Arkansas Commercial Maintenance Obligations
Learn about landlord and tenant maintenance responsibilities in Arkansas commercial properties, including the lack of implied warranty of habitability.
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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.
Arkansas Commercial Maintenance Obligations
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Arkansas for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
When it comes to maintenance and repairs in Arkansas commercial real estate, the governing rule is simple: read the lease.
Unlike residential tenancies, which are bound by state-mandated health and safety standards, the commercial property market in Arkansas places almost zero statutory maintenance burden on the landlord. The responsibilities for repairing the roof, maintaining the HVAC, and keeping the parking lot paved are determined entirely by the negotiations documented in the commercial lease agreement.
No Implied Warranty of Habitability
In residential law, an "implied warranty of habitability" requires landlords to keep the property safe and livable, regardless of what the lease says. Arkansas courts do not recognize an implied warranty of habitability or suitability for commercial properties.
If a commercial tenant in Arkansas signs a lease "as-is," and a month later the HVAC system dies and the roof begins to leak, the tenant has no statutory right to demand the landlord fix it, unless the landlord explicitly agreed to maintain the HVAC and roof in the written lease.
Allocating Maintenance in the Lease
Because the law provides no safety net, a well-drafted Arkansas commercial lease must clearly delineate who is responsible for every aspect of the property. Responsibilities generally fall into three categories depending on the lease structure:
1. The Landlord’s Responsibility
In a standard commercial lease, landlords typically retain responsibility for the "bones" of the building and shared spaces. This usually includes:
- The structural integrity of the building (foundation, load-bearing walls).
- The roof structure and outer membrane.
- Common areas (lobbies, shared restrooms, elevators, parking lots).
- Utility conduits up to the point of entry into the tenant's specific suite.
2. The Tenant’s Responsibility
Tenants are almost always responsible for maintaining the interior of their specific leased premises. This typically includes:
- Interior lighting and plumbing fixtures.
- Cosmetic elements (paint, carpeting, drywall).
- Janitorial services within their suite.
- Pest control within their specific unit.
3. The HVAC Wildcard
Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning (HVAC) systems are a frequent source of dispute in commercial leases. In Arkansas, the lease must state who handles HVAC.
- Some leases place full repair and replacement burden on the tenant.
- Some require the tenant to hold a preventative maintenance contract, but require the landlord to pay for full unit replacements.
- It is critical to define these terms explicitly to avoid litigation.
See our Commercial Lease Requirements guide for more on structuring specific clauses.
The Tenant's Lack of Statutory Remedies
Because there is no statutory mandate for commercial landlords to repair the property, commercial tenants in Arkansas do not have the statutory "repair and deduct" rights found in some residential jurisdictions.
If an Arkansas commercial landlord breaches a maintenance obligation that they explicitly agreed to in the lease, the tenant generally cannot simply stop paying rent. Instead, the tenant's primary remedy is to sue the landlord for breach of contract, or, if the failure to repair is so severe that the tenant is physically forced to abandon the property, they may claim Constructive Eviction.
Constructive Eviction
To successfully claim constructive eviction in Arkansas, a commercial tenant must typically prove that:
- The landlord substantially breached a lease obligation.
- The breach fundamentally deprived the tenant of the beneficial use and enjoyment of the property.
- The tenant provided notice and a reasonable opportunity for the landlord to cure the defect.
- The landlord failed to cure.
- The tenant actually vacated the premises. (A tenant cannot claim the property is unusable while continuing to operate their business out of it).
How Landager Helps Commercial Landlords
Commercial property maintenance isn't just about fixing things; it's about tracking exactly whose responsibility it is to pay for the fix. Landager enables Arkansas commercial landlords to intake maintenance requests, instantly cross-reference those requests against the specific tenant's lease obligations, and generate work orders. If a repair falls under Common Area Maintenance (CAM), Landager seamlessly routes the cost into the CAM reconciliation ledger for accurate annual pass-through billing.
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