Yukon Commercial Eviction Process: Landlord Rights and Remedies

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Guide to Yukon's commercial eviction process — grounds for termination, distress remedy, re-entry rights, lease forfeiture, notice periods, and dispute resol...

Melvin Prince
7 min čítania
Overené Mar 2026Kanada flag
YukonVymáhanie-nájmu-priestorovKomerčný prenájomTiesneOpätovné vstupenie

Právne upozornenie

Tento obsah slúži len na všeobecné informačné a vzdelávacie účely. Nepredstavuje právne poradenstvo a nemalo by sa naň tak spoliehať. Zákony sa často menia – vždy si overte aktuálne predpisy a poraďte sa s licencovaným právnikom vo vašej jurisdikcii pre rady špecifické pre vašu situáciu. Landager je platforma na správu nehnuteľností, nie právnická firma.Informácie naposledy overené: March 2026.

Commercial evictions in Yukon operate under an entirely different framework from residential evictions. The Commercial Landlord and Tenant Act and the terms of the lease agreement itself govern how a commercial landlord can end a tenancy, re-enter the premises, or pursue outstanding amounts. There is no Residential Tenancies Office or equivalent specialized tribunal for commercial disputes.

in yukon

1

Tenant breaches a fundamental term (e.g., non-payment of rent).

2

Landlord issues a formal notice to cure the breach, strictly following the lease’s notice section.

3

The time allowed to fix the breach (e.g., 5 days) passes without resolution.

4

Landlord formally terminates the lease, often through a Notice of Forfeiture.

5

Using a commercial bailiff, the landlord re-enters and secures the premises.

6

If the tenant resists, the landlord files an application in the Yukon Supreme Court for possession.

Key Differences from Residential Eviction

FeatureResidentialCommercial
No-cause evictionProhibitedPermitted if lease allows
Minimum notice periodsStatutorySet by lease (or common law defaults)
Specialized tribunalResidential Tenancies OfficeYukon courts / arbitration
Tenant protectionsExtensiveMinimal — contract governs
Distress remedyNot availableAvailable for unpaid rent

Grounds for Commercial Eviction

Commercial leases typically specify the circumstances under which the landlord may terminate the lease. Common ground for termination include:

  • Non-payment of rent — The most common ground; rent is typically due on the first of each month
  • Material breach of lease terms — Unauthorized subletting, improper use, failing to maintain insurance, etc.
  • Insolvency or bankruptcy of the tenant
  • Abandonment of premises
  • Expiry of fixed-term lease without renewal
  • Demolition or redevelopment — If the lease provides for early termination in these circumstances

Notice Periods

Commercial notice periods in Yukon are primarily governed by the lease. In the absence of a lease provision, general common law principles apply:

Tenancy TypeDefault Notice Period
Month-to-Month1 full rental month's notice
Fixed-Term (expired)No notice required — term ends at stated date
Non-paymentAs specified in lease; typically immediate action or 3–5 days
Material breachReasonable notice to cure, then termination

Always review the lease to confirm the actual notice requirements for your specific tenancy.

Landlord Remedies for Non-Payment

1. Distress

Under the Commercial Landlord and Tenant Act, a landlord has the right of distress — the ability to seize and sell the tenant's goods located on the premises to recover unpaid rent. Distress may be exercised without going to court, but must be carried out lawfully, following the procedures in the Act.

Key distress rules:

  • Can only be used to recover rent arrears (not other amounts)
  • The tenant's goods must be on the leased premises
  • Re-entry must be peaceful
  • Goods must be inventoried and the tenant notified before sale
  • The tenant has an opportunity to redeem goods by paying the outstanding rent

2. Re-Entry and Forfeiture

If the tenant has breached the lease (including non-payment of rent), the landlord may re-enter the premises and terminate the lease. The lease must contain a forfeiture clause authorizing this remedy.

Re-entry can be:

  • Peaceful re-entry — Changing locks, taking possession, without court involvement (must be done carefully; any use of force creates liability)
  • Court-ordered re-entry — Obtained through Yukon courts for contested situations or where peaceful re-entry is not possible

3. Suing for Rent Arrears

The landlord may also commence a civil action in Yukon courts for unpaid rent and damages, without necessarily terminating the lease. This is common when the relationship is salvageable or the tenant is solvent.

Lease Forfeiture and Tenant's Right of Relief

When a lease is forfeited due to non-payment, the tenant may apply to the court for relief from forfeiture — effectively asking the court to reinstate the lease on payment of arrears. Courts have discretion to grant such relief, particularly if the breach was a payment issue that has since been cured.

Month-to-Month Commercial Tenancy

If a fixed-term lease has expired and the tenant continues paying rent and the landlord continues accepting it, the tenancy typically converts to a month-to-month tenancy. Either party can then end the tenancy with one full month's written notice.

Dispute Resolution

Commercial tenancy disputes in Yukon may be resolved through:

  1. Direct negotiation — Often the fastest and cheapest option
  2. Mediation — Non-binding, but effective if both parties are willing
  3. Arbitration — Binding if the lease specifies it as the dispute resolution mechanism
  4. Yukon courts — Territorial court for smaller claims; Supreme Court of Yukon for larger commercial disputes

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Draft clear default provisions — Your lease should define exactly what constitutes default and what remedies are available.
  2. Use written notices — Always issue written notices stating the breach, the required cure, and the timeline.
  3. Exercise distress carefully — The distress remedy is powerful but procedurally strict; consult a lawyer before exercising it.
  4. Avoid self-help eviction — Changing locks without following proper procedures exposes you to liability.
  5. Document everything — Keep a paper trail of all communications, non-payment records, and your remediation efforts.

Elevate Your Yukon Property Management

Adhering to Yukon's Residential Landlord and Tenant Act or complex commercial lease frameworks requires a precise and highly resilient operational strategy. Overlooking the 15-day security deposit return deadline, the 12-month minimum rent increase interval, or proper RTO eviction notices can result in significant financial penalties, delayed proceedings, and loss of revenue. Landager delivers a streamlined, comprehensive property management solution that automates key compliance workflows. From tracking the exact delivery times for standard lease obligations to executing sophisticated operational analytics, Landager seamlessly manages your entire Yukon portfolio, empowering landlords in Whitehorse and beyond to maximize efficiency and fundamentally eliminate compliance vulnerabilities.

Back to Yukon Commercial Tenancy Overview.


Landager helps commercial landlords track rent arrears, document lease breaches, and maintain organized records for dispute resolution proceedings. Learn more about Landager.

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