Capital Constraints in Owner-Operated Trade Businesses – When Owning the Building Quietly Limits Growth 

Lennard Commercial Realty logo + Capital Constraints in Owner-Operated Trade Businesses

January 7, 2026

By David Horowitz, Senior Vice President, Lennard Commercial Realty

For many contractor-owned businesses, growth starts to feel harder than it should. The work is there. Customers are steady. Crews are busy. Yet when owners look to expand, invest, or create breathing room, capital often feels tighter than expected. In many cases, the issue is not operations or demand. It is a real estate decision made years earlier and never revisited. 

Stability can quietly become friction 

For electrical, mechanical, and industrial contractors, owning the building they operate from is often one of the smartest decisions they have made. It reduces rent risk. It builds long-term equity. It provides certainty in an industry where certainty is rare. Over time, the building fades into the background. It quietly supports the business while owners focus on people, projects, and customers. The challenge is that what once created stability can later limit flexibility if it is never reassessed. 

Strong businesses can still feel capital-constrained 

Many owner-operated trade businesses look healthy on paper. Revenue is consistent. Margins are reasonable. Equipment is paid down. Backlogs are solid. Yet when owners explore financing options, they are often surprised by how constrained things feel. 

The reason is structural. A large portion of the owner’s net worth sits inside the property. That equity is real, but it is not liquid. Accessing it is rarely as straightforward as expected. Banks often view the operating company and the building together. When they do, borrowing capacity becomes tied to both business performance and property risk at the same time. The result is a business that appears strong, yet feels restricted when capital is needed. 

Growth decisions often collide with property decisions 

Growth rarely arrives neatly. A competitor exits. A customer wants more capacity. A new service line becomes viable. A second location starts to make sense. At that point, owners often realize that every major decision now involves the building.

Should capital go toward equipment or stay tied up in real estate? Can the business support more debt if the property is already leveraged? Is the building still the best use of capital given where the business is headed? These questions usually surface when timing matters most. 

The building itself is rarely the problem 

The property is not the issue. It is simply a separate asset with its own financing rules, risk profile, and timeline. The challenge arises when owners treat the business and the building as one decision instead of two. When both are bundled together, options narrow. When they are separated conceptually, flexibility often improves. 

Common paths owners begin to explore 

Once owners step back and look at structure more clearly, a few common paths tend to emerge. Some separate the property from the operating company to simplify financing and future decisions. Others refinance the building to create liquidity while maintaining ownership. Some sell the property and continue operating as tenants, prioritizing flexibility over long-term ownership. There is no single right answer. The right path depends on timing, risk tolerance, and what the owner wants the business to support next. 

A simple starting point 

Before making a major growth move, many owners benefit from one simple exercise. Step back and look at the business, the property, and the bank as three separate conversations. Each responds differently to change. Understanding how they interact before decisions are made often reveals options that were not obvious before. Clarity does not force action. It creates control. For many contractor-owned businesses, that clarity starts with revisiting the building they operate from, not because it was a mistake, but because the business has evolved.

_____
David Horowitz, Senior Vice President at Lennard Commercial Realty, is a commercial real estate advisor who works with owner-operated businesses on property-related growth and structural decisions. 

If you would like to learn more about Lennard Commercial Realty, you can visit their website at https://www.lennard.com/.

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