Drafting Commercial Lease Agreements in Nunavut

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A guide to the required and recommended clauses for a strong commercial lease agreement in Nunavut's unique real estate market.

Melvin Prince
4 min di lettura
Verificato Apr 2026Canada flag
Contratto di locazione commercialeNunavutContratto di locazioneProtezione-locatoreCanada

Disclaimer Legale

Questo contenuto è solo a scopo informativo ed educativo generale. Non costituisce consulenza legale e non deve essere considerato tale. Le leggi cambiano frequentemente: verifica sempre le normative vigenti e consulta un avvocato abilitato nella tua giurisdizione per consulenza specifica sulla tua situazione. Landager è una piattaforma di gestione immobiliare, non uno studio legale.Informazioni verificate l'ultima volta: April 2026.

Because commercial real estate in Nunavut is governed primarily by contract law rather than prescriptive tenant-protection statutes, the commercial lease agreement is the absolute bedrock of the landlord-tenant relationship. A poorly drafted lease can expose a landlord to immense financial risk.

No "Standard Form" Lease

Unlike residential tenancies, where standard government-approved forms are common, there is no mandatory standard commercial lease in Nunavut. Every lease is custom-drafted to reflect the specific realities of the property (retail, office, industrial, warehouse) and the negotiations between the parties.

However, certain clauses are practically universally required to protect the landlord.

Essential Lease Clauses

1. Accurate Description of Premises

The lease must explicitly define the exact square footage being leased and differentiate between "usable area" (the space the tenant actually occupies) and "rentable area" (which includes a prorated share of common areas like lobbies and hallways). Reference an appended floor plan.

2. Permitted Use Clause

This strictly limits what type of business the tenant can operate. For example, a lease might specify the space can only be used for "general accounting offices and no other purpose." This prevents a tenant from suddenly pivoting their business model to something riskier, noisier, or in violation of local zoning (like opening a retail store in an office building).

3. Clear Definition of "Rent"

Differentiate clearly between Base Rent and Additional Rent.

  • Base Rent: The fixed monthly amount.
  • Additional Rent: If it's a Net lease, explicitly list what the tenant must pay for: their share of property taxes, building insurance, common area maintenance (CAM), utility bills, snow removal, and property management fees. State clearly that Failure to pay Additional Rent constitutes a default identical to failing to pay Base Rent.

4. Assignment and Subletting

Without a restrictive clause, a tenant under common law can freely assign their lease or sublet the space to another business. A strong commercial lease dictates that any assignment or sublet requires the prior written, reasonable consent of the landlord. Furthermore, the original tenant should remain fully liable for the rent if the subtenant defaults.

5. Insurance Requirements

Specify the types and minimum limits of insurance the tenant must carry:

  • Comprehensive General Liability (CGL) insurance (often $2M to $5M minimum).
  • Property insurance covering the tenant's inventory, equipment, and any improvements they made.
  • Business interruption insurance to ensure they can still pay rent if a fire forces them to close temporarily.
  • The landlord must be named as an "Additional Insured" on the tenant's liability policy.

6. Maintenance and Repairs

In Nunavut's harsh climate, clarify who is responsible for the HVAC system, roof repairs, snow removal, structural foundation, and interior wear. Generally, landlords handle the roof and structure, while tenants handle everything within the four walls of their premises.

7. Environmental Clauses

Crucial for industrial or automotive uses. The tenant must indemnify the landlord against any environmental contamination they cause and agree to adhere to all federal and territorial environmental regulations.

8. Default and Remedies (Distress & Re-entry)

Explicitly define what constitutes a default (e.g., rent more than 5 days late, unauthorized subletting, bankruptcy). Crucially, draft the landlord's right to pursue remedies, specifically preserving the common law right of distress (seizing goods) and the right to terminate the lease and re-enter the premises.

The Importance of the Offer to Lease

Before the massive formal lease document is drafted, the parties usually sign an Offer to Lease or a Letter of Intent (LOI). This shorter document outlines the fundamental economic terms (rent amount, term length, tenant improvement allowances). While an LOI is often non-binding regarding the minutiae of the final lease, a signed Offer to Lease can be legally binding, forcing the parties to execute a formal lease containing those agreed-upon economic terms.

How Landager Helps

Operating a rental property in Nunavut requires navigating a distinct regulatory environment under the Nunavut Rental Office. From adhering to the unique rule that allows tenants to pay security deposits across three months, to calculating heavily restricted late payment penalties that demand an official Rental Officer order, manual compliance tracking is error-prone. Landager’s platform fully automates these localized schedules. We instantly track partial deposit payments, flag the legally required 12-month spacing for rent increases, and enforce the mandatory three-month notice period before rent jumps take effect. By storing rigorous documentation of property conditions and notices, Landager ensures that you have perfectly organized evidence ready for any fast-tracked rental hearing, keeping your portfolio compliant, organized, and out of the territorial courts.

Back to Nunavut Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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