Newfoundland and Labrador Commercial Lease Requirements: Key Terms and

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Guide to NL commercial lease requirements including essential terms, NNN lease

Melvin Prince
5 мин чтения
Проверено Apr 2026Канада flag
Коммерческий договор арендыНьюфаундленд и ЛабрадорУсловия арендыNNN-арендаПереуступка

Юридическое уведомление

Этот контент предназначен только для общей информации и образования. Он не является юридической консультацией и не должен на него полагаться. Законы часто меняются — всегда проверяйте действующие правила и проконсультируйтесь с лицензированным юристом в вашей юрисдикции для получения консультации, специфичной для вашей ситуации. Landager — это платформа управления недвижимостью, а не юридическая фирма.Информация последний раз проверена: April 2026.

Region
Newfoundland and Labrador
Governing Law
Common Law / Commercial Tenancies Act
Last Verified
2026-04-10

Commercial leases in Newfoundland and Labrador are complex legal documents governed by the Commercial Tenancies Act and common law principles. Unlike residential agreements with statutory protections, commercial leases are fully negotiable contracts where the terms define the rights and obligations of each party.

Essential Lease Terms

Every commercial lease in Newfoundland and Labrador should include:

TermDescription
PartiesFull legal names of landlord and tenant (including corporate details)
PremisesDetailed description of the leased space, including square footage and any common areas
TermStart date, end date, and renewal options
RentBase rent amount, payment schedule, and escalation provisions
Additional rentOperating costs, CAM charges, property taxes, insurance
Permitted useSpecific business activities allowed on the premises
Security depositAmount, handling, and return conditions
InsuranceRequired coverage types and minimum amounts

Lease Structure Types

Gross Lease

  • Tenant pays a single, all-inclusive rent
  • Landlord pays operating expenses
  • Common for office space and smaller tenancies
  • Simpler for tenants to budget

Net Lease Variations

TypeTenant PaysCommon For
Single Net (N)Rent + property taxesIndustrial
Double Net (NN)Rent + taxes + insuranceMulti-tenant buildings
Triple Net (NNN)Rent + taxes + insurance + maintenanceRetail, standalone buildings

Percentage Lease

  • Base rent plus a percentage of gross sales
  • Common in shopping centres and retail environments
  • The lease must define "gross sales" precisely

Permitted Use Clause

The permitted use clause defines what the tenant can and cannot do on the premises. Key considerations:

  • Narrow use clauses restrict the tenant to a specific business type
  • Broad use clauses give the tenant more flexibility but may conflict with other tenants' exclusivity rights
  • Exclusive use provisions prevent the landlord from leasing to competing businesses in the same building or complex
  • Ensure the permitted use aligns with municipal zoning regulations

Assignment and Subletting

Commercial leases typically require the landlord's consent for assignment or subletting. Important provisions include:

  • Whether consent can be unreasonably withheld
  • Whether the landlord has a right of first refusal to recapture the space
  • Whether the original tenant remains liable after assignment
  • Whether the landlord can impose conditions on consent (e.g., financial review of the assignee)

Tenant Improvements

Landlord's Work

Improvements that the landlord agrees to complete before the tenant moves in, often specified in a schedule to the lease.

Tenant's Work Improvements that the tenant makes at their own expense. Key considerations:

  • Approval requirements — Whether the landlord must approve tenant improvements
  • Contractor requirements — Whether the tenant must use landlord-approved contractors
  • Removal at lease end — Whether improvements must be removed or can remain
  • Tenant improvement allowance (TIA) — Cash contribution from the landlord toward the tenant's fit-out costs

Renewal and Expansion Options

Renewal Options

  • The number of renewal terms available
  • The length of each renewal term
  • How rent is determined for renewal terms (market rent, fixed increase, CPI)
  • The notice period required to exercise the option

Right of First Refusal

The tenant's right to lease additional space in the building before it is offered to third parties.

Expansion Options The tenant's right to lease adjacent or additional space at predetermined terms.

Default and Remedies

The lease should clearly define:

Events of Default

  • Non-payment of rent (and any cure period)
  • Breach of lease terms
  • Insolvency or bankruptcy
  • Abandonment of the premises
  • Failure to maintain required insurance

Landlord Remedies

  • Right of re-entry and termination
  • Distress for rent (seizure of goods)
  • Acceleration of rent (entire remaining term becomes due)
  • Right to relet the premises and recover the deficiency

Indemnification and Liability

  • Tenant indemnification — Tenant holds the landlord harmless from claims arising from the tenant's use of the premises
  • Landlord indemnification — Landlord holds the tenant harmless from claims arising from the landlord's negligence
  • Limitation of liability — Caps on each party's potential liability

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Engage a commercial real estate lawyer — Never use a residential lease template for commercial properties
  2. Define all terms precisely — Ambiguity favours the tenant in disputes
  3. Include comprehensive default provisions — Protect yourself with clear remedies
  4. Address all additional costs — Specify exactly what the tenant is responsible for
  5. Review zoning before signing — Confirm the permitted use aligns with municipal zoning
  6. Keep lease templates updated — Review and update your standard lease regularly

How Landager Helps

Navigating the Newfoundland and Labrador rental market requires strict attention to the Residential Tenancies Act, 2018, particularly regarding the unique 3/4 month security deposit cap and the specific sliding scale for late fees. Landager's property management platform is specifically configured to handle these regional nuances, automating the calculation of legal late fees ($5 plus $2/day up to $75) and ensuring that security deposit holdings always align with provincial statutory limits. Our system tracks critical notice periods—from the 6-month rent increase window to the 10-day non-payment termination notice—providing landlords in St. John's, Corner Brook, and beyond with the digital certainty needed to maintain compliance and avoid costly disputes at the Residential Tenancies Division.

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