02/10/2026
In commercial real estate, ICE isn’t one single universal term—it depends on context. The most common meanings you’ll see are:
1. Initial Capital Expenditures (ICE) or (CapEx)
Most common in underwriting & acquisitions. Refers to the up-front capital required right after purchase or at the start of a project.
Includes things like:
* Deferred maintenance
* Tenant improvements (TI)
* Leasing commissions (LC)
* Major repairs or upgrades (roof, HVAC, parking lot)
👉 Example: “The deal requires $2.5M of ICE in year one to stabilize the asset.”
2. Interest Carry Expense (ICE)
Common in development and value-add deals.The interest cost on debt during construction or lease-up, before the property generates enough income.
👉 Example: “We modeled 18 months of ICE during the construction period.”
3. In-Common Equity (ICE) (less common)
Used in some structured ownership or TIC-style arrangements to describe shared equity interests among investors.
Bottom line
If you see ICE in a pro forma or underwriting model, it almost always means Initial Capital Expenditures or Interest Carry Expense—the surrounding line items will make it clear.
If you want, tell me where you saw ICE (offering memo, model, loan docs), and I’ll pinpoint the exact meaning.