Utah Commercial Maintenance Obligations

A guide to commercial property maintenance laws in Utah. Understand why the implied warranty of habitability doesn't apply and how NNN leases work.

3 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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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.

Unlike residential tenancies, where landlords are legally required to maintain livable conditions, commercial maintenance obligations in Utah are entirely negotiable. This fundamental difference shifts significant maintenance burdens onto the tenant, provided the lease is drafted correctly.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Utah for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

No "Implied Warranty of Habitability"

The Utah Fit Premises Act, which requires landlords to provide safe, heated, and functioning residential housing, does not apply to commercial leases.

In commercial real estate, there is no statutory "implied warranty of habitability." If the HVAC system breaks in a restaurant, or the roof leaks in a warehouse, the legal responsibility to fix it depends 100% on the language of the commercial lease agreement. Commercial tenants generally cannot use remedies like "Repair and Deduct" or "Rent Abatement" unless the lease explicitly grants them those rights.

Maintenance Allocation in Leases

Commercial landlords in Utah utilize different lease structures to allocate maintenance risk:

1. Triple Net (NNN) Leases

In an absolute NNN lease (common in standalone retail or industrial properties), the tenant is responsible for almost everything.

  • The tenant pays for all interior maintenance, HVAC repairs, plumbing fixes, and janitorial services.
  • The landlord acts mostly as a rent collector, and is typically only responsible for major structural components (foundation, roof, exterior walls).

2. Full Service Gross Leases

Common in multi-tenant office buildings (like those in downtown Salt Lake City). The landlord handles all maintenance—from vacuuming common hallways to fixing the elevator and replacing lightbulbs. The cost of all this maintenance is baked into the tenant's higher base rent.

Common Area Maintenance (CAM) Fees

In multi-tenant spaces like strip malls or office parks, the landlord typically oversees the maintenance of the "Common Areas" (parking lots, landscaping, shared hallways, snow removal).

The costs for these services are compiled and charged back to the tenants as CAM Fees. Utah law allows landlords wide latitude in what can be included in CAM fees, but the lease must clearly define:

  • What expenses are included (e.g., snow removal, property management fees, parking lot repaving).
  • How the tenant's share is calculated (usually a pro-rata share based on their square footage compared to the total leasable area).
  • The tenant's right to audit the landlord's CAM accounting at the end of the year.

Structuring the "HVAC Clause"

One of the most litigated areas in Utah commercial leases is HVAC maintenance. Because commercial HVAC replacements can cost tens of thousands of dollars, landlords must clearly define:

  • Who pays for standard preventative maintenance.
  • Who pays for major breakdown repairs.
  • Most importantly: Who pays if the unit must be entirely replaced (Often, landlords will replace it but amortize the cost back to the tenant over the remaining term of the lease).

How Landager Helps

Managing CAM reconciliations and tracking who is responsible for which repair can be a logistical nightmare. Landager's maintenance portal allows you to categorize repair tickets based on your lease structure. If a NNN tenant submits a ticket for a plumbing issue, you can immediately reference their lease abstraction to confirm it is a tenant-billable charge, keeping your operating expenses low.

Back to Utah Commercial Property Laws Overview.

Sources & Official References

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