Understanding Commercial Maintenance Obligations in Nunavut

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A guide for Nunavut commercial landlords on navigating Triple Net (NNN) leases, Gross Leases, and dividing maintenance responsibilities.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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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 where the landlord is legally mandated to maintain habitability standards regardless of the lease wording, commercial property maintenance in Nunavut is almost entirely dictated by the lease structure chosen during negotiations.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial real estate law is complex. Always consult a licensed attorney in Nunavut for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

Gross Leases vs. Net Leases

The division of maintenance responsibilities hinges on whether the tenancy is a Gross Lease or a Net Lease (specifically, a Triple Net lease).

The Gross Lease

In a Gross Lease, the tenant pays a higher, fixed Base Rent, and the landlord absorbs all operating costs, property taxes, insurance, and maintenance out of that rent pool.

  • Landlord Responsibilities: Nearly everything. Roof, structural, HVAC repairs, snow removal, landscaping, common area cleaning, and utility maintenance.
  • Tenant Responsibilities: Keeping the interior of their specific unit clean and adhering to fire/safety codes.

Note: Gross leases are becoming less common in commercial real estate, as landlords prefer to insulate themselves from unpredictable inflation in repair and utility costs.

The Triple Net (NNN) Lease

This is the standard for most modern commercial, retail, and industrial leases in Nunavut. The tenant pays a lower Base Rent but assumes financial responsibility for a proportionate share of the building's operating expenses.

  • Landlord Responsibilities: The landlord still physically coordinates and manages the "base building" maintenance (roof replacements, parking lot paving, foundational repairs). They pay the initial invoices.
  • Tenant Responsibilities: The tenant financially reimburses the landlord for those costs through monthly "Additional Rent" payments. Furthermore, the tenant is fully responsible for organizing and paying for the physical repair and maintenance of everything within their leased premises—this often includes replacing burnt-out light bulbs, servicing the interior plumbing, and sometimes even replacing the HVAC unit serving their specific space.

HVAC Systems: A Common Point of Contention

Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning (especially heat in Nunavut) are expensive to maintain and replace. The lease must be incredibly specific about who bears this burden:

  1. Does the tenant only maintain it? (e.g., changing filters, paying for annual servicing).
  2. Is the tenant responsible for full replacement? If an HVAC unit dies in year 9 of a 10-year lease, a poorly drafted lease might force the tenant to buy a brand new $15,000 unit that the landlord will inherit a year later. A fairer lease might require the landlord to replace it, but then amortize the cost, charging the tenant only for the portion of the unit's lifespan they utilized.

Structural vs. Non-Structural Repairs

Even in the strictest Triple Net leases, landlords generally retain responsibility for repairing latent structural defects.

  • Structural: The foundation framing, exterior walls, and roof structure mapping. The landlord pays for this out of pocket (often not passing the cost to the tenant via CAM charges).
  • Non-Structural/Wear & Tear: A leaking roof membrane, worn-out lobby carpet, or faded exterior paint. The landlord may coordinate the repair, but the cost is passed through to the tenants via CAM charges.

Snow Removal and Winter Maintenance

Given Nunavut's climate, this is a distinct and critical maintenance category.

  • If it's a multi-tenant building (like a retail plaza or office block), the landlord must ensure parking lots, walkways, and emergency exits are promptly cleared of snow and ice to prevent liability. The significant cost of snow removal contractors is then passed on to the tenants proportionately.
  • If a tenant leases a standalone industrial building, the lease may dictate that the tenant must hire their own snow removal contractor directly.

Tenant Improvements and "Make Good" Clauses

When a tenant first moves in, they often build out the space to suit their needs (adding walls, specialized lighting, networking cables).

A critical maintenance issue arises when the lease ends. Landlords should ensure the lease contains a "Make Good" clause, requiring the tenant to remove their improvements and restore the unit back to the original "base building" condition at their own expense before handing back the keys, saving the landlord thousands in demolition costs for the next tenant.

How Landager Helps

Managing Triple Net leases requires meticulous tracking of maintenance invoices to justify the year-end Common Area Maintenance (CAM) reconciliations to your tenants. Landager allows landlords to attach all contractor invoices and repair work orders directly to specific properties and automatically calculates each tenant's proportionate share, ensuring transparency and preventing disputes over Additional Rent charges.

Back to Nunavut Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

Sources & Official References

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