];
  • when the landlord decides to sell the premises during the term of the tenant’s right of first refusal, the landlord will notify the tenant of the terms on which the landlord is willing to sell with a Notice of Decision to Sell Property or Lease Additional Space form [See RPI Form 579-2; See RPI Form 579 §3];
  • the number of days the tenant has after receiving the landlord’s written notice sent by certified mail or personal delivery to agree to purchase the premises on the terms stated in the notice [See RPI Form 579 §3.1];
  • when the tenant fails to exercise the option within the option period, the landlord has the right to sell the premises to a third party on the same terms stated in the landlord’s notice to the tenant [See RPI Form 579 §3.2];
  • any sale on different terms reinstates the tenant’s right of first refusal [See RPI Form 579 §3.3]; and
  • when the landlord has not closed a sale of the property within six months after the tenant’s receipt of the landlord’s notice, the tenant’s right of first refusal is reinstated. [See RPI Form 579 §4]

The landlord and tenant then sign the form, agreeing to the terms set out in the right of first refusal.

Revision history

Form navigation page published 07-2021.

Form last revised 2016.