Scotland Commercial Maintenance Obligations
Understand maintenance duties in Scottish commercial leases, including FRI obligations, service charges, dilapidations, and the absence of a Repairing Standard.
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.
The residential Repairing Standard—which mandates minimum property conditions for private landlords—has no application in Scottish commercial leases. Instead, maintenance obligations are carved out in the lease itself, with the vast majority of Scottish commercial leases placing a heavy burden on the tenant.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a qualified Scottish solicitor for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
No Implied Residential Warranty
A commercial landlord in Scotland does not guarantee that the property is fit for any particular purpose. If the roof leaks, the HVAC system fails, or the car park surface deteriorates, the question of who pays is determined entirely by the lease—not by legislation.
Full Repairing and Insuring (FRI) Leases
Under an FRI lease (the standard for single-let commercial properties in Scotland), the tenant assumes near-total responsibility:
- Structural repairs: Roof, foundations, load-bearing walls.
- External repairs: Windows, external cladding, gutters, downpipes.
- Internal repairs: All internal fabric, fixtures, and fittings.
- Building insurance: The tenant must insure the building (or reimburse the landlord if the landlord arranges insurance).
- Compliance: The tenant is responsible for ensuring the property complies with all statutory regulations applicable to their use.
The landlord essentially delivers the building and receives a "clear rent" throughout the lease with no ongoing maintenance outlay.
Service Charges in Multi-Let Properties
For multi-tenanted commercial buildings (e.g., office blocks, shopping centres), the landlord typically retains control of common areas and external maintenance but recovers the costs through a service charge:
- Each tenant pays a proportionate share (usually calculated by floor area) of the total building running costs.
- Service charge budgets are prepared annually, with tenants paying quarterly or monthly in advance based on estimates.
- At year-end, the landlord reconciles actual expenditure against estimates and issues a balancing charge or credit.
- Tenants have the right to challenge unreasonable service charges and request sight of underlying invoices and contracts.
Dilapidations
At the end of the lease, the tenant must return the property in the condition reflected by the repairing obligations in the lease. This is enforced through the dilapidations process:
- Terminal Schedule of Dilapidations: The landlord's chartered surveyor prepares a detailed list of disrepair, comparing the property's actual condition with the lease obligations.
- Negotiation: The tenant can challenge individual items. Most dilapidations claims in Scotland are settled by negotiation.
- Financial Settlement: Many tenants pay a negotiated cash sum (a "dilapidations payment") instead of physically carrying out the repairs, especially if the landlord intends to refurbish or demolish the building after the tenant leaves.
- RICS Scotland Guidance: The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors provides specific guidance on Scottish dilapidations, which differs in several respects from the English RICS guidance.
Scotland's Weather and Maintenance
Scotland's harsh climate (heavy rain, high winds, freezing temperatures, snow) places exceptional demands on building fabric. Tenants under FRI leases must be proactive with:
- Roof inspections and repairs.
- Gutter and drainage maintenance (to prevent water ingress).
- Heating system servicing (boiler breakdowns in a Scottish winter can cause pipe bursts and flooding).
- External weatherproofing (repointing stonework, replacing damaged slates).
How Landager Helps
Landager's maintenance tracker logs all repair requests, vendor invoices, and inspection reports against each commercial property. At lease expiry, the platform generates a comprehensive maintenance history report, significantly strengthening the landlord's position in dilapidations negotiations.
Sources & Official References
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