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Commercial Maintenance Obligations Italy

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Breakdown of maintenance responsibilities in Italian commercial leases. Extraordinary vs ordinary repairs.

Melvin Prince
3 min čitanja
Provjereno Mar 2026Italija flag
Komercijalno-održavanjeItalijaKomercijalni najamTrostruki netoObveze-održavanja

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Maintenance in Italian commercial leases is governed primarily by the contract and, subsidiarily, by the Civil Code. Parties enjoy greater contractual freedom compared to residential leases.

Commercial Maintenance Obligations Agency
Agenzia delle Entrate
Commercial Energy APE
Mandatory
Commercial CIN Code
National Required

Default Rules (Civil Code)

Without specific contractual provisions:

  • Extraordinary repairs → landlord's responsibility
  • Ordinary (small) repairs → tenant's responsibility
  • Tenants may carry out urgent repairs and seek reimbursement if the landlord fails to act

Lease Structures and Maintenance

Gross Lease

Landlord handles most maintenance and includes costs in the rent. Tenant responsible only for minor repairs.

Standard Lease (Separate Expenses)

Landlord handles extraordinary maintenance and extraordinary condominium charges. Tenant handles ordinary maintenance and ordinary condominium expenses.

Triple Net Tenant bears most responsibilities including system maintenance, property taxes (IMU, TARI), insurance, and all condominium charges. Structural elements typically remain the landlord's responsibility unless expressly agreed otherwise.

System Maintenance Allocation

SystemOrdinary (Tenant)Extraordinary (Landlord)
Boiler/heatingAnnual servicingReplacement
HVACFilter cleaningUnit replacement
ElectricalSwitches, outletsComplete rewiring
Fire preventionPeriodic inspectionsSystem replacement
ElevatorAs per contractOverhaul

Tenant Adaptations

Commercial tenants often need to adapt premises to their business. Works must be authorized by the landlord (unless the contract provides otherwise). At lease end, the tenant must restore the original condition unless agreed differently. Improvements are not reimbursable unless expressly agreed. Additions may be removed by the tenant if removal causes no damage.

required Contract Clauses

  1. Precise definitions of ordinary vs. extraordinary maintenance
  2. Cost thresholds distinguishing the two categories
  3. Intervention timelines for landlord repairs
  4. Reporting procedures for maintenance needs
  5. Restoration obligations at lease end
  6. Authorization procedures for tenant works

Best Practices

for Landlords

  1. Detail maintenance allocation in the contract
  2. Conduct periodic inspections (semiannual or annual)
  3. Require invoices and certificates for tenant-performed maintenance
  4. Maintain a reserve fund for unexpected extraordinary repairs
  5. Document property condition at lease start and end

Structural vs. Routine Maintenance

The distinction between ordinary and extraordinary maintenance is a frequent source of friction. Ordinary maintenance (manutenzione ordinaria) includes small repairs, painting, and servicing of systems (like the boiler or fire extinguishers). These are almost always the tenant's responsibility.

Extraordinary maintenance (manutenzione straordinaria) involves work on the primary structure of the building-roof leaks, structural plumbing failures, or structural cracks. These are the landlord's burden. In commercial leases, it is possible to shift some extraordinary burdens to the tenant, but the contract must be extremely specific. Vague language will usually result in the court defaulting back to the Civil Code protections for the tenant.

How Landager Helps

Landager automates your maintenance obligations tracking, manages registration deadlines with the Agenzia delle Entrate, and ensures your property is 100% compliant with Italian Law.

Back to Italy Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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