Commercial Maintenance Obligations in the Czech Republic
Understand how maintenance responsibilities, service charges, and Triple Net (NNN) leases shape commercial property upkeep in the Czech Republic.
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.
While the Czech Civil Code enforces an absolute "warranty of habitability" on residential landlords, commercial real estate operates almost entirely on the freedom of contract. In the Czech Republic, commercial landlords systematically utilize the lease agreement to shift the vast majority of maintenance responsibilities and building operating costs to the commercial tenant.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial landlord-tenant laws change, and contracts dictate most rules. Always consult a licensed local attorney for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Institutional Leases vs. The Civil Code
The default rule in the Civil Code states that landlords must hand over the commercial space in a condition fit for the agreed purpose and continually maintain it in that state at their own expense (barring minor routine repairs).
However, in modern Czech commercial real estate, this rule is universally bypassed.
Institutional landlords (office complexes, logistics parks, shopping centers) utilize "Double Net" (NN) or "Triple Net" (NNN) lease structures. Under these leases, the tenant is not only responsible for repairing the interior of their own unit, but they must also financially reimburse the landlord for the maintenance, repair, and operation of the entire structural building and all common areas.
The Landlord's Core Duty
In an NNN lease environment, the landlord physically organizes and executes major repairs to the roof, foundation, HVAC systems, elevators, and parking lots. However, the landlord does not pay for them. The costs are categorized as "Service Charges" and invoiced back to the tenants.
Service Charges (Servisní poplatky / Společné provozní náklady)
Maintenance obligations in a commercial building are funded through a precisely calculated Service Charge mechanism.
Payment and Reconciliation
Tenants pay monthly advances toward the estimated annual maintenance costs. The amount is usually apportioned based on the tenant's exact square meterage relative to the total gross leasable area (GLA) of the building.
Within a specified period after the end of the calendar year (usually between March and June), the landlord provides a full, audited reconciliation (vyúčtování) of actual costs incurred. If actual maintenance expenses exceeded the collected advances, tenants must pay the shortfall. The lease commonly strictly limits the tenant's right to audit or contest these charges to a narrow 30-day window.
Exclusions from Service Charges
Fierce negotiations occur between the landlord and commercial tenant regarding what can legitimately be categorized as a building maintenance fee. Strong corporate tenants will force landlords to explicitly exclude "capital expenditures" (CAPEX)—such as a complete roof replacement or installing brand-new elevators—from the service charge pool, forcing the landlord to bear structural capital costs out of their own long-term yield.
Tenant Repair Obligations Inside the Unit
Within their exclusively leased premises, the commercial tenant is entirely responsible at their own expense for all maintenance, repairs, and replacements.
This generally includes:
- Routine cleaning and waste removal.
- Servicing any tenant-installed HVAC, kitchen equipment, or specialized manufacturing machinery.
- Maintaining all interior walls, flooring, doors, and glass storefronts.
- Routine electrical and plumbing servicing interior to the unit boundaries.
If a severe defect occurs within the unit (e.g., a burst pipe caused by a structural failure outside the tenant's control), the tenant must inform the landlord immediately. If the tenant fails to report the damage rapidly, they become financially liable for all secondary damage to the building, regardless of the original cause.
Fit-Out and Make Good (Uvedení do původního stavu)
One of the largest hidden "maintenance" costs in a Czech commercial lease is the dilapidations or make good clause at the end of the term.
Commercial premises are often delivered to the tenant in a physical "shell and core" state. The tenant spends millions of crowns fitting out the space with carpets, glass partitions, advanced lighting, and IT server rooms.
Upon expiration of the lease, the default contractual obligation requires the tenant to entirely dismantle the fit-out, repair all cosmetic damage to the base building caused by the removal, and return the premises to a perfectly clean, bare, shell-and-core state. This process is incredibly expensive. Landlords usually retain the sole right to waive this requirement and demand the tenant leave specific improvements (like expensive glass walls) behind for the landlord's future benefit, paying the tenant zero compensation in return.
Getting Started with Compliance
Managing commercial maintenance in the Czech Republic relies on airtight Service Charge definitions and exhaustive end-of-year expense reconciliations. A landlord must guarantee that all common area repairs are legally recoverable. Landager helps commercial property managers automatically calculate complex fractional service charge apportionments, manage annual reconciliations, and track exact fit-out "make good" obligations for every commercial tenant in the building.
Sources & Official References
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