Oklahoma Commercial Maintenance Obligations: Landlord and Tenant Duties
Guide to Oklahoma commercial property maintenance, including NNN lease responsibilities, HVAC, roof repair, and the absence of habitability requirements.
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.
Unlike residential properties, Oklahoma commercial properties have no implied warranty of habitability. Maintenance responsibilities are determined entirely by the lease agreement, making explicit allocation of every building system critical.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Oklahoma for guidance specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
No Implied Warranty of Habitability
| Aspect | Residential | Commercial |
|---|---|---|
| Implied habitability | Yes | No |
| Repair and deduct | Yes ($100 limit) | No |
| 14-day repair notice | Yes | No |
| Maintenance allocation | Primarily landlord | Per lease |
Maintenance by Lease Type
Gross Lease
Landlord handles most maintenance:
- Building structure (roof, walls, foundation)
- HVAC, plumbing, electrical systems
- Common areas and landscaping
- Fire and life safety systems
Tenant handles:
- Interior cleaning
- Light fixtures within leased space
- Minor cosmetic items
NNN (Triple Net) Lease
Tenant assumes most responsibilities:
- All interior maintenance
- HVAC servicing, repairs, and often replacement
- Plumbing and electrical within premises
- Pest control and glass maintenance
Landlord typically retains:
- Structural integrity (foundation, load-bearing walls)
- Common area maintenance (costs passed through as CAM)
Modified Gross Lease
A hybrid with negotiated allocation:
- Landlord often handles structural and major systems
- Tenant handles interior and utilities
Severe Weather Considerations
Oklahoma's location in "Tornado Alley" demands special attention:
- Storm shelters: Specify availability and maintenance responsibility
- Roof inspections: Schedule regular inspections after severe storms
- Insurance requirements: Ensure adequate wind and hail coverage
- Emergency procedures: Document emergency plans and communication protocols
- Disaster restoration: The lease should specify responsibilities and timelines for repairs after severe weather damage
HVAC Maintenance
HVAC is the most commonly disputed item. Best practices:
- Require service contracts with licensed technicians, proof submitted annually
- Specify filter change frequency (monthly or quarterly)
- Set replacement caps (e.g., tenant pays up to $5,000; landlord handles system replacement)
- Disclose system age at lease signing
Preventive Maintenance Program
- Quarterly HVAC inspections — seasonal tune-ups
- Annual roof inspections — especially after tornado season
- Semi-annual fire safety inspections — extinguishers, alarms, sprinklers
- Seasonal exterior work — landscaping, parking lot maintenance, storm drain cleaning
- Regular plumbing checks — especially in older buildings
Best Practices for Commercial Landlords
- Assign every building system — leave nothing ambiguous
- Require proof of maintenance from NNN tenants
- Budget for capital reserves — set aside funds for major replacements
- Conduct annual inspections even in NNN leases
- Document all maintenance — maintain comprehensive logs
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks maintenance responsibilities per lease, schedules automated reminders for inspections and service contract renewals, and stores all vendor invoices and maintenance records centrally.
Sources & Official References
هل أنت مستعد لتبسيط أعمال التأجير الخاصة بك؟
انضم إلى الآلاف من الملاك المستقلين الذين قاموا بتبسيط أعمالهم مع Landager.
