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FALSE000179810000017981002025-12-082025-12-08

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 8-K
CURRENT REPORT
PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(D) OF THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
Date of report (Date of earliest event reported): December 8, 2025
NETSTREIT Corp.
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
Maryland 001-39443 84-3356606
(State or Other Jurisdiction
of Incorporation)
(Commission
File Number)
(IRS Employer
Identification No.)
2021 McKinney Avenue
Suite 1150
Dallas, Texas
75201
(Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)
972-200-7100
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
Not applicable
(Former Name or Former Address, if Changed Since Last Report)
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:
Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)
Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)
Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))
Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each class Trading Symbol(s) Name of each exchange on which registered
Common Stock,
$0.01 par value per share
NTST The New York Stock Exchange
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an emerging growth company as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 (§230.405 of this chapter) or Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (§240.12b-2 of this chapter).

Emerging growth company ☐

If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☐




Item 7.01. Regulation FD Disclosure.

On December 8, 2025, NETSTREIT Corp. (the “Company”) released a presentation that it intends to use from time to time in meetings with investors. A copy of the presentation is attached hereto as Exhibit 99.1. The investor presentation is also available on the “Investor Relations / Events & Presentations” page of the Company’s website at www.netstreit.com. The information found on, or otherwise accessible through, the Company’s website is not incorporated by reference herein.

The information set forth in this Item 7.01 and in the attached Exhibit 99.1 is being “furnished” and shall not be deemed “filed” for the purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), or otherwise subject to the liabilities of Section 18, nor shall it be deemed incorporated by reference into any filing of the Company under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Exchange Act, whether made before or after the date hereof, regardless of any general incorporation language in any such filing.

Item 9.01. Financial Statements and Exhibits.

(d) Exhibits. The following exhibit is being filed herewith:

Exhibit No. Description
99.1
104 Cover page interactive data file (embedded within the inline XBRL document).




SIGNATURE

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.

NETSTREIT Corp.
December 8, 2025 /s/ DANIEL DONLAN
Date Daniel Donlan
Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer
(Principal Financial Officer)

EX-99.1 2 ntstinvestorpresentation.htm EX-99.1 ntstinvestorpresentation
1 Investor Presentation December 2025 NETSTREIT


 
Disclaimer 2 This presentation contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Such forward-looking statements include, without limitation, statements concerning our business and growth strategies, investment, financing and leasing activities, including estimated development costs, and trends in our business, including trends in the market for single-tenant, retail commercial real estate. Words such as “expects,” “anticipates,” “intends,” “plans,” “likely,” “will,” “believes,” “seeks,” “estimates,” and variations of such words and similar expressions are intended to identify such forward-looking statements. Such statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause our actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from the results of operations or plans expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Although we believe that the assumptions underlying the forward-looking statements contained herein are reasonable, any of the assumptions could be inaccurate, and therefore such statements included in this presentation may not prove to be accurate. In light of the significant uncertainties inherent in the forward-looking statements included herein, the inclusion of such information should not be regarded as a representation by us or any other person that the results or conditions described in such statements, or our objectives and plans will be achieved. For a further discussion of these and other factors that could impact future results, performance or transactions, see the information under the heading “Risk Factors” in our Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, filed with the SEC on February 24, 2025, and other reports filed with the SEC from time to time. Forward-looking statements and such risks, uncertainties and other factors speak only as of the date of this presentation. New risks and uncertainties may arise over time, and it is not possible for us to predict those events or how they may affect us. Many of the risks identified herein and in our periodic reports have been and will continue to be heightened as a result of the ongoing and numerous adverse effects arising from macroeconomic conditions, including inflation, interest rates and instability in the banking system. We expressly disclaim any obligation or undertaking to update or revise any forward-looking statement contained herein, to reflect any change in our expectations with regard thereto, or any other change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based, except to the extent otherwise required by law. This presentation also includes certain financial measures not presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) including, but not limited to, FFO, Core FFO, AFFO, EBITDA, EBITDAre, Adjusted EBITDAre, Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre, Property-Level NOI, Property-Level Cash NOI, Property-Level Cash NOI - Estimated Run Rate, Net Debt, Adjusted Net Debt, and Adjusted Net Debt. These non-GAAP financial measures are not measures of financial performance in accordance with GAAP and may exclude items that are significant in understanding and assessing the Company’s financial results. Therefore, these measures should not be considered in isolation or as an alternative to net income, cash flows from operations or other measures of profitability, liquidity or performance under GAAP. You should be aware that the presentation of these measures may not be comparable to similarly-titled measures used by other companies. The Company believes these non-GAAP measures provide useful information to management and investors regarding certain financial and business trends relating to the Company’s financial condition and results of operations. The Company believes that the use of these non-GAAP financial measures provides an additional tool for investors to use in evaluating ongoing operating results and trends in and in comparing its financial results with other similar companies, many of which present similar non-GAAP financial measures to investors. These non-GAAP financial measures are subject to inherent limitations as they reflect the exercise of judgments by management about which expense and income are excluded or included in determining these non-GAAP financial measures. Certain monetary amounts, percentages and other figures included in this presentation have been subject to rounding adjustments. Certain other amounts that appear in this presentation may not sum due to rounding.


 
Investment Highlights & Business Update 3 Source: Company data and balance sheet as of September 30, 2025, unless otherwise noted. Figures represent percentage of ABR unless otherwise noted. Due to rounding, respective percentage of credit rating may not precisely reflect the absolute figures. 1. Represents tenants with investment grade credit metrics (more than $1.0 billion in annual sales and a debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio of less than 2.0x), but do not carry a published rating from S&P, Fitch, Moody's, or NAIC. 2. See slides 4 or 13 for further details. 3. Reflects 25.4 million of unsettled forward equity shares at the September 30, 2025, weighted average net settlement price of $16.98 per share and 5.8 million of ATM shares sold QTD in 4Q’25 at a weighted average net settlement price of $18.09 per share. 4. Includes the $150 million of undrawn term loan balance from the $250 million senior unsecured term loan. 5. Stat incorporates all completed activities as of December 4, 2025, as if they occurred by September 30, 2025; all other portfolio stats are as of September 30, 2025. 87% Necessity, Discount, and Service-Oriented Tenants 99.9% Occupancy 3.9x Unit-Level Rent Coverage2 $1.24 billion Total PF Liquidity3,4 3.1x PF Adj. Net Debt3 / Annualized Adj. EBITDAre Focused on growing portfolio with high quality tenants that offer strong credit profiles and provide consistent performance through various economic cycles Proven track record of full occupancy and strong unit-level coverage; NTST’s lone vacancy has received strong interest from multiple retailers above the prior rent Long weighted average lease term and de minimis intermediate-term lease expirations within the pharmacy and dollar store industries Low leverage with no intermediate-term debt maturities $431 million of unsettled forward equity at 3Q’25-end $106 million of gross ATM sales QTD in 4Q’25 High Credit Quality & Resilient Net Lease Portfolio Well Capitalized Balance Sheet 62% Investment Grade (IG) and Investment Grade Profile (IGP)1 7.0% Wtd. Avg. Cash Yield Since 3Q’20 Strong investment pace since 2020 with a solid pipeline of investment opportunities at attractive cash yields $412 million of gross investments completed YTD as of 3Q’25 Proven ability to source resilient investments as evidenced by our de minimis historical credit loss Proven Ability to Source Attractive Investment Opportunities 2028 First Term Loan Maturity $104 million Avg. Net Investments Per Quarter Since 3Q’20 20% PF Adj. Net Debt3 / Undepreciated Gross Assets 4bps Annual Credit Loss in 5.5 Yrs2 7.6% Wtd. Avg Cash Yield YTD as of 3Q’25 9.9 Years Weighted Average Lease Term (WALT) 15bps Pharmacy & Dollar Store ABR5 Expiring Thru YE’28


 
$- $0.5 $1.0 $1.5 $2.0 $2.5 $3.0 $3.5 2Q'23 Pre-Bankruptcy Post-Bankruptcy Current & Former Big Lots Assets Disposed Assets Annualized Credit Loss Experience vs. Peers De Minimis Historical Annualized Credit Loss Since Inception 4 Since NETSTREIT’s initial equity raise in 4Q’19, only one portfolio tenant – Big Lots – has experienced a credit event, which is projected to cause $404K1 in lost ABR for 4bps of annualized credit loss in 5.5 years Big Lots Historical ABR Source: Company data as of September 30, 2025. 1. Post bankruptcy rent loss with Big Lots is calculated using management’s expected recovery on its vacant Big Lots asset in Bowie, MD, which remains subject to multiple LOIs that are in various stages of negotiation. In 2H’23, NTST disposed of three underperforming assets leased to Big Lots with $850K in ABR; post bankruptcy all three assets are vacant After 5.5 years of existence, NTST has lost just $404K1 of ABR from credit events "Historically, our longer-term average is closer to 25bps” (1Q‘24 Earnings Transcript) Peer Commentary on Annualized Credit Loss “Historically, both under assumptions but also realized credit loss…we've probably been more in the 50bps to 75bps range” (1Q’25 Citi Conference Transcript) “We provided some good credit loss statistics in our NAREIT deck of 30bps per annum is our historical experience” (3Q’24 Earnings Transcript) “Historically, our credit loss typically runs in the kind of the 30bps to 50bps kind of range” (4Q’24 Earnings Transcript) “Historically about how when you exclude the pandemic, we’ve been right there around 25bps of credit loss in a given year as a % of revenue” (3Q’24 Earnings Transcript) With Big Lots footprint shrinking to ≈200 stores from ≈1,400 stores post bankruptcy (15% acceptance rate), NETSTREIT’s 87.5% acceptance rate (7 of 8 leases accepted/assigned in bankruptcy) was significantly better than all other multi-unit landlords


 
5.3% 5.2% 4.4% 4.1% 3.8% 3.7% 2.7% 2.7% 2.7% 2.5% A Portfolio Overview High-Quality, Diversified Portfolio Consisting of 62.1% IG and IG Profile Tenants Across 45 States 5 Source: Company data as of September 30, 2025, unless otherwise noted. 1. Includes acquisitions, mortgage loans receivable, and completed developments. 2. Calculation excludes properties under development and one vacant property. 3. Percentage represents investments, or investments that are subsidiaries of a parent entity, with a credit rating of BBB- (S&P/Fitch), Baa3 (Moody’s), or NAIC2 (National Association of Insurance Commissioners) or higher, and investments with investment grade credit metrics (more than $1.0 billion in annual sales and a debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio of less than 2.0x), but do not carry a published rating from S&P, Moody’s, Fitch, or NAIC. 4. Weighted by ABR; excludes lease extension options and investments that secure mortgage loans receivable. 5. Stats incorporate all completed activities as of December 4, 2025, as if they occurred by September 30, 2025; all other portfolio stats are as of September 30, 2025. Key Portfolio Stats Investments1 721 States 45 Portfolio Square Feet (in millions) 13.2 Tenants 114 Retail Sectors 28 % Occupancy2 99.9% % IG and IG Profile Tenants (by ABR) 3 62.1% WALT (Years)4 9.9 Lease Turnover Through 2027 (by ABR) 2.7% National Footprint in Attractive Markets Top 10 Tenants by % of ABR Investment Grade BBB Sub-Investment Grade (unrated)≥1% and <3% ABR <1% ABR ≥5% ABR ≥3% and <5% ABR 0% ABR AK HI WA OR MT CA AZ WY NV ID UT CO NM TX OK ND SD NE KS LA AR MO IA MN WI IL IN MI OH KY TN FL MS AL GA SC NC VAWV PA DE NJ NY ME VTNH MA MD CT RI SIG (unrated) Baa1 BBB SIG (unrated) IG Profile AA BBB+ A Investment Grade Profile 5 5 5


 
Dollar Stores1: Convenience Stores: Home Improvement: 9.4% Grocery: 13.9% 1 Portfolio Diversification In Defensive Retail Sectors Nationally Diversified Portfolio Primarily Comprised of Recession Resilient Retail Tenants Source: Company data as of September 30, 2025. All figures represent percentage of ABR. Due to rounding, respective defensive retail sector exposure may not precisely reflect the absolute figures. 1. Stats incorporate all completed activities as of December 4, 2025, as if they occurred by September 30, 2025; all other portfolio stats are as of September 30, 2025. Top Industries45.8% Necessity 14.7% Discount 13.2% Other 9.3% 3 12.8% 2 4 Drug Stores & Pharmacies1: 7.9% 5 26.3% Service 86.8% ABR Necessity Discount Service 6


 
Resilient, Cycle-Tested Investment Grade Credit Tenants with Durable Cash Flows1 >60% 62.1% (46.9% IG and 15.2% IGP) Granular Assets in Highly Fragmented, Undercapitalized Market Segment $3.6 million Avg. Asset Size $1 to $10 million Avg. Asset Size Net Lease Retail Assets with Long Lease Term Benefiting From Contractual Rent Growth ~10 Year WALT 9.9 Year WALT2 Diversification by Industry, Tenant, State1 <15% Industry <50% Top 10 Tenants <15% State 13.9% Industry 37.5% Top 10 Tenants3 15.4% State Significant Focus on Fundamental Real Estate Underwriting Attractive cost basis with durable valuation supported by market rents and demos, physical structure and location, and alternative use analyses 7 Source: Company data as of September 30, 2025, unless otherwise noted. Due to rounding, respective percentage of credit rating may not precisely reflect the absolute figures. 1. Portfolio statistics as a percentage of ABR. 2. Weighted by ABR; excludes lease extension options and investments that secure mortgage loans receivables. 3. Stats incorporate all completed activities as of October 27, 2025, as if they occurred by September 30, 2025; all other portfolio stats are as of September 30, 2025. Current MetricsInvestment Philosophy Portfolio Strategy Defensive Tenancy in Necessity-Based and E-commerce-Resistant Retail Industries1 86.8%Primarily Consistent Investment Approach Disciplined and Deliberate Portfolio Construction


 
“Market-Taker Assets” 8 Inefficiently Priced Assets TYPICAL TRANSACTION - Well marketed transaction - Straight-forward transaction - Ability to finance transaction - Highly competitive, well capitalized investors TYPICAL TRANSACTION - Not highly marketed - May involve transaction structuring that limits buyer pool - Limited financing options - Less competitive Efficiently Priced Assets Acquisition Strategy – Bell Curve Investing Acquisition Strategy is Focused on Inefficiently Priced Assets Where Risk Adjusted Returns are Higher


 
9 Real Estate Valuation Unit-Level Profitability• Review underlying key real estate metrics to maximize re- leasing potential • Location analysis • Alternative use analysis • Determine rent coverage (min. 2.0x) and cost variability • Assess volatility and likelihood of cash flow weakness C B Tenant Credit Underwriting • Evaluate corporate level financials • Assess business risks • Determine ownership/sponsorship • Rigorous credit underwriting A Le ve l o f U nd er w rit in g Em ph as is Stringent Three-Part Underwriting Process Our Three-Pronged Approach Results in Superior Downside Protection


 
Investment Grade (rated) Investment Grade Profile (unrated) Sub-IG (rated) & Sub-IG Profile (unrated) Description • Validated financial strength and stability • Professional management with standardized operational practices • Focus on corporate guarantee credit • Lower relative yields • Higher competition for deals • IG-caliber balance sheets without explicit rating • Threshold metrics: • At least $1B in sales • Debt / adjusted EBITDA of less than 2.0x • Well-capitalized retailers • National footprint with strong brand equity • Focus on real estate quality / unit- level profitability • Higher relative yields • Lower competition for deals Durability • Coverage and credit enhancements required given more susceptible to market disruptions % Of ABR 46.9% 15.2% 37.9% Lease Terms (WALT, Rent Bumps, etc.) Less negotiating leverage More negotiating leverage Most negotiating leverage Representative Tenants 10 Source: Company data as of September 30, 2025, unless otherwise noted. Due to rounding, respective percentage of credit rating may not precisely reflect the absolute figures. 62.1% IG and IG Profile Defensive, consistent performance through economic cycles Strong Tenant Credit Underwriting Credit-Focused Underwriting Approach Drives Stable Revenue and Long-Term Return on Investment


 
11 Market-Level Considerations Property-Level Considerations • Fungibility of building for alternative uses • Replacement cost • Location analysis • Traffic counts • Nearby uses and traffic drivers, complementary nature thereof • Accessibility and parking capacity • Ingress and egress • Visibility / signage • Vacancy analysis • Marketability of the real estate without current tenant • List of likely replacement tenants • Rent analysis • Market rent versus in-place rent • Demographic analysis • Current demographics plus trends and forecasts • Competitive analysis • Market position versus competing retail corridors Real Estate Valuation Real Estate Closely Follows Credit as a Top Priority: We Utilize a Ground-Up Framework Rooted in Real Estate Fundamentals to Underpin Valuation and Further Quantify the Upside Potential of an Investment


 
12 Obtain Financial Info Perform Financial Analysis2 Assess Investment Merits1 3 • Provides clarity into location-specific performance • Analyze store demand dynamics, cost structure and liquidity profile • Determine whether property meets investment criteria • Obtain unit-level financial information from parent company if possible • If financials are not provided, utilize data provided by third party vendors to estimate sales by location • Third party data includes: • Cell phone traffic • Point of sales (POS) data • Triangulate P&L based on available information • Foot traffic • Sales • EBITDAR margin • Rent • Account for variability in business model cost structure • Higher proportion of fixed costs = more variability in rent coverage • Determine store ranking within tenant’s broader operating portfolio based on estimated sales Key Unit-Level Investment Criteria Target Rent Coverage of 2.0x on a Stabilized Basis  Higher Variable Cost Structure Ranks in Top Half of Tenant’s Store Portfolio Unit-Level Profitability Assess Unit-Level Financial Performance to Focus on Properties with Strong Rent Coverage and Higher Variability in Operating Costs


 
0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 12% 14% 16% NR <1.00 1.00-1.49 1.50-1.99 >2.00 4% 9% 2% 7% 10% 9% 28% 31% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% Portfolio Health Statistics Durability Evidenced by Creditworthy Tenants with Large Revenue Bases and Strong Unit-Level Coverage 13 Source: Company data as of September 30, 2025. “NR” stands for not reported. Please note that 0.8% of the non-reporting coverage tranche includes newly built locations that are required to provide unit-level financial information in the future. 1. Unit-level rent coverage is calculated using a.) unit-level financial reporting, which represents 33.9% of ABR, or b.) Placer.ai adjusted sales and corporate EBITDA margins, where unit level reporting is not required by a lease. 2. The chart illustrates the ABR attributable to leases with tenants having specified implied credit ratings based on their Moody’s EDF-X scores. Moody’s equates the EDF scores generated using EDF-X with a corresponding credit rating. For those tenants with an actual credit rating from S&P, Moody’s, Fitch, or the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, the higher of the actual or implied credit rating is used. 3. Excludes investments that secure mortgage loans receivable and one vacant property. % of ABR by Tenant Revenue Tranche % of ABR by Unit-Level Coverage Tranche1 Unit-Level Coverage by Tenant Credit2 Unit-Level Coverage by Lease Expiration3 >85% of our tenants generate >$1B in annual revenue Our weighted average unit-level coverage for the portfolio is 3.9x ABR expiring through 2029 has coverage of 5.4x 91% of our ABR has unit- level coverage >1.5x >2.00x: 76.7% 1.50-1.99x: 14.2% 1.00-1.49x: 5.0% <1.00x :0.7% NR, 3.3% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% NR <1.00 1.00-1.49 1.50-1.99 >2.00


 
14 Source: Company filings from August 2020 through September 30, 2025. 1. Investments that have investment grade credit metrics (more than $1.0 billion in annual sales and a debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio of less than 2.0x), but do not carry a published rating from S&P, Fitch, Moody’s, or NAIC. 2. Excludes lease extension options and investments that secure mortgage loans receivable. 3. Assumes cash cap rate is 30bps lower than reported GAAP cap rate. Gross Volume ($ in millions) $2,622 $7,031 $3,642 $1,514 $5,552 Investment Grade % 57.4% 67.0% NA 54.7% NA Investment Grade Profile1 % 14.3% NA NA NA NA IG + IG Profile % 71.1% NA NA NA NA WALT2 11.6 10.1 12.8 11.2 15.7 Weighted Average Cash Yield 7.0% 6.4%3 7.1% 6.7% 7.6% History of Sourcing Investments at Attractive Yields Consistently Invested at Above-Market Yields Despite Focus on High-Quality Tenants Sourcing Volume Since 3Q’20


 
$119,128 $129,207 $115,734 $151,555 $195,079 $90,680 $117,063 $203,907 $0 $40,000 $80,000 $120,000 $160,000 $200,000 $240,000 4Q'23 1Q'24 2Q'24 3Q'24 4Q'24 1Q'25 2Q'25 3Q'25 G ro ss In ve st m en t A ct iv ity ($ 00 0s ) 15 Investment Activity Summary Details Source: Company data as of September 30, 2025. 1. Includes acquisitions, mortgage loans receivable, and completed developments. 2. Excludes lease extension options and investments that secure mortgage loans receivable. Investments1 4Q' 1Q'2 2Q'24 3Q'24 4Q' 1Q' 2Q' 3Q' Number of Investments 57 42 28 33 52 25 32 50 Average Investment $2,090 $3,076 $4,133 $4,593 $3,752 $3,627 $3,658 $4,078 Cash Cap Rates 7.2% 7.5% 7.5% 7.5% 7.4% 7.7% 7.8% 7.4% IG + IGP % 98.7% 84.8% 39.1% 52.4% 51.2% 65.9% 25.7% 33.4% Weighted Average Lease Term2 10.9 11.5 16.7 12.5 14.0 9.2 15.7 13.4


 
$15,995 $21,600 $12,707 $24,105 $59,337 $40,293 $60,391 $37,769 $0 $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $40,000 $50,000 $60,000 $70,000 4Q'23 1Q'24 2Q'24 3Q'24 4Q'24 1Q'25 2Q'25 3Q'25 D is po si tio ns A ct iv ity ($ 00 0s ) 16 Disposition Activity Summary Details Source: Company data as of September 30, 2025. 1. Excludes vacant properties. Dispositions 4Q'23 1Q'24 2Q'24 3Q'24 4Q'24 1Q'25 2Q'25 3Q'25 Cash Cap Rates1 7.2% 6.8% 6.8% 7.3% 7.1% 7.3% 6.5% 7.2% Number of Investments 6 12 6 8 30 16 20 24 Weighted Average Lease Term 11.2 10.3 10.3 9.9 11.4 10.0 9.3 11.8


 
17 Source: Company data as of September 30, 2025. Since inception, the Company has disposed of 201 properties totaling $499 million, which has materially improved portfolio performance metrics such as tenant quality, WALT, and geographic diversity Identify properties not meeting strategy and/or risk management criteria (i.e. rent coverage) Periodically review all properties for changes in performance, credit, and local conditions Leverage 1031 exchange transfers where possible to access deep, non- institutional market for portfolio optimization Strategic Recycling Perpetual Stratification Active Monitoring Identify Active Asset Management Continuously Track Property Performance to Stratify Portfolio and Ensure a Secure Rental Stream


 
Source: Company data as September 30, 2025, unless otherwise noted. 1. Includes $200 million senior unsecured term loan that matures on March 25, 2031, and $250 million senior unsecured delayed draw term loan that matures on September 24, 2032. 2. Reflects the 25.4 million of unsettled forward equity shares at the September 30, 2025, weighted average net settlement price of $16.98 per share and 5.8 million of ATM shares sold QTD in 4Q’25 at a weighted average net settlement price of $18.09 per share. 3. Includes the $150 million of undrawn term loan balance from the $250 million senior unsecured term loan. Conservative Balance Sheet with Strong Liquidity Balance Sheet Positioned for Growth Given Strong Liquidity Profile and Low Leverage Position 18 $200 $250 $350 $500 $8 $200 $100 $0 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $600 $700 $800 $900 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 In M illi on s Term Loan RCF Capacity Mortgage Note New Term Loans Access to Debt: Secured $450 million in new term loans1 Abundant Liquidity to Support Growth: $1.24 billion in total PF liquidity2,3 Well-Staggered Debt Maturity Profile: Increased weighted average debt maturity to 4.2 years; no term loan maturities expected until 2028 Unsecured Balance Sheet: Asset base is over 99% unencumbered Low Leverage: PF Adjusted Net Debt2 / Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre of 3.1x Debt Maturity Schedule $150


 
97% 26% 78% 26% 28% 59%15% 15% 6% 46% 3% 40% 15% 12% FCPT NTST EPRT ADC O NNN Service Discount Necessity 1.7% 2.7% 7.4% 9.9% 11.8% 12.8% EPRT NTST ADC NNN O FCPT 47% 67% 53% 32% 14% 0% ADC FCPT NTST O NNN EPRT 5.1x 3.9x 3.6x NR NR NR FCPT NTST EPRT O NNN ADC Source: Public filings as of September 30, 2025. 1. Examples of service includes convenience stores, quick service restaurants, automotive service, and health and fitness. Examples of discount include dollar store and discount retail. Examples of necessity include, drug stores & pharmacy, home improvement, auto parts, and banking. Realty Income’s portfolio composition reflects their Top 20 industries only as they no longer disclose their complete list of industries. Portfolio Highlights Relative to Peers NTST’s Stable & Predictable Cash Flow Profile Drives Superior Risk-Adjusted Returns Lease Rollover Through 2027 Unit-Level Rent Coverage Investment Grade % Portfolio Composition1 Weighted-Average Lease Term 19 14.4 9.9 8.0 8.9 10.1 7.1


 
Source: Public filings, FactSet and S&P Capital IQ. Note: Market data as of December 4, 2025. Capitalization data as of Q3 2025. 1. AFFO per share growth CAGR is calculated using 2021A and 2024A AFFO per share. 2. FVR’s common stock began trading on the New York Stock Exchange on October 2, 2024. 3. During 2023, WPC spun-off NLOP. Year-over-year growth not comparable. Consensus WPC RemainCo 2023A AFFO not available. 4. 2026E AFFO per share growth is calculated using FactSet mean 2026E AFFO per share estimates and 2025E AFFO per share estimates. 5. Net Debt is adjusted for forward equity. For NTST, net debt is further adjusted to include the impact of ATM sales in 4Q’25 through December 4, 2025. 6. 2026E AFFO per share multiple calculated using current price per share and FactSet mean 2026E AFFO per share estimates. Adj. Net Debt / EBITDA5 Multiple and Earnings Growth Comparison Relative Valuation and Growth Remains Stable 20 AFFO per Share Growth CAGR1 (2021-2024) 2026E AFFO per Share Growth4 2026E AFFO per Share Multiple6 32 3.1x 3.5x 3.8x 4.6x 4.7x 5.3x 5.4x 5.4x 5.6x 5.8x 10.3% 9.1% 5.9% 5.7% 5.3% 3.5% 3.1% 3.0% NA NA 16.4x 15.2x 13.2x 13.0x 12.9x 12.7x 12.2x 11.5x 11.3x 11.1x 8.0% 5.3% 4.5% 4.2% 3.7% 3.6% 3.6% 3.4% 3.3% 2.8%


 
Implied Cap Rate G&A Adjusted Implied Cap Rate2 2025E AFFO Multiple 5.7% 5.3% 17.1x 5.9% 5.4% 16.3x 6.6% 6.0% 13.5x 6.8% 6.6% 13.3x 6.9% 6.1% 13.9x 7.0% 6.7% 12.0x Average ex NTST 6.4% 6.0% 14.4x (unaudited, in millions) Three Months Ended, September 30, 2025 NOI - Property $40.6 Straight-line Rental Adjustments (1.1) Amortization of Lease-Related Intangibles (0.0) Cash NOI - Property 39.4 Intraquarter Net Investment Activity 2.7 Normalized Cash NOI - Property 42.1 Annualized Normalized Cash NOI - Property $168.4 Applied Cap Rate 7.00% 6.75% 6.50% 6.41% 6.00% Implied Real Estate Value $2,406 $2,495 $2,591 $2,629 $2,807 Mortgage Loan Receivable 138.3 Property Under Development 1.8 Other Tangible Assets 57.0 Net Debt1 (623.5) Other Tangible Liabilities (41.8) Implied Equity Value $1,938 $2,027 $2,123 $2,161 $2,339 Fully Diluted Shares Outstanding 83.5 Unsettled Forward Shares1 25.4 Implied Equity Value per Share $17.80 $18.62 $19.50 $19.85 $21.48 If NTST traded to the peer avg. cap rate of 6.4%, it would imply a share price ~$20 Applied Cap Rate and NAV Analysis Strong Upside Potential Given Relative Valuation Applied Nominal Cap Rate – Sensitivity Analysis 21 Peer Benchmarking Source: Public filings, FactSet and S&P Capital IQ. Note: Capitalization data as of Q3 2025. Market data as of November 13, 2025; closing price per share of $18.07. Companies may define adjusted cash NOI differently. Accordingly, such data for these companies and NTST may not be comparable. 1. Assumes 25.4 million of unsettled forward equity shares were settled for cash on September 30, 2025, at a weighted average net settlement price of $16.98 per share. 2. (NOI – TTM G&A) / Implied Real Estate Value.


 
22 Corporate Responsibility


 
23 Source: Company data. 1. Reflects gender and racial / ethnic diversity. Annual Director Elections Majority Voting Standard For Election of Directors Director Resignation Policy Annual Director and Committee Assessments No poison pill or differential voting stock structure to chill shareholder participation Shareholders’ right to amend the charter and bylaws by simple majority vote Separate non-executive Chair and CEO roles and Lead Independent Director with strong role and significant governance duties Governance Highlights Board Independence and Diversity 86% Independent Directors 50% Diverse Independent Directors1 43% Female Directors 4 Fully Independent Committees Governance We are committed to acting with honesty and integrity and conducting all corporate opportunities in an ethical manner.


 
24 401K Plan 100% company match of up to a 6% contribution Insurance Health, dental, and vision insurance costs covered at 90% for employees and 80% for dependents Leave Ten weeks of paid maternity leave at 100% salary as well as four weeks of paid family bonding; Company also provides jury duty, witness leave, and military leave Paid Time Off A minimum of twenty-three PTO days Paid Holidays Fourteen days of paid holidays Employee Assistance 24/7 toll-free hotline to access confidential counseling on various physical and mental health needs Continuing Education Reimbursement for certifications, tuition, courses, and seminars for continuing professional education BenefitsWorkforce Diversity Source: Company data as of March 31, 2025. Social Responsibility Human capital management is the cornerstone of our ESG and corporate strategy. We believe in the value of a diverse workforce and inclusive culture. 44% Women 24% Ethnically Diverse


 
25 Source: Tenants within our portfolio that have public environmental, social, or governance initiatives as of September 30, 2025. 1. The sustainability-linked loan feature is for the $250 million senior unsecured term loan, which matures in January 2029. Environmental Responsibility We are committed to fulfilling our responsibility as an outstanding corporate citizen.  19 of our top 20 tenants have corporate sustainability initiatives in place  58% of ABR represents top tenants with ESG initiatives  We incorporated green lease clauses in our standard lease form and as part of our corporate guidelines  We received Silver Level recognition from Green Lease Leaders for our efforts  We incorporated sustainability-linked loan feature to our unsecured term loan1  We completed scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas emissions inventory for our corporate headquarters  We participated annually in GRESB Public Disclosure  Corporate headquarters is LEED v4 O+M: EB Gold Certified, meeting strict guidelines set forth by the Environmental Protection Agency  Implementation of conservation practices in office Corporate Sustainability Initiatives from Tenants Greenhouse Gas Emissions Green Lease Clauses Sustainable Practices Science Based Target initiatives (“SBTi”) GRESB Public Disclosure


 
26 Financial Information and Non-GAAP Reconciliations


 
27 Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations (unaudited, dollars in thousands, except per share data) Three Months Ended September 30, Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025 2024 2025 2024 REVENUES Rental revenue (including reimbursable) $ 45,026 $ 38,172 $ 132,774 $ 110,226 Interest income on loans receivable 3,282 3,272 9,485 8,458 Other revenue — — 245 — Total revenues 48,308 41,444 142,504 118,684 OPERATING EXPENSES Property 4,302 4,494 13,589 12,578 General and administrative 5,128 4,287 15,772 15,266 Depreciation and amortization 21,389 20,438 63,818 56,522 Provisions for impairment 5,493 9,838 13,531 17,336 Transaction costs 19 26 139 201 Total operating expenses 36,331 39,083 106,849 101,903 OTHER (EXPENSE) INCOME Interest expense, net (12,636) (7,965) (36,734) (21,749) Gain (loss) on sales of real estate, net 1,122 (132) 6,730 874 Loss on debt extinguishment — — (46) — Other income (expense), net 170 416 46 (2,451) Total other expense, net (11,344) (7,681) (30,004) (23,326) Net income (loss) before income taxes 633 (5,320) 5,651 (6,545) Income tax expense (12) (2) (41) (31) Net income (loss) 621 (5,322) 5,610 (6,576) Net income (loss) attributable to noncontrolling interests 3 (27) 29 (35) Net income (loss) income attributable to common stockholders $ 618 $ (5,295) $ 5,581 $ (6,541) Amounts available to common stockholders per common share: Basic $ 0.01 $ (0.07) $ 0.07 $ (0.09) Diluted $ 0.01 $ (0.07) $ 0.07 $ (0.09) Weighted average common shares: Basic 83,472,089 77,610,680 82,344,168 74,822,286 Diluted 85,641,948 77,610,680 83,429,550 74,822,286


 
28 Funds From Operations and Adjusted Funds From Operations (unaudited, dollars in thousands, except per share data) Three Months Ended September 30, Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025 2024 2025 2024 GAAP Reconciliation: Net income (loss) $ 621 $ (5,322) $ 5,610 $ (6,576) Depreciation and amortization of real estate 21,315 20,360 63,598 56,286 Provisions for impairment 4,134 9,838 12,173 17,336 (Gain) loss on sales of real estate, net (1,122) 132 (6,730) (874) FFO $ 24,948 $ 25,008 $ 74,651 $ 66,172 Adjustments: Non-recurring executive transition costs, severance, and related charges 1 14 80 1,495 Debt related transaction costs 92 — 495 — Other non-recurring loss (gain), net 1,314 (115) 1,314 3,077 Core FFO $ 26,355 $ 24,907 $ 76,540 $ 70,744 Adjustments: Straight-line rent adjustments (1,126) (749) (3,263) (1,829) Amortization of deferred financing costs 756 558 2,164 1,673 Amortization of above/below-market assumed debt 29 29 86 86 Amortization of loan origination costs and discounts (147) (265) (197) (242) Amortization of lease-related intangibles (35) (170) (110) (363) Earned development interest 36 259 118 962 Capitalized interest expense (24) (130) (112) (709) Non-cash interest expense (income) 721 (990) 2,138 (2,948) Non-cash compensation expense 1,484 1,376 4,393 4,128 AFFO $ 28,049 $ 24,825 $ 81,757 $ 71,502 FFO per common share, diluted $ 0.29 $ 0.32 $ 0.89 $ 0.87 Core FFO per common share, diluted $ 0.31 $ 0.32 $ 0.92 $ 0.93 AFFO per common share, diluted $ 0.33 $ 0.32 $ 0.98 $ 0.94 Dividends per share $ 0.215 $ 0.210 $ 0.635 $ 0.620 Dividends per share as a percent of AFFO 65% 66% 65% 66% Weighted average common shares outstanding, basic 83,472,089 77,610,680 82,344,168 74,822,286 Operating partnership units outstanding 421,954 433,942 423,944 450,952 Unvested restricted stock units 420,132 115,703 218,847 117,761 Unsettled shares under open forward equity contracts 1,327,773 10,219 442,591 311,475 Weighted average common shares outstanding, diluted 85,641,948 78,170,544 83,429,550 75,702,474


 
29 EBITDAre and Adjusted EBITDAre (unaudited, dollars in thousands) 1. Adjustment reflects the estimated cash yield on developments in process as of September 30, 2025. 2. Adjustment assumes all re-leasing activity, investments in, and dispositions of real estate, including developments completed during the three months ended September 30, 2025, had occurred on July 1, 2025. 3. We calculate Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre by multiplying Adjusted EBITDAre by four. 4. Reflects 25,393,242 of unsettled forward equity shares at the September 30, 2025, available weighted average net settlement price of $16.98 per share. 5. Reflects 1,639,092 of shares sold at a weighted average net settlement price of $18.11 per share. Three Months Ended September 30, 2025 GAAP Reconciliation: Net income $ 621 Depreciation and amortization of real estate 21,315 Amortization of lease-related intangibles (35) Non-real estate depreciation and amortization 74 Interest expense, net 12,636 Income tax expense 12 Amortization of loan origination costs and discounts (147) EBITDA 34,476 Adjustments: Provisions for impairment 4,134 (Gain) loss on sales of real estate, net (1,122) EBITDAre 37,488 Adjustments: Straight-line rent adjustments (1,126) Debt related transaction costs 92 Non-recurring executive transition costs, severance, and related charges 1 Other non-recurring loss (gain), net 1,314 Transaction costs 19 Non-cash compensation expense 1,484 Adjustment for construction in process(1) 32 Adjustment for intraquarter investment activities(2) 2,474 Adjusted EBITDAre $ 41,778 Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre(3) $ 167,112 Net Debt As of September 30, 2025 Principal amount of total debt 1,108,084 Less: Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash (53,324) Net Debt $ 1,054,760 Less: Net value of unsettled forward equity(4) (431,246) Adjusted Net Debt $ 623,514 Less: Subsequent ATM Sales(5) (29,682) Pro Forma Adjusted Net Debt $ 593,832 Leverage Net Debt / Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre 6.3x Adjusted Net Debt / Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre 3.7x Pro Forma Adjusted Net Debt / Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre 3.6x


 
30 Net Operating Income (unaudited, dollars in thousands) 1. Adjustment assumes all re-leasing activity, investments in, and dispositions of real estate, including developments completed during the three months ended September 30, 2025, had occurred on July 1, 2025. Three Months Ended September 30, 2025 2024 GAAP Reconciliation: Net income (loss) $ 621 $ (5,322) General and administrative expense 5,128 4,287 Depreciation and amortization 21,389 20,438 Provisions for impairment 5,493 9,838 Transaction costs 19 26 Interest expense, net 12,636 7,965 (Gain) loss on sales of real estate, net (1,122) 132 Income tax expense 12 2 Amortization of loan origination costs and discounts (147) — Interest income on mortgage loans receivable (3,282) (3,272) Other (income) expense (170) 107 Property-Level NOI 40,577 34,201 Straight-line rent adjustments (1,126) (749) Amortization of lease-related intangibles (35) (170) Property-Level Cash NOI $ 39,416 $ 33,282 Adjustment for intraquarter acquisitions, dispositions, and completed development (1) 2,691 Property-Level Cash NOI - Estimated Run Rate $ 42,107 Property Operating Expense Coverage Property operating expense reimbursement $ 3,743 $ 3,919 Property operating expenses (4,302) (4,494) Property operating expenses, net $ (559) $ (575)


 
31 Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets (unaudited, dollars in thousands, except per share data) September 30, 2025 December 31, 2024 Assets Real estate, at cost: Land $ 676,664 $ 571,272 Buildings and improvements 1,471,002 1,400,393 Total real estate, at cost 2,147,666 1,971,665 Less accumulated depreciation (173,846) (143,422) Property under development 1,794 6,118 Real estate held for investment, net 1,975,614 1,834,361 Assets held for sale 86,060 48,637 Mortgage loans receivable, net 138,307 139,409 Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash 53,324 14,320 Lease intangible assets, net 157,671 164,392 Other assets, net 56,958 58,227 Total assets $ 2,467,934 $ 2,259,346 LIABILITIES AND EQUITY Liabilities: Term loans, net $ 1,092,746 $ 622,608 Revolving credit facility — 239,000 Mortgage note payable, net 7,824 7,853 Lease intangible liabilities, net 17,522 20,177 Liabilities related to assets held for sale 1,954 1,912 Accounts payable, accrued expenses, and other liabilities 41,957 29,664 Total liabilities $ 1,162,003 $ 921,214 Equity: Stockholders’ equity Common stock, $0.01 par value, 400,000,000 shares authorized; 83,479,176 and 81,602,232 shares issued and outstanding as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively $ 835 $ 816 Additional paid-in capital 1,540,070 1,507,995 Distributions in excess of retained earnings (235,097) (188,046) Accumulated other comprehensive (loss) income (6,619) 10,206 Total stockholders’ equity 1,299,189 1,330,971 Noncontrolling interests 6,742 7,161 Total equity 1,305,931 1,338,132 Total liabilities and equity $ 2,467,934 $ 2,259,346


 
32 Debt, Capitalization, and Financial Ratios (unaudited, dollars in thousands) Fixed, 100% Fixed vs. Floating Debt $200 $250 $350 $500 $8 $200 $100 $0 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $600 $700 $800 $900 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 In M illi on s Debt Maturity Schedule Term Loan RCF Capacity Mortgage Note New Term Loans $150 1. Rates presented exclude the impact of capitalized loan fee amortization. Effective September 25, 2025, credit spread adjustment was removed from the revolver and term loans. Interest rates that consist of fixed rate SOFR swaps include a borrowing spread of 1.15%. The borrowing spread for the 2032 Term Loan is 1.50%. 2. Interest rate reflects the all-in borrowing rate as of September 30, 2025. Facility fees are charged at an annual rate of 0.15% of the total facility size of $500 million, and are not included in the interest rate presented. The facility matures on January 15, 2029, and includes a one-year extension option. Remaining capacity reduced by $0.15 million for outstanding letters of credit. 3. The term loan matures on July 3, 2026, and includes two one-year extension options and one six-month extension option. 4. The term loan matures on January 15, 2029, and includes a one-year extension option. Existing fixed rate SOFR expires in January 2027; the term loan is unhedged beyond that date. 5. The term loan matures on January 15, 2029, and includes a one-year extension option. 6. The effective date for the SOFR swap is October 1, 2025. 7. $200.0 million of the term loan is hedged at an all-in rate of 4.92%. The remaining $50.0 million is unhedged. The effective date for the SOFR swap shown is October 1, 2025. Subsequent SOFR swaps will take effect on January 1, 2026, and April 1, 2026, on $50.0 million respectively. 8. The mortgage note was assumed as part of an asset acquisition during the third quarter of 2022. As of September 30, 2025 Debt Summary Fully Extended Maturity Principal Balance Fixed Rate SOFR Swap Interest Rate(1) Remaining Capacity Available Term (years) Unsecured revolver(2) January 15, 2030 $ — —% —% $ 499,850 4.3 2028 Term Loan February 11, 2028 200,000 2.63% 3.78% — 2.4 2029 Term Loan(3) January 3, 2029 250,000 3.74% 4.89% — 3.3 2030 Term Loan A(4) January 15, 2030 175,000 2.40% 3.55% — 4.3 2030 Term Loan B(5) January 15, 2030 175,000 3.87% 5.02% — 4.3 2031 Term Loan(6) March 25, 2031 200,000 3.44% 4.59% — 5.5 2032 Term Loan(7) September 24, 2032 100,000 3.45% 4.95% 150,000 7.0 Mortgage note(8) November 1, 2027 8,084 —% 4.53% — 2.1 Total / Weighted Average $ 1,108,084 3.26% 4.45% $ 649,850 4.2


 
33 Debt, Capitalization, and Financial Ratios (cont’d) (unaudited, dollars in thousands) 1. Reflects 25,393,242 of unsettled shares under forward sale agreements at the September 30, 2025, available weighted average net settlement price of $16.98 per share. 2. Reflects 1,639,092 of shares sold at a weighted average net settlement price of $18.11 per share. 3. Remaining capacity reduced by $0.15 million for outstanding letters of credit. 4. Value is based on the September 30, 2025, closing share price of $18.06 per share. Net Debt September 30, 2025 Principal amount of total debt $ 1,108,084 Less: Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash (53,324) Net Debt $ 1,054,760 Less: Net value of unsettled forward equity(1) (431,246) Adjusted Net Debt $ 623,514 Less: Subsequent ATM Sales(2) (29,682) Pro Forma Adjusted Net Debt $ 593,832 Net Debt / Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre 6.3x Adjusted Net Debt / Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre 3.7x Pro Forma Adjusted Net Debt / Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre 3.6x Key Debt Covenant Information Required Actual Consolidated total leverage ratio ≤ 60.0% 34.5% Fixed charge coverage ratio ≥ 1.50x 3.28x Maximum secured indebtedness ≤ 40.0% 0.3% Maximum recourse indebtedness ≤ 10.0% —% Unencumbered leverage ratio ≤ 60.0% 38.6% Unencumbered interest coverage ratio ≥ 1.75x 3.38x Liquidity As of September 30, 2025 Unused unsecured revolver capacity(3) $ 499,850 Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash 53,324 Net value of unsettled forward equity(1) 431,246 Undrawn Term Loan Balance 150,000 Total Liquidity $ 1,134,420 Subsequent ATM Sales(2) 29,682 Total Pro Forma Liquidity $ 1,164,102 Equity Ending Shares/ Units Equity Market Capitalization % of Total Common shares(4) 83,479,176 $ 1,507,634 99.5 % OP units(4) 421,954 7,620 0.5 % Total 83,901,130 $ 1,515,254 100.0 % Enterprise Value As of September 30, 2025 % of Total Adjusted Net Debt $ 623,514 24.3 % Market Value of Unsettled Forwards 431,246 16.8 % Equity Market Capitalization 1,515,254 59.0 % Total Enterprise Value $ 2,570,014 100.0 %


 
34 Non-GAAP Measures and Definitions FFO, Core FFO, and AFFO The National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts (“NAREIT”), an industry trade group, has promulgated a widely accepted non-GAAP financial measure of operating performance known as FFO. Our FFO is net income in accordance with GAAP, excluding gains (or losses) resulting from dispositions of properties, plus depreciation and amortization and impairment charges on depreciable real property. Core FFO is a non-GAAP financial measure defined as FFO adjusted to remove the effect of unusual and non-recurring items that are not expected to impact our operating performance or operations on an ongoing basis. These include non-recurring executive transition costs, severance and related charges, other non-recurring losses (gains), and debt related transaction costs. AFFO is a non-GAAP financial measure defined as Core FFO adjusted for GAAP net income related to non-cash revenues and expenses, such as straight-line rent, amortization of above- and below-market lease-related intangibles, amortization of lease incentives, capitalized interest expense and earned development interest, non-cash interest expense, non-cash compensation expense, amortization of deferred financing costs, amortization of above/below-market assumed debt, and amortization of loan origination costs. Historical cost accounting for real estate assets implicitly assumes that the value of real estate assets diminishes predictably over time. In fact, real estate values historically have risen or fallen with market conditions. FFO is intended to be a standard supplemental measure of operating performance that excludes historical cost depreciation and valuation adjustments from net income. We consider FFO to be useful in evaluating potential property acquisitions and measuring operating performance. We further consider FFO, Core FFO, and AFFO to be useful in determining funds available for payment of distributions. FFO, Core FFO, and AFFO do not represent net income or cash flows from operations as defined by GAAP. You should not consider FFO, Core FFO, and AFFO to be alternatives to net income as a reliable measure of our operating performance nor should you consider FFO, Core FFO, and AFFO to be alternatives to cash flows from operating, investing, or financing activities (as defined by GAAP) as measures of liquidity. FFO, Core FFO, and AFFO do not measure whether cash flow is sufficient to fund our cash needs, including principal amortization, capital improvements, and distributions to stockholders. FFO, Core FFO, and AFFO do not represent cash flows from operating, investing, or financing activities as defined by GAAP. Further, FFO, Core FFO, and AFFO as disclosed by other REITs might not be comparable to our calculations of FFO, Core FFO, and AFFO.


 
35 Non-GAAP Measures and Definitions (cont’d) EBITDA, EBITDAre, Adjusted EBITDAre, and Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre We compute EBITDA as earnings before interest expense, income tax expense, and depreciation and amortization. In 2017, NAREIT issued a white paper recommending that companies that report EBITDA also report EBITDAre. We compute EBITDAre in accordance with the definition adopted by NAREIT. NAREIT defines EBITDAre as EBITDA (as defined above) excluding gains (or losses) from the sales of depreciable property and impairment charges on depreciable real property. Adjusted EBITDAre is a non-GAAP financial measure defined as EBITDAre further adjusted to exclude straight-line rent, non-cash compensation expense, non-recurring executive transition costs, severance and related charges, debt related transaction costs, transaction costs, other non-recurring loss (gain), net, other non-recurring expenses (income) including lease termination fees, as well as adjustments for construction in process and for intraquarter activities. Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre is Adjusted EBITDAre multiplied by four. We present EBITDA, EBITDAre, Adjusted EBITDAre, and Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre as they are measures commonly used in our industry. We believe that these measures are useful to investors and analysts because they provide supplemental information concerning our operating performance, exclusive of certain non-cash items and other costs. We use EBITDA, EBITDAre, Adjusted EBITDAre, and Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre as measures of our operating performance and not as measures of liquidity. EBITDA, EBITDAre, Adjusted EBITDAre, and Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre do not include all items of revenue and expense included in net income, they do not represent cash generated from operating activities and they are not necessarily indicative of cash available to fund cash requirements; accordingly, they should not be considered alternatives to net income as a performance measure or cash flows from operations as a liquidity measure and should be considered in addition to, and not in lieu of, GAAP financial measures. Additionally, our computation of EBITDA, EBITDAre, Adjusted EBITDAre, and Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre may differ from the methodology for calculating these metrics used by other equity REITs and, therefore, may not be comparable to similarly titled measures reported by other equity REITs. Net Debt, Adjusted Net Debt, and Pro Forma Adjusted Net Debt We calculate Net Debt as the principal amount of our total debt outstanding, excluding deferred financing costs, net discounts, and debt issuance costs, less cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash available for future investment. We then adjust Net Debt by the net value of unsettled forward equity as of period end to derive Adjusted Net Debt. Further, we adjust Adjusted Net Debt by the value of any unsettled forward equity and at-the-market sales occurring subsequent to the period to derive Pro Forma Adjusted Net Debt. We believe excluding cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash available for future investment from the principal amount of our total debt outstanding, together with the exclusion of the net value of unsettled forward equity as of period end and the net value of unsettled forward equity and at-the-market sales subsequent to the period, all of which could be used to repay debt, provides a useful estimate of the net contractual amount of borrowed capital to be repaid. We believe these adjustments are additional beneficial disclosures to investors and analysts. Enterprise Value We calculate Enterprise Value as the sum of our Adjusted Net Debt, market value of unsettled forwards, and equity market capitalization as of period end.


 
36 Non-GAAP Measures and Definitions (cont’d) Property-Level NOI, Property-Level Cash NOI, and Property-Level Cash NOI - Estimated Run Rate Property-Level NOI, Property-Level Cash NOI, and Property-Level Cash NOI - Estimated Run Rate are non-GAAP financial measures which we use to assess our operating results. We compute Property-Level NOI as net income (computed in accordance with GAAP), excluding general and administrative expenses, interest expense, net, income tax expense, amortization of loan origination costs and discounts, transaction costs, depreciation and amortization, gains (or losses) on sales of depreciable property, real estate impairment losses, interest income on mortgage loans receivable, debt related transaction costs, and other expense (income), net, including lease termination fees. We further adjust Property-Level NOI for non-cash revenue components of straight-line rent and amortization of lease-intangibles to derive Property-Level Cash NOI. We further adjust Property-Level Cash NOI for intraquarter acquisitions, dispositions, and completed development to derive Property-Level Cash NOI - Estimated Run Rate. We believe Property-Level NOI, Property-Level Cash NOI, and Property-Level Cash NOI - Estimated Run Rate provide useful and relevant information because they reflect only those income and expense items that are incurred at the property level and present such items on an unlevered basis. Property-Level NOI, Property-Level Cash NOI, and Property-Level Cash NOI - Estimated Run Rate are not measurements of financial performance under GAAP and may not be comparable to similarly titled measures of other companies. You should not consider our measures as alternatives to net income or cash flows from operating activities determined in accordance with GAAP. Other Definitions ABR is annualized base rent for all leases that commenced and annualized cash interest for all executed mortgage loans as of September 30, 2025. Cash Yield is the annualized base rent contractually due from acquired properties and completed developments, and interest income from mortgage loans receivable, divided by the gross investment amount, gross proceeds in the case of dispositions, or loan repayment amount. Defensive Category is considered by us to represent tenants that focus on necessity goods and essential services in the retail sector, including discount stores, grocers, drug stores and pharmacies, home improvement, automotive service and quick-service restaurants, which we refer to as defensive retail industries. The defensive sub-categories as we define them are as follows: (1) Necessity, which are retailers that are considered essential by consumers and include sectors such as drug stores, grocers and home improvement, (2) Discount, which are retailers that offer a low price point and consist of off- price and dollar stores, (3) Service, which consist of retailers that provide services rather than goods, including, tire and auto services and quick service restaurants, and (4) Other, which are retailers that are not considered defensive in terms of being considered necessity, discount or service, as defined by us. Investments are lease agreements in place at owned properties, properties that have leases associated with mortgage loans receivable, developments where rent commenced, interest earning developments, or in the case of master lease arrangements each property under the master lease is counted as a separate lease. Occupancy is expressed as a percentage, and it is the number of leased investments divided by the total number of investments owned, excluding properties under development.


 
37 Non-GAAP Measures and Definitions (cont’d) OP Units means operating partnership units not held by NETSTREIT. Weighted Average Lease Term is weighted by the annualized base rent, excluding lease extension options and investments associated with mortgage loans receivable.