A Phase 1 Environmental Site Assessment (ESA) is the standard first step in evaluating the environmental condition of a property. Lenders require them before approving commercial mortgages. Buyers use them to identify contamination risks before closing. And in most jurisdictions, completing a Phase 1 ESA is a prerequisite for an innocent landowner defense if contamination is later discovered.
This guide covers what a Phase 1 ESA includes, what it costs, how long it takes and when you need one.
What Is a Phase 1 ESA?
A Phase 1 ESA is a non-intrusive investigation of a property's environmental condition. No soil or water samples are collected. Instead, the assessment relies on historical research, regulatory database searches, site reconnaissance and interviews to identify recognized environmental conditions (RECs) - evidence of past or present contamination that could affect the property.
The standard framework in North America is ASTM E1527-21 (updated from E1527-13 in 2022). In Europe, ISO 14015 provides similar guidance. Australia uses NEPM and AS 4482. The UK follows BS 10175. While the names differ, the core methodology is consistent worldwide: investigate the property's history and current condition to identify environmental risks.
What Does a Phase 1 ESA Include?
1. Records Review
The consultant reviews historical and regulatory records to trace the property's use history and identify potential contamination sources:
- Historical aerial photographs - Typically going back to the 1940s or earlier. Shows previous buildings, land use changes, storage areas and evidence of industrial activity.
- Fire insurance maps (Sanborn maps) - Detailed building footprints showing industrial uses, chemical storage and underground tanks.
- City directories and building permits - Documents past tenants and their businesses. A dry cleaner, gas station or machine shop in the property's history is a red flag.
- Land title records - Chain of ownership and any environmental liens or deed restrictions.
- Topographic and geologic maps - Identifies geology, groundwater flow direction and surface water features that could influence contaminant migration.
2. Regulatory Database Search
A commercial database search (typically from providers like EDR, GeoSearch or Maxxam) checks federal, state/provincial and local regulatory databases for:
- Known contaminated sites within defined search radii (typically up to 1 mile / 1.6 km)
- Underground and above-ground storage tank registrations
- Reported spills and releases
- Hazardous waste generator registrations
- Environmental permits and violations
- Brownfield listings and voluntary cleanup sites
The search covers not just the subject property but surrounding properties as well, since contamination can migrate via groundwater.
3. Site Reconnaissance
A qualified environmental professional physically inspects the property looking for visual evidence of contamination or potential sources:
- Stained soil or pavement
- Chemical odors
- Abandoned drums, tanks or containers
- Floor drains, sumps and wastewater discharge points
- Vent pipes or fill ports indicating underground storage tanks
- Areas of stressed or dead vegetation
- Fill material of unknown origin
- PCB-containing equipment (old transformers, capacitors)
- Asbestos-containing materials (if visible)
4. Interviews
The consultant interviews individuals with knowledge of the property:
- Current and past owners and operators
- Current tenants
- Local government officials (fire department, building department, environmental agency)
- Neighboring property owners (if accessible)
5. Report
The Phase 1 ESA report documents all findings and classifies environmental conditions into three categories:
- Recognized Environmental Conditions (RECs) - Evidence of a release or likely release of hazardous substances that requires further investigation (Phase 2 ESA).
- Controlled RECs (CRECs) - Known contamination that has been addressed but is subject to institutional or engineering controls (e.g., deed restrictions, capping).
- Historical RECs (HRECs) - Past contamination that has been cleaned up to regulatory satisfaction and is no longer a concern.
How Much Does a Phase 1 ESA Cost?
Typical Phase 1 ESA costs by property type:
| Property Type | Typical Cost Range | Timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Single commercial lot (retail, office) | $2,000 - $3,500 | 2-3 weeks |
| Small industrial property | $3,000 - $4,500 | 3-4 weeks |
| Large industrial complex | $4,000 - $8,000+ | 4-6 weeks |
| Undeveloped land / agricultural | $2,000 - $3,000 | 2-3 weeks |
| Multi-property portfolio | $1,500 - $2,500 per property | 4-8 weeks |
Factors that increase cost: large or complex properties, multiple buildings, extensive industrial history, remote locations requiring travel, rush turnaround and properties with prior environmental issues requiring more detailed records review.
When Do You Need a Phase 1 ESA?
- Commercial property purchase - Virtually all commercial lenders require a Phase 1 ESA before approving a mortgage. Without one, you cannot qualify for an innocent landowner defense.
- Industrial property acquisition - Essential for any property with current or former industrial use.
- Refinancing - Lenders may require a new or updated Phase 1 when refinancing commercial loans, particularly if the existing assessment is more than 180 days old.
- Lease transactions - Some landlords and tenants commission Phase 1 ESAs for long-term commercial leases, particularly in industrial settings.
- Development projects - Before rezoning or developing land, a Phase 1 ESA identifies environmental constraints that could affect project feasibility.
- Mergers and acquisitions - Corporate transactions involving real property holdings routinely include environmental due diligence.
- Regulatory compliance - Some jurisdictions require environmental assessments when properties change use (industrial to residential) or when environmental permits are transferred.
What Happens If the Phase 1 Finds Something?
If the Phase 1 ESA identifies one or more RECs, the next step is typically a Phase 2 ESA - a subsurface investigation involving soil borings, monitoring wells and laboratory analysis to determine whether contamination actually exists and, if so, its type, concentration and extent.
A Phase 1 ESA with no RECs is often called a "clean" report. This means no evidence of environmental concern was identified based on the available records and site inspection. It does not guarantee the property is free of contamination - it means no evidence of contamination was found using standard assessment methods.
Choosing a Consultant
Not all Phase 1 ESAs are created equal. Key factors when selecting a consultant:
- Qualifications - The Phase 1 ESA must be prepared by or under the supervision of an Environmental Professional (EP) as defined by ASTM E1527-21. Look for licensed engineers (P.Eng.), geoscientists (P.Geo.), or certified environmental professionals (LEP, QEP, REA) with relevant experience.
- ASTM compliance - Confirm the report will comply with the current ASTM E1527-21 standard. Older standards (E1527-13 or E1527-05) may not satisfy current lender requirements.
- Local knowledge - Consultants familiar with local regulatory databases, historical land use patterns and regional environmental issues produce more thorough assessments.
- Insurance - Verify the consultant carries professional liability (E&O) insurance. If the assessment misses a significant environmental condition, this insurance is your recourse.
- Turnaround time - Standard turnaround is 3-4 weeks. Rush reports (1-2 weeks) are available at a premium but may sacrifice thoroughness.
- Report quality - Ask for a sample report. A good Phase 1 ESA is clear, well-organized and provides definitive conclusions, not vague language that hedges on everything.
Common Phase 1 ESA Triggers
The following property characteristics or histories commonly result in RECs requiring Phase 2 investigation:
- Current or former gas stations, auto repair shops or car dealerships
- Dry cleaning operations (past or present)
- Manufacturing or industrial processes involving chemicals
- Underground storage tanks (registered or suspected)
- Agricultural properties with pesticide use history
- Properties near railroad corridors or military installations
- Former landfills or waste disposal areas
- Properties with fill material of unknown origin
The Bottom Line
A Phase 1 ESA is the most cost-effective risk management tool in commercial real estate. For $2,000 to $6,000, you get a professional assessment of whether a property has environmental issues that could cost hundreds of thousands or millions to resolve. Skip the Phase 1, and you are betting your investment on hope. That is not a strategy - that is a liability waiting to materialize.