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Washington State Commercial Maintenance Obligations (NNN & CAM)

Understand the division of maintenance responsibilities in Washington commercial property, focusing on NNN leases, CAM reconciliations, and the absence of ha...

Melvin Prince
3 min de lecture
Hitelesített Apr 2026United States flag
WashingtonÉtats-UnisComercialEntretienRéparations

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Washington State Commercial Maintenance Obligations (NNN & CAM)

Washington's residential landlords are bound by the non-waivable Implied Warranty of Habitability under the RLTA (RCW 59.18.060). If a residential furnace fails, the landlord must fix it.

In the commercial sector, this warranty does not exist.

Maintenance responsibilities in Washington commercial real estate are completely dictated by the written lease agreement. The dominant standard is the Triple Net (NNN) structure, which shifts virtually all maintenance and costs to the commercial tenant.

Region
Washington
Major Statute
RCW 59.18
Last Verified
2026-04-10

1. Single-Tenant Properties: Absolute NNN

If a commercial tenant rents an entire freestanding building in Washington (e.g., a standalone retail store, a warehouse in Kent, or an industrial facility in Everett), the lease is almost always structured as an absolute Triple Net (NNN) Lease.

Under a pure NNN lease, the tenant assumes total responsibility for the entire property:

  • Daily Operations: Landscaping, janitorial services, parking lot maintenance, and (given Washington's climate) significant rain gutter and drainage upkeep.
  • Systems Maintenance: HVAC servicing, plumbing maintenance, electrical panel inspections.
  • Major Structural Repairs: If the roof fails or the HVAC unit catastrophically dies during a Pacific Northwest winter storm, the tenant pays for the replacement.

2. Multi-Tenant Buildings and CAM Charges

In multi-tenant commercial buildings (like the office towers in downtown Seattle or strip malls across the Puget Sound region), the landlord typically retains physical control over the common areas—but recovers 100% of the costs from tenants via Common Area Maintenance (CAM) Charges.

The Annual CAM Reconciliation

  1. The Estimate: At the start of the year, the landlord estimates total building operating costs (e.g., $200,000). A tenant occupying 15% of the building pays $30,000 annually ($2,500/month) in addition to base rent.
  2. The Reconciliation: At year's end, the landlord audits actual expenses. If the persistent rain required more drainage repairs and the actual bills were $240,000, the tenant receives an invoice for their share of the $40,000 shortfall ($6,000). If bills were only $180,000, the tenant gets a $3,000 credit.

3. Condition at Surrender (Dilapidations)

Washington commercial leases routinely require the tenant to return the premises in "good condition and repair, ordinary wear and tear excepted."

When a lease expires, the landlord will perform a rigorous walk-through inspection comparing the property's condition against the baseline established at lease commencement. Any tenant-caused damage (cracked flooring, damaged drywall, broken fixtures) will be itemized and charged to the tenant—potentially deducted from their security deposit or invoiced separately.

See our Commercial Security Deposits guide.

Back to Washington Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

How Landager Helps

Managing Washington properties requires precision, especially with Seattle's strict security deposit caps and the statewide 30-day return deadline. Landager automates the mandatory move-in checklist process, tracks the 14-day "pay or vacate" notices, and ensures rent increases are delivered with the required 90-day notice. From managing installment payment requests to staying compliant with Just Cause eviction requirements, Landager helps you navigate the complex RCW 59.18 landscape.

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