Commercial Property Maintenance in Brazil: Who Pays?
Clarifying repair responsibilities for shops, offices, and warehouses in Brazil.
法的免責事項
このコンテンツは、一般的な情報提供および教育目的のみを目的としています。これは法的助言を構成するものではなく、法的助言として依拠されるべきではありません。法律は頻繁に変更されます。常に現在の規制を確認し、あなたの状況に固有のアドバイスについては、あなたの管轄区域のライセンスを持つ弁護士に相談してください。Landagerは不動産管理プラットフォームであり、法律事務所ではありません。最終確認日: April 2026.
In the business world, maintenance is often something you can negotiate away. While the law has defaults, your lease agreement is the boss here. You'll want to be very clear about who fixes the HVAC or the parking lot.
Unlike residential leases where the law aggressively protects individuals from sudden, crushing structural repair bills, the B2B commercial real estate sector in Brazil expects billion-dollar corporations to fend for themselves. Furthermore, commercial leases routinely transfer unprecedented layers of maintenance responsibility and financial burdens directly onto the shoulders of the business tenant.
The Basement Baseline: Structural Deliveries
Despite the immense flexibility of commercial contracts, the foundational legal baseline under Article 22 remains unchanged: The landlord must deliver the property with sound foundational integrity spanning roofs, support columns, and plumbing mains.
The corporate landlord is primarily responsible for securing the base "Habite-se" (Certificate of Occupancy) that clears the raw building shell for general human occupation. However, almost everything else can be negotiated.
"Triple Net" (NNN) Style Leases and Shifting the Burden
In massive industrial parks, logistics distribution hubs, and single-tenant flagship retail locations, Brazilian corporate landlords frequently employ variations of what is known globally as a Triple Net (NNN) Lease.
While the residential law heavily shields tenants, commercial B2B law allows landlords to draft manage addendums shifting the vast majority of financial and physical repair obligations onto the multinational tenant. In exchange for lower base rent or a pristine customizable location, a massive corporate tenant legally agrees to assume 100% responsibility for:
- Fully repairing and replacing the massive warehouse roof if it collapses.
- Paying the entirety of the property's municipal taxes (IPTU) directly.
- Maintaining the structural integrity of the parking lots and exterior facades.
- Handling all electrical and plumbing catastrophes entirely out of their own corporate budget.
The Reserve Fund (Fundo de Reserva) Exception
The one major exception to shifting costs involves corporate tenants operating out of high-rise office buildings or shopping malls governed by a commercial Homeowners Association (HOA/Condomínio).
The Tenancy Law fiercely dictates that Extraordinary Condominium Expenses-specifically the building's permanent Reserve Fund (Fundo de Reserva) used for massive, once-in-a-decade structural overhauls-must be paid by the actual property owner, not the tenant.
The commercial tenant is only required to pay their pro-rata share of the building's daily operational costs (cleaning, lobby security, basic elevator maintenance). Attempting to force an office tenant to pay into the building's permanent construction reserve fund is legally impermissible.
Custom Upgrades, Accessibility (PCD), and Teardowns
When a business moves into a commercial space, they invariably demolish walls, build custom mezzanines, and install heavy server racks.
- Accessibility Mandates (PCD): If municipal laws require the store to install wheelchair ramps, tactile floors, and specific handicap bathrooms to meet Persons with Disabilities (PCD) standards, the commercial tenant must front 100% of these construction costs to clear their specific operating license.
- The "Return" Clause: B2B landlords write extremely strict teardown clauses into their contracts. When the commercial lease ends, the business tenant must completely rip out their custom additions and reconstruct the space back to its original hollow shell layout. Anything left behind-even if it is a multimillion-dollar improvement-is considered "abandoned" to the landlord with zero expectation of indemnification or reimbursement, unless explicitly negotiated otherwise in writing prior to construction.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, automated rent reminders, and document expiration - making it easy to stay compliant with Brazil regulations.
Back to Brazil Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
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