Drugstore & Dollar Store Properties
Freestanding pharmacy and dollar store properties net-leased to national tenants including pharmacy chains and discount retailers on long-term absolute net leases.
Market snapshot
These figures describe Net Lease Properties (8.1.5), the segment that Drugstore & Dollar Store Properties sits within — not Drugstore & Dollar Store Properties on its own.
Net-lease properties span retail, industrial, and office within nonresidential leasing (NAICS 531120) and are a lease-structure rather than property-type category, so the segment is not separately sized here. Realty Income is the largest net-lease REIT.
Business model & economics
Revenue model
Long-term net-lease income (tenant pays expenses)
Key economics
- Recurring revenue
- High
- EBITDA margin
- Strong
- Capex intensity
- High
long, escalating, bond-like leases
passive, low-overhead net leases
Characteristics
- Bond-like, stable, predictable single-tenant income.
- Long leases with escalators and tenant-paid expenses.
- Sale-leasebacks a key sourcing channel.
M&A deal context
Who’s acquiring
- Net-lease REITs (Realty Income, W.P. Carey)
- Private-equity real estate & 1031 investors
- Sale-leaseback sponsors
What’s driving deals
- Acquisition-driven net-lease consolidation.
- Sale-leaseback origination.
- Interest-rate-driven valuation.
Find Drugstore & Dollar Store Properties acquisition targets
Search Acquisera’s index for companies classified under Drugstore & Dollar Store Properties (8.1.5.3) and build a targeted deal pipeline.
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