Nova Scotia Commercial Maintenance Obligations: Landlord Responsibilities
Guide to Nova Scotia commercial property maintenance obligations including structural repairs, HVAC, eligible tenant protections, and lease-based responsi...
법적 고지
이 콘텐츠는 일반 정보 및 교육 목적으로만 제공됩니다. 법률 자문에 해당하지 않으며 그러한 것으로 의존해서는 안 됩니다. 법률은 자주 변경되므로 항상 현재 규정을 확인하고 귀하의 상황에 맞는 조언을 받으려면 해당 지역의 면허가 있는 변호사와 상담하십시오. Landager는 부동산 관리 플랫폼이며 법률 회사가 아닙니다.정보 최종 확인: April 2026.
Commercial maintenance obligations in Nova Scotia are primarily governed by the lease agreement rather than statute. Unlike residential tenancies, there is limited statutory intervention in how maintenance responsibilities are divided between commercial landlords and tenants. However, the Supporting Small Business Act has introduced new obligations for landlords of eligible commercial tenants.
Lease-Based Maintenance Division
The commercial lease determines who is responsible for what. Most leases divide maintenance into several categories:
Typical Landlord Responsibilities
Typical Tenant Responsibilities
Variable Responsibilities (Depends on Lease)
- HVAC maintenance and replacement — In Nova Scotia, HVAC is commonly the landlord's responsibility, but leases can shift this to the tenant
- Plumbing within the unit — Often the tenant's responsibility for minor issues
- Electrical within the unit — Tenant's responsibility for maintenance; landlord for system-level issues
- Glass and storefronts — Usually the tenant's responsibility
NNN Lease Maintenance Obligations
In triple net (NNN) leases, tenants assume most operating costs, including maintenance. However, even in NNN leases:
- The landlord typically retains responsibility for structural and roof repairs
- The lease should clearly define what constitutes "structural" vs. "non-structural"
- Capital expenditures may be allocated differently from routine maintenance
- The tenant's maintenance obligations should be explicitly defined
Eligible Commercial Tenant Protections
Under the Supporting Small Business Act (Bill 244), landlords of eligible commercial tenants (charitable organizations and certified small businesses) have an additional obligation:
Landlords must maintain the premises in a condition suitable for the agreed business or charitable activity of the eligible commercial tenant.
This is a statutory obligation that cannot be contracted away and represents a significant departure from the general principle that commercial maintenance is purely a contractual matter.
Building Code Compliance
All commercial properties in Nova Scotia must comply with applicable:
- National Building Code of Canada (as adopted by Nova Scotia)
- Nova Scotia Building Code Act and regulations
- Municipal bylaws and building codes
- Fire Safety Act requirements
- Accessibility requirements
The landlord is generally responsible for ensuring the building itself meets code requirements, while the tenant may be responsible for code compliance within their leased space (particularly for tenant improvements and alterations).
Fire and Life Safety
Landlord Obligations
- Maintain fire detection and alarm systems
- Ensure sprinkler systems are operational
- Keep fire exits clear and accessible
- Maintain emergency lighting
- Arrange annual fire safety inspections
Tenant Obligations
- Comply with fire safety regulations within the leased space
- Not impede fire exits or block fire safety equipment
- Report fire safety concerns to the landlord
- Comply with building evacuation procedures
Environmental Maintenance
Landlords should be aware of environmental maintenance obligations:
- Asbestos management — If the building contains asbestos, the landlord must maintain an asbestos management plan
- Hazardous materials — Proper handling and storage of hazardous materials in common areas
- Waste management — Providing adequate waste disposal facilities
- Indoor air quality — Maintaining HVAC systems to ensure acceptable indoor air quality
Emergency Repairs
For emergency situations affecting the safety or security of the premises:
- The landlord is typically responsible for immediate response to building-wide emergencies
- The lease should define what constitutes an emergency and who to contact
- Common emergencies: flooding, fire damage, gas leaks, loss of heat, structural damage
- Landlords should maintain 24/7 emergency contact availability for tenants
Best Practices for Commercial Landlords
- Define responsibilities clearly in the lease — Remove ambiguity about who maintains what
- Create a maintenance schedule — Regular preventive maintenance reduces emergency repairs
- Budget for capital expenditures — Set aside reserves for roof, HVAC, and structural repairs
- Respond promptly — Address maintenance requests quickly to maintain tenant satisfaction
- Hire qualified contractors — Use licensed professionals for specialized systems
- Maintain records — Document all maintenance activities, inspections, and repairs
- Review insurance coverage — Ensure your property insurance covers maintenance-related claims
- Know your eligible tenants — Comply with the enhanced maintenance obligation under Bill 244
How Landager Helps
Managing properties in Nova Scotia requires navigating a rapidly evolving legislative landscape, particularly with the introduction of the 5% interim rent cap and shortened eviction timelines. Landager's comprehensive platform protects NS landlords by automating the strict 4-month notice requirement for rent increases aligned with the tenancy anniversary date. Furthermore, the platform tracks the precise 3-day arrears window before a Form D can be legally served, ensuring your compliance is never in question. From managing security deposit trust account records to facilitating the 10-day return timeline, Landager provides a digital safety net that shields you from the complexities of the Residential Tenancies Program.
📬 해당 법규 변경 시 알림 받기
임대인-임차인 법규가 업데이트될 때 이메일을 보내드립니다. 스팸 없이 법규 변경 사항만 알려드립니다.




