Saskatchewan Commercial Property Maintenance: Landlord & Tenant

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Guide to Saskatchewan commercial property maintenance responsibilities including landlord vs. tenant obligations, NNN lease structures, and capital expenditu...

Melvin Prince
6 min read
Verified May 2026Canada flag
MaintenanceCommercial-propertySaskatchewanLandlord-obligationsNNN-lease

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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.Information last verified: May 2026.

Maintenance obligations in Saskatchewan commercial leases are fundamentally different from residential tenancies. While residential landlords have broad statutory maintenance duties, commercial maintenance responsibilities under The Landlord and Tenant Act (R.S.S. 1978, c. L-6) are primarily defined by the lease agreement. In the absence of specific lease provisions, common law principles apply.

Lease-Driven Obligations

In commercial leasing, maintenance responsibilities are negotiable and must be explicitly addressed in the lease. There are no Standard Conditions or statutory minimum habitability requirements equivalent to those found in residential tenancy law.

Default Position (Without Lease Provisions)

If the lease is silent on maintenance, Saskatchewan common law follows the principle of caveat lessee (let the tenant beware). There is no implied covenant that the landlord must keep the premises in a state of repair or fit for a specific purpose.

ObligationResponsible Party
Structural repairsNo implied duty (Landlord not obligated)
Common area maintenanceNo implied duty (Landlord not obligated)
Minor maintenanceTenant (must use premises in a 'tenant-like manner')
Active damageTenant (must refrain from 'voluntary waste')

Because the landlord has no implied duty to perform structural or any other repairs if the lease is silent, it is critical to address maintenance explicitly in the lease agreement.

Typical Allocation by Lease Type

Gross Lease

CategoryResponsible Party
Structural (roof, walls, foundation)Landlord
Building systems (HVAC, plumbing, electrical)Landlord
Interior finishesTenant
Common areasLandlord
Landscaping/snow removalLandlord
All operating costsLandlord (included in rent)

Triple Net (NNN) Lease

CategoryResponsible Party
Structural (roof, walls, foundation)Landlord (charged back as operating cost)
Building systems (HVAC, plumbing, electrical)Varies — often tenant for unit HVAC
Interior finishesTenant
Common areasLandlord (charged as CAM to tenants)
Landscaping/snow removalLandlord (charged as CAM)
Property taxesTenant (proportionate share)
InsuranceTenant (proportionate share)

Absolute Net Lease (Ground Lease)

CategoryResponsible Party
All maintenance and repairsTenant
Structural, including replacementTenant
Building systemsTenant
Property taxes and insuranceTenant

Landlord's Common Maintenance Obligations

Even in net leases, landlords typically retain responsibility for:

Structural Components

  • Roof structure and membrane
  • Exterior walls and cladding
  • Foundation and footings
  • Structural beams and columns
  • Parking lot structure (in multi-level garages)

Common Areas

Landlords must generally maintain common areas in working order and ensure they meet municipal and provincial standards:

  • Hallways, lobbies, and elevators
  • Parking lots and walkways
  • Landscaping and grounds
  • Snow and ice removal
  • Common washrooms
  • Loading docks and service areas

Building Systems Depending on the lease, landlords may be responsible for:

  • Central HVAC systems
  • Fire protection and alarm systems
  • Electrical distribution panels
  • Plumbing mains
  • Elevator maintenance and inspections

Tenant's Common Maintenance Obligations

Commercial tenants are typically responsible for:

  1. Interior maintenance — walls, flooring, ceiling tiles, lighting fixtures
  2. In-unit HVAC — maintenance and filter replacement for rooftop units or split systems
  3. Plumbing within the premises — fixtures, drains, hot water tanks
  4. Tenant improvements — any modifications made by the tenant
  5. Signage — maintenance and replacement of tenant signage
  6. Grease traps and specialized equipment — for restaurant or food service tenants
  7. Cleaning and janitorial — maintaining cleanliness of the leased premises

Capital Expenditures

Large capital repairs or replacements require special attention in the lease:

Allocation Methods

MethodDescription
AmortizationCapital cost is amortized over its useful life; tenants pay proportionate share during their lease term
Reserve fundTenants contribute to a capital reserve fund through monthly payments
Direct chargeCost is charged to tenants in the year incurred
Landlord bearsLandlord absorbs the cost (typical in gross leases)

Common Capital Items

  • Roof replacement ($15,000–$100,000+)
  • HVAC system replacement ($10,000–$50,000+ per unit)
  • Parking lot resurfacing ($3,000–$10,000+ per typical lot)
  • Elevator modernization ($50,000–$200,000+)
  • Building envelope repairs (variable)

Saskatchewan-Specific Considerations

Climate-Related Maintenance

Saskatchewan's extreme climate creates unique maintenance demands:

  1. Winter heating — ensuring adequate heating is critical; failures can cause pipe freezing and extensive damage
  2. Snow removal — regular, timely clearing of parking areas and walkways is essential for safety and liability
  3. Ice dam prevention — proper roof drainage and insulation
  4. Foundation movement — freeze-thaw cycles can affect foundations
  5. Roof snow loading — monitoring and managing heavy snow accumulation

Municipal Property Standards

Commercial owners must comply with local bylaws regardless of lease terms. Key regulations include:

  • Saskatoon: Property Maintenance & Nuisance Abatement Bylaw 8175.
  • Regina: Community Standards Bylaw 2016-2.
  • These bylaws mandate minimum standards for exterior maintenance (siding, roofing, signage), lot maintenance (landscaping, fencing), and snow/ice removal from sidewalks.

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Define maintenance obligations clearly in the lease — leave no gaps
  2. Create a preventive maintenance schedule — address issues before they become emergencies
  3. Maintain an emergency repair fund — budget for unexpected costs
  4. Conduct regular property inspections — at least quarterly
  5. Document all maintenance activities — photos, receipts, and contractor reports
  6. Use qualified, licensed contractors — especially for HVAC, electrical, and plumbing
  7. Monitor tenant compliance — ensure tenants are fulfilling their maintenance obligations
  8. Plan for capital expenditures — maintain a long-term capital plan with projected costs

How Landager Helps

Managing commercial property maintenance in Saskatchewan requires strict organization and clear communication to avoid disputes. Landager's comprehensive platform protects Saskatchewan commercial landlords by tracking maintenance requests, vendor assignments, and capital expenditure planning. By maintaining a centralized, timestamped record of all maintenance activities, lease agreements, and tenant communications, Landager provides a comprehensive digital safety net that ensures clear accountability and helps enforce the specific maintenance obligations defined in your commercial leases.

Sources & Official References

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Major cities governed by Saskatchewan jurisdiction

SaskatoonReginaPrince AlbertMoose JawLloydminsterSwift CurrentYorktonNorth BattlefordWarmanWeyburnEstevanMartensvilleCorman Park No. 344SaskatoonReginaPrince AlbertMoose JawLloydminsterSwift CurrentYorktonNorth BattlefordWarmanWeyburnEstevanMartensvilleCorman Park No. 344SaskatoonReginaPrince AlbertMoose JawLloydminsterSwift CurrentYorktonNorth BattlefordWarmanWeyburnEstevanMartensvilleCorman Park No. 344SaskatoonReginaPrince AlbertMoose JawLloydminsterSwift CurrentYorktonNorth BattlefordWarmanWeyburnEstevanMartensvilleCorman Park No. 344

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