See the expiration before it's urgent
Three leases expire within 180 days — 53,000 square feet. Here they are on one axis, with options and notice windows marked. Tap a lease.
What "we'll deal with it in Q4" actually costs
An expiration you catch late doesn't just risk vacancy — it hands the leverage to the other side of the table.
From lease record to deal, without a spreadsheet in between
Expirations aren't a report you remember to run — they're a pipeline that starts at the import and ends in a deal.
Lease details import →
Terms, options, and dates land as dated snapshots from your managers' systems.
02Expiration matrix →
Year × property, with the 180-day window highlighted.
03MLA assumptions →
Renewal probability, future rent, TI/MR — the thesis, priced per unit.
04Deals pipeline →
Renewal or backfill, tracked to signed — status syncing back to the MLA.
It stays on the radar without you holding it there
The expiring-leases Insights card refreshes from verified data, and a saved Copilot prompt answers the Monday question in one line — sources attached.
The window moves. The tracking doesn't stop.
Today's 2027 column is next year's fire drill. The expiration matrix keeps the full horizon visible — 2027 alone holds six leases across three buildings.
Amber cells sit inside the 180-day window — the same three leases from the timeline above.
See your portfolio in one trusted owner view.