Lebanon

Restaurants for Lease in Lebanon

Browse current restaurant spaces for lease in Lebanon.

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Restaurants for Lease in Lebanon

While inventory is limited in Lebanon, explore the market guide below or get notified when new restaurant spaces for lease are listed.

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Market Context

Lebanon Lease Market Overview

What tenants need to understand about leasing restaurant space in Lebanon.

Lebanon is the New Hampshire anchor of the Upper Valley region with approximately 14,000 residents but a regional commercial economy serving approximately 110,000 across both sides of the Connecticut River into Vermont. The economy is dominated by Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center (one of the largest hospitals in northern New England, with 9,000+ employees), Dartmouth College in adjacent Hanover (4,500 students plus faculty), and a substantial cross-border retail and dining draw from Vermont residents seeking no-sales-tax purchases. The Lebanon Municipal Airport adds business traveler demand.

Restaurant lease rates in Lebanon reflect the medical and academic anchors plus the Vermont cross-border commercial draw. Prime Downtown along Hanover Street commands $26 to $36 per square foot annually. West Lebanon along Route 12A anchors the highest-traffic corridor in the Upper Valley at $26 to $38. The Dartmouth-Hitchcock medical corridor runs $24 to $34. Mascoma Lake and outlying residential corridors offer accessible entry at $22 to $32 per square foot.

Lebanon restaurant acquisitions involving alcohol service work through the New Hampshire Liquor Commission under the same statewide structure as the rest of New Hampshire. On-premise restaurant licensing is comparatively accessible and not quota-limited. The 9 percent Meals and Rentals Tax applies to prepared food sales. Lebanon's distinctive position straddling the Vermont border makes New Hampshire's lack of a state sales tax particularly meaningful, with substantial Vermont resident dining demand drawn across the river by the price differential.

Popular Markets

Where to Lease a Restaurant in Lebanon

Lebanon restaurant lease opportunities span several distinct submarkets, each with different rent profiles and operating characteristics.

  • Downtown Lebanon & Hanover Street (Walkable Core): Downtown Lebanon along Hanover Street and the surrounding blocks anchors the city's walkable commercial core, with the Lebanon Opera House and the Colonial Theatre adding meaningful cultural amenities. Lease rates run $26 to $36 per square foot annually.
  • West Lebanon & Centerra (Retail Anchor): West Lebanon along NH Route 12A anchors the Upper Valley's largest concentration of national chain restaurants and big-box retail, drawing substantial Vermont cross-border traffic seeking no-sales-tax retail. Lease rates run $26 to $38 per square foot. Highest traffic counts in the Upper Valley region.
  • Dartmouth-Hitchcock Corridor (Medical Anchor): The corridor connecting Lebanon to the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center (one of the largest medical facilities in northern New England, employing 9,000+) anchors substantial daytime workforce dining demand. Lease rates run $24 to $34 per square foot. Strong consistent demand.
  • Mascoma Lake & Outlying (Residential Submarkets): The Mascoma Lake area and outlying Lebanon residential corridors serve established neighborhoods. Lease rates run $22 to $32 per square foot annually.

Types of Restaurant Leases in Lebanon

Pepperlot lists all three restaurant lease types in Lebanon. Understanding the differences is the first step in evaluating any opportunity.

  • Second-Generation Lease (2nd Generation): Restaurant infrastructure already in place: hood, grease trap, walk-in cooler, plumbing for prep sinks, and ventilation. The fastest and cheapest path to opening.
  • Turnkey Restaurant Lease (Turnkey): Equipment, FF&E, and often a license history come with the lease. The operator takes over a near-complete operation and can open within weeks.
  • First-Generation Lease (1st Generation): Vanilla shell with no restaurant infrastructure. Requires full buildout including hood, grease trap, walk-in, and equipment. Typical buildout cost $200 to $500 per square foot.

For Owners & Brokers

Why Use Pepperlot to Find Restaurant Leases in Lebanon

Built exclusively for restaurant real estate. Not a general commercial platform with a restaurant filter.

Restaurant-Specific Search

Every listing on Pepperlot is a restaurant or F&B space, with operational filters for hood, grease trap, walk-in, patio, drive-thru, and infrastructure status.

State-Specific Detail

License history, seating capacity, health department permit notes, and city-specific zoning context for each submarket.

Lease Market Context

Submarket rent ranges, typical concession packages, lease term norms, and the regulatory specifics that determine whether a lease is workable for your concept.

Direct Landlord and Broker Contact

Reach the listing broker or landlord directly. No lead routing, no middlemen. Pepperlot is a listing platform that connects tenants with the parties that control the space.

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Platform

How to Lease a Restaurant in Lebanon

What to expect when securing a restaurant lease in Lebanon.

Define Your Concept and Operating Model

Before browsing Lebanon lease space, define your cuisine, target check size, daypart focus, seating capacity, and whether alcohol service is required. These decisions drive submarket selection and the infrastructure required in any leased space.

Filter by Submarket and Infrastructure

Lebanon lease rates run $22 to $38 per square foot annually across submarkets. Filter by neighborhood, square footage, hood specs, grease trap capacity, walk-in cooler size, and second-generation vs first-generation status.

Evaluate License Feasibility

If your concept requires alcohol service, evaluate New Hampshire license feasibility before signing the lease. Licenses do not transfer with the property, so any tenant planning alcohol service must apply separately. Building a no-license concept can be a faster path to opening.

Tour Spaces and Verify Infrastructure

Walk every space with a contractor familiar with New Hampshire restaurant buildouts. Verify hood CFM matches your equipment plan, grease trap capacity matches your sewer flow, electrical service supports your load, and HVAC capacity matches your seating.

Negotiate Lease Terms and Sign

New Hampshire restaurant leases typically run five to ten years with one or two five-year options. Negotiate free rent, tenant improvement allowance, exclusivity for your cuisine type, signage rights, and the scope of personal guarantees. Have a New Hampshire-licensed commercial real estate attorney review before signing.

About Pepperlot

Our Vision

Pepperlot exists to modernize how restaurant spaces are leased. By focusing exclusively on restaurant real estate, the platform eliminates noise from unrelated commercial listings and creates a marketplace built around real operational needs.

The goal is simple: better data, better matches, and better outcomes for restaurant operators and landlords.

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Our Team

Who We Are

Pepperlot is a restaurant-only real estate and transaction platform built for operators, brokers, and landlords. The team combines marketplace technology with deep category focus to support leasing decisions ranging from single-location operators to multi-unit expansion.

Every feature, listing, and filter is designed to serve one purpose: making restaurant lease transactions clearer, faster, and more informed.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to lease a restaurant in Lebanon?

Lebanon restaurant lease rates run $22 to $38 per square foot annually depending on the corridor, age of the space, and infrastructure already in place. Walkable premium corridors command the high end of that range. Suburban and outer-neighborhood corridors offer the most accessible rates. Beyond base rent, tenants should factor in CAM (common area maintenance), property tax pass-through, insurance, and any landlord-required tenant improvements.

What's the difference between a second-generation and a first-generation restaurant space in Lebanon?

A second-generation space already has restaurant infrastructure in place: hood, grease trap, walk-in cooler, plumbing for prep sinks, ventilation, and often FF&E. First-generation (vanilla shell) requires building all of that from scratch, which typically adds $200 to $500 per square foot in buildout costs and several months to opening. Lebanon's second-generation lease inventory is particularly valuable given rising restaurant construction costs.

How do liquor licenses work for restaurant acquisitions in New Hampshire?

New Hampshire restaurant on-premise licenses are issued by the New Hampshire Liquor Commission (NHLC) Division of Enforcement and Licensing. Unlike states such as Utah, Massachusetts, and New Jersey, New Hampshire does not operate a quota system for on-premise restaurant licenses, making the licensing process comparatively accessible. License types include the Restaurant Liquor License (full beer, wine, and spirits service) and the Restaurant Beer and Wine License. The state operates a retail monopoly on off-premise liquor sales through the NH Liquor and Wine Outlet stores, but this is separate from on-premise restaurant licensing. Licenses do not transfer with the business or property sale; any buyer must apply separately to NHLC. The 9 percent Meals and Rentals Tax applies to all prepared food and beverage sales.

What taxes apply to New Hampshire restaurant sales?

New Hampshire is one of only five US states without a general state sales tax. Instead, the state applies a 9 percent Meals and Rentals Tax to all prepared food and beverage sales at restaurants, plus a 9 percent tax on lodging. The Meals and Rentals Tax is paid by the customer and remitted by the restaurant operator monthly to the New Hampshire Department of Revenue Administration. The absence of a general sales tax produces distinctive restaurant pricing and customer draw economics, particularly for southern New Hampshire cities on the Massachusetts border and Upper Valley cities on the Vermont border.

What lease terms are standard for Lebanon restaurants?

Lebanon restaurant leases typically run five to ten year initial terms with one or two five-year renewal options. Triple-net (NNN) structures are standard, meaning the tenant pays base rent plus their proportionate share of property tax, insurance, and CAM. Personal guarantees are common. Free rent periods of two to four months are typical for second-generation space and can extend to six or more for first-generation buildouts.

What should I confirm before signing a Lebanon restaurant lease?

Confirm the use clause specifically permits your cuisine and any alcohol service planned. Verify license feasibility for your concept before signing if alcohol service is essential. Verify health department permitting feasibility for the proposed layout. Confirm hood capacity, grease trap capacity, and electrical capacity match your equipment plan. Check Lebanon city zoning and any pending entitlement work. Review CAM history for the past three years.