Yukon Commercial Rent Increases: Rules for Commercial Landlords

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Guide to commercial rent increase provisions in Yukon — escalation clauses, CPI adjustments, rent review procedures, NNN leases, and best practices for commercial property owners.

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.

Commercial rents in Yukon are not subject to any statutory cap or rent control. Unlike residential tenancies, which are limited by the CPI-based cap under the Residential Tenancies Act, commercial rent amounts and increases are entirely a matter of contract between the landlord and tenant. The commercial lease governs everything.

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

No Rent Control for Commercial Properties

FeatureResidentialCommercial
Rent controlYes — CPI-based capNo — fully negotiated
Notice required3 months minimumPer lease terms
Frequency restrictionOnce per 12 monthsPer lease terms
Form requiredGovernment-approved formNot required
Above-cap applicationsRTO processNot applicable

Common Commercial Rent Increase Structures

1. Fixed Annual Escalation

The simplest approach: rent increases by a fixed percentage (e.g., 2%, 3%) each year on a specified anniversary date. This provides certainty for both parties.

2. CPI-Linked Escalation

Rent increases annually in line with the Consumer Price Index (CPI) — often the Whitehorse or national CPI. This protects the landlord against inflation while giving the tenant a predictable formula.

3. Stepped Rent

The lease specifies different rent levels for different periods — for example, Year 1–2 at a lower introductory rate, Years 3–5 at a higher rate. Common in long-term leases.

4. Rent Review Clause

At specified intervals (e.g., every 5 years), the rent is reviewed and reset to market rent as determined by an appraisal or arbitration process. Yukon commercial landlords should ensure the market review clause is clearly defined.

5. Operating Cost Pass-Throughs (NNN Leases)

In triple net (NNN) leases — common in Yukon's commercial sector — the tenant pays base rent plus their proportionate share of:

  • Property taxes
  • Building insurance
  • Common area maintenance (CAM) costs

These pass-through costs can increase significantly year-over-year independent of the base rent, meaning tenants' total occupancy costs may rise even without a formal rent increase.

Operating Cost Escalations

In NNN and modified gross leases, Yukon landlords should clearly define:

ElementDefinition
Base yearThe year against which future operating cost increases are compared
Expense capMaximum annual increase in controllable operating costs (e.g., 5%)
Gross-up provisionAdjusts costs as if the building were fully occupied
Reconciliation periodWhen year-end actual costs are compared to estimates and adjusted
Audit rightsTenant's right to audit operating cost calculations

Notice Requirements

Commercial lease rent increases typically require notice as specified in the lease. Common provisions:

  • 30–90 days' advance written notice before an increase takes effect
  • Delivery at the landlord's address for notices specified in the lease
  • Written notice via e-mail if permitted by the lease

Without an escalation clause, a landlord cannot unilaterally increase rent — rent can only be changed at renewal or by mutual agreement.

Rent at Lease Renewal

When a fixed-term lease expires and is renewed, Yukon landlords may renegotiate rent to market rates without restriction. This is often the key point at which significant rent increases occur. If the lease contains an option to renew, the rent for the renewal term may be:

  • Fixed in the original lease
  • Set by negotiation
  • Set by market rent appraisal or arbitration

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Include a rent escalation clause — Don't rely on renegotiation; build increases into the lease from the start.
  2. Define operating cost caps — Cap year-over-year increases in controllable expenses to manage tenant relationships.
  3. Use audit-rights provisions — Allow tenants to audit operating cost reconciliations to build trust.
  4. Track increase dates carefully — Missing scheduled increase dates can be difficult to remedy retroactively.
  5. Issue written notices — Even if the lease allows for deemed notice, always confirm in writing.

Back to Yukon Commercial Tenancy Overview.


Landager helps commercial landlords track rent escalation schedules, calculate operating cost year-end reconciliations, and generate rent increase notices automatically. Learn more about Landager.

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