Technical Maintenance (Facility Management) in Commercial Leasing in Ukraine
An overview of the division of responsibility for repairs and upkeep of commercial (B2B) real estate in Ukraine, covering capital and current repairs, engine...
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.Information last verified: April 2026.
The issue of technical maintenance (Facility and Property Management) in Ukraine's commercial real estate is more complex than in residential apartments. It involves servicing industrial ventilation systems, central chiller-fan coil air conditioning, fire hydrants, electrical infrastructure (transformer substations), and common areas (corridors, parking lots) of Class A business centers.
Therefore, the general legal provisions regarding "current/capital repair" are often supplemented by a detailed and comprehensive lease agreement.
1. Legislative Framework: Capital and Current Repairs (Art. 776 CC)
If one imagines that lawyers forgot to detail repair algorithms in a commercial contract, the base Civil Code of Ukraine (which also governs commercial relations via subsidiarity) would step in:
- Current repairs to the property are performed by the Tenant (Company) at their own expense (unless otherwise stipulated in the contract). Meaning, changing lightbulbs, fixing broken office doors, or plunging the plumbing inside the leased warehouse lies exclusively on the user business.
- Capital repairs to the thing (Commercial building or object) are performed by the Landlord (Building Owner).
The B2B Practice Problem: Where exactly lies the line between "current" and "capital"? For example, is the replacement of a compressor in a central air conditioning system a capital repair by the landlord or routine maintenance? It is precisely because of these nuances that disputes often arise in Commercial court.
2. Modern Corporate Practice (OPEX and Service Fees)
In new and high-class Business or Logistics Centers in Ukraine, conflicts surrounding repairs are addressed through a systemic approach. The Landlord typically assumes technical maintenance of infrastructural systems (outside the leased premises).
But they do not do this for "free." Instead, they levy a separate Operational Expense Payment (OPEX - Operating Expenses or Management Fee) on all commercial tenants, which is added monthly to the base rental rate (sometimes adding from $3 to $10 or more per square meter extra).
The Landlord's zone of responsibility (funded via tenants' OPEX payments) typically includes:
- Payment of the commercial real estate tax and land tax beneath the building.
- Round-the-clock physical and cyber security of the overall building, video surveillance, and access barriers.
- Clearing snow from the roof, cleaning and repairing common halls, restroom zones (if shared), lobbies, and parking facilities.
- Servicing (service
contracts) of industrial elevators, fire suppression systems (sprinklers), and water booster pumps. 5. Removal of industrial waste (within baseline norms) and the maintenance of building generators and fuel tanks (critically relevant since 2022).
Tenant Space Responsibility: As soon as you, as a business client, step into the leased area "behind your glass or metal doors," the entire internal ecosystem—broken windows, smashed outlets, a torn-off fire sensor, or changing the carpeting (fit-out)—becomes 100% exclusively your financial and legal burden of current repair.
3. "Improvements" (Fit-out) and Inseparable Changes (Art. 778 CCU)
A particular catastrophe for the B2B sector involves "Inseparable improvements" (the tenant's investments into the building). Retail chains (like restaurants) physically cannot operate in bare concrete walls ("shell and core"); they invest up to $2,000 per sq.m. creating floors, ducting ventilation systems, and altering components (Capital Fit-out).
- The Risk for the Tenant: According to the law, all improvements (a bolted-down toilet, a poured screed, a new drop ceiling) that the tenant company "cannot magically remove without damaging the Landlord's building walls," on the final day of the lease completely and gratuitously remain the property of the Landlord and become their asset. The tenant "gifts" the owner a $100k renovation.
- Compensation? The law dryly states: "The Tenant has the right to demand compensation for the cost of the repair if the Landlord gave written permission for these improvements." But in practice—no professional mall contract anywhere allows "compensating" renovation costs upon moving out. The text contains a "massive waiver of claims regarding compensation for improvements." Therefore, commercial law firms demand so-called "Rent Holidays" (Rent-free periods) from Landlords. The tenant enters a concrete object, builds it out for 3 or 6 months, and pays zero base rent during this time, thereby "recouping" their investments.
The Landager digital property management platform is specifically tuned for aggressive and complex B2B facilities (Business Parks or Warehouses). The control panel allows the company owner to flexibly split a corporate client's monthly invoice into the "pure base rental rate," transparent "OPEX (operational) fees," and variable custom invoices based on industrial hot water and electricity meter readings (Service Charges). Furthermore, the "Maintenance Triage" module enables tenants to instantly dispatch photo work orders, which the system automatically identities and routs to the corresponding zone of responsibility: "burnt-out bulb in lobby" (dispatch to in-house duty electrician for OPEX-covered fix) versus "shattered lock on tenant’s glass door" (issue the tenant a Bill Back for repair or reject it due to their own liability for internal current maintenance).
Sources & Official References
📬 Get notified when these laws change
We'll email you when landlord-tenant laws update in No spam — only law changes.




