Residential Maintenance Obligations in Egypt
A landlord's guide to maintaining property in Egypt, covering the Civil Code's requirement for habitability and managing compound maintenance fees (Wadeea).
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The obligations regarding property maintenance in Egypt are dictated primarily by the Egyptian Civil Code (Articles 558 to 594), establishing a clear baseline of responsibility aimed at ensuring residential properties remain fit for use.
The Landlord's Core Duty: Habitability
Under the Egyptian Civil Code, the landlord bears the ultimate legal responsibility to deliver the property in a specific state and to maintain it throughout the lease term.
The Civil Code explicitly requires:
- Delivery in Good Condition: The landlord must hand over the apartment in "good condition" and "fit for its intended purpose."
- Major Repairs and Structural Integrity: It is the landlord's unequivocal duty to manage and pay for major structural repairs necessary to keep the building habitable. This includes maintaining the foundational structure, fixing major roof leaks, repairing collapsed central plumbing, and ensuring the main electrical wiring safely supports the apartment.
If an Egyptian landlord fails to undertake these major, urgent repairs, the Civil Code provides the tenant with powerful legal remedies:
- The tenant can seek a court order to force the landlord to accomplish the repairs.
- The tenant can obtain judicial permission to hire contractors to perform the repairs themselves and deduct the exact cost from their future rent payments.
- If the lack of maintenance makes the property unlivable (e.g., severe flooding or no electricity), the tenant can demand immediate termination of the lease and massive financial compensation.
The Tenant's Duty: Day-to-Day Maintenance
The law balances the landlord's severe structural obligations by placing the everyday upkeep squarely on the tenant.
- The tenant is responsible for "minor repairs" resulting from their daily use of the property.
- This includes replacing burnt-out lightbulbs, fixing minor, localized plumbing drips (like a broken faucet or showerhead), and the routine servicing of air conditioning units (A/C split units).
- The tenant must also report any major structural issues (like a spreading water leak in the wall) to the landlord immediately so that the landlord can address it before it causes catastrophic damage to the building.
The Complication of Compound Maintenance Fees (Wadeea)
A unique, uniquely expensive aspect of the modern Egyptian real estate market-especially in gated communities in New Cairo, Sheikh Zayed, or the North Coast-is the massive cost of compound maintenance.
Developers often demand large annual fees (or require an enormous upfront "maintenance deposit" called Wadeea, where the developer invests the lump sum and uses the interest to run the compound). These fees pay for private security, landscaping, pool cleaning, and street sweeping.
Who pays the Wadeea?
- By default, the landlord (the property owner) is usually responsible to the developer for the Wadeea.
- However, the Egyptian Civil Code allows freedom of contract. In modern "New Rent" leases, it is extremely common for landlords to draft a clause specifically shifting the burden of the actual annual compound maintenance fee invoices onto the tenant, in addition to their monthly rent.
- This division of responsibility must be explicitly crystal clear in the signed lease agreement to avoid bitter disputes.
covered repair requests and organize your expensive annual Wadeea compound receipts efficiently using Landager's covered Egyptian property management toolkit.
Deep Dive Into Local Regulations
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, automated rent reminders, and document expiration - making it easy to stay compliant with Egypt regulations.
Back to Egypt Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
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