Tasmania Commercial Rent Reviews: Retail vs. Non-Retail

Understand the strict rules governing rent reviews under the Retail Leases Act 2022, including the prohibition on ratchet clauses in Tasmania.

3 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 the rigid restrictions imposed on the residential sector, commercial rent increases (commonly referred to as "rent reviews" or "escalation clauses" in Australia) are dictated almost entirely by the intricate terms drafted into the lease agreement.

However, in Tasmania, you must first determine if the lease falls under the heavily regulated Retail Leases Act 2022.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial real estate in Tasmania relies heavily on precise lease drafting regarding rent reviews. Always consult a licensed commercial property solicitor for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

Non-Retail Rent Reviews (Freedom of Contract)

If the commercial real estate is a non-retail premises (e.g., an industrial shed, an abattoir, or an independent corporate office suite), the rent review mechanism is bound purely by the common law doctrine of "Freedom of Contract."

In these leases, a landlord can draft highly advantageous, aggressive rent review structures:

  • Multiple Review Methods: The lease can state rent increases by the higher of "5% fixed OR the Consumer Price Index (CPI)."
  • Ratchet Clauses: A landlord can legally include a "ratchet clause," stipulating that if a Market Rent Review determines the property's market value has dropped significantly, the rent simply stays flat rather than decreasing to meet the new market reality.

Retail Rent Reviews (Retail Leases Act Restrictions)

If the lease is classified as a "Retail Premises" (such as a shop in a mall or a high-street clothing boutique), the Retail Leases Act 2022 imposes severe consumer-protection limitations on how and when rent can be escalated.

1. The Single Basis Rule

A retail lease must generally specify a single basis on which the rent is to be reviewed on each specific review date.

You cannot state that rent will increase "by CPI or 4%, whichever is greater" on the same anniversary date. You must pick one specific method per review date (e.g., Year 2 = CPI, Year 3 = 4% Fixed, Year 4 = Fair Market Review).

2. The Prohibition on Ratchet Clauses

Under the modern Retail Leases Act, ratchet clauses are explicitly prohibited and void in retail leases.

If a retail lease calls for a "Current Market Rent" review at the midpoint of a 5-year lease, and the appointed specialist valuer determines that retail demand has evaporated and the fair market rent is now 15% lower than the tenant was previously paying, the rent must legally decrease. A landlord cannot enforce a clause stating "the market rent review shall not result in rent less than the rent payable in the preceding year."

3. Market Rent Valuation Disputes

If a retail lease calls for a Market Rent review and the landlord and tenant cannot agree on the new rental figure during negotiations, the Act outlines a strict dispute resolution mechanism.

An independent Specialist Retail Valuer must be appointed to determine the true current market rent. The landlord cannot unilaterally impose their own preferred valuer's high figure on the retail tenant; if they cannot agree on a valuer, an independent body will appoint one.

Navigating Complex Escalations

Managing a mixed commercial portfolio in Tasmania—where the industrial sheds possess compound 4% fixed escalators with harsh ratchets, and the retail bays require single-basis CPI escalations with mandatory 7-day outgoings disclosures—is an administrative headache for large agencies. Landager centralizes these disparate lease formulas, flagging statutory exclusions and auto-generating mathematically perfect rent review invoices based precisely on that specific unit's contractual and statutory allowances.

Back to Tasmania Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

Sources & Official References

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