I have a very high density site (5 fwys and over 500,000 cars daily pass) and I get $2,200. This is a very old lease and is what has been called a "historically low rent" in today's wireless world. Just a FYI.
A few things to note.
Tmobile may be bought by Sprint.
Do not drive them off. Get as much as you can with out making them go next door.
Also, a 70' pole is going to be tall enough to bring other carriers later. Try to get a piece of that.
There are lease buyers out there. They offer very good present value for these lease. In the $100,000's if the terms and carrier are good.
Jul 17, 2014 Rating
It depends... by: Stephen
It's more complicated than that. The question is what is the neighboring property owner across the street going to charge them, or is your property the best site? Has T-Mobile provided you with a survey or architectural drawings yet? I like the idea of only having a 20' x 20' compound. Does that mean that this property is located in the city and there are very limited choices for locating ground equipment?
Like this page? Show us some Social Love. Here's how.
Would you prefer to share this page with others by linking to it?
Click on the HTML link code below.
Copy and paste it, adding a note of your own, into your blog, a Web page, forums, a blog comment, your Facebook account, or anywhere that someone would find this page valuable.
Steve or Kevin- I have had a cell site with SBA/T-Mobile (~$1500/month & 4% annual increase) for >15 years. At&t wants to co-locate. My SBA lease gives
We live in a Rural area of Plain City, OH. Our signal is horrendous. We have tried everything, Boosters in the house, upgraded equipment, etc. We recently