Serbian Commercial Maintenance & Repair Obligations
Discover how maintenance responsibilities, capital expenditures (CAPEX), and common area charges are allocated in Serbian commercial leases.
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.
In the Serbian commercial real estate market, the division of maintenance responsibilities and financial liability for property administration is largely determined by contract rather than statutory law. While the Law on Obligations (Zakon o obligacionim odnosima) provides a baseline, corporate leases almost entirely override it to shift the burden according to institutional market standards (e.g., Triple Net or Gross leases).
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial maintenance law depends heavily on the specific terms of your corporate contract. Always consult a licensed Serbian attorney for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
The Default Legal Framework
If a commercial lease is poorly drafted or silent on the issue, Article 570 of the Law on Obligations dictates that:
- The landlord is responsible for major structural repairs and ensuring the property is fit for its intended use.
- The tenant is responsible only for "minor" repairs caused by their regular use of the item.
In commercial settings—where properties utilize complex industrial HVAC systems, specialized electrical grids, or extensive corporate fit-outs—relying on the vague statutory definition of a "minor" repair is a recipe for disastrous litigation.
Institutional Market Practices
Serbian Class A commercial properties (office towers in New Belgrade, logistics parks, modern retail centers) rarely rely on the default rules. Instead, they structure maintenance using detailed lease clauses.
1. The "Shell and Core" Principle and Fit-Outs
Most premium commercial space is leased "shell and core." The landlord provides the bare structure (walls, basic utility connections). The corporate tenant is then fully responsible for designing, funding, and executing the internal "fit-out" (partition walls, flooring, specialized lighting) according to their corporate needs.
- Tenant's Burden: Once the fit-out is complete, the lease almost universally places the complete financial and operational burden of maintaining and repairing those specific internal improvements squarely on the tenant.
- HVAC and Internal Systems: Routine servicing, filter changes, and minor repairs of the internal climate control units located within the leased space are typically the tenant's responsibility.
2. Capital Expenditure (CAPEX)
Institutional landlords almost always retain responsibility for major Capital Expenditures (CAPEX). This involves the structural integrity of the building.
- Roof replacement.
- Foundation stabilization.
- Replacing the central chiller units or massive technical infrastructure of the building itself.
3. Service Charges (OPEX)
For multi-tenant commercial buildings (like office towers or shopping malls), landlords utilize a Service Charge (Troškovi održavanja or OPEX) model.
- The landlord (or a contracted Facility Management company) maintains all Common Areas (lobbies, elevators, shared restrooms, exterior landscaping, security guards, exterior window cleaning).
- The total cost of running the building is calculated annually.
- Each corporate tenant pays a monthly Service Charge, proportionally calculated based on the square footage they occupy relative to the total leasable area of the building.
- "Open Book" Reconciliation: Sophisticated leases require the landlord to provide an "open book" accounting at the end of the year. If the actual maintenance costs were lower than the collected Service Charges, the tenant receives a credit. If costs were higher, the tenant receives an invoice for the shortfall.
"Triple Net" (NNN) Leases
While less common for multi-tenant office buildings, Triple Net (NNN) leases are increasingly standard for single-tenant industrial, warehousing, or standalone retail properties in Serbia. In a true NNN lease, the corporate tenant assumes practically all financial responsibilities, including:
- All interior and exterior maintenance and repairs (excluding the absolute core structural roof/walls).
- All building insurance premiums.
- All property taxes (Porez na imovinu).
In these structures, the landlord essentially acts simply as a financier collecting a pure yield, while the corporate tenant operates the facility entirely autonomously.
Operational Clarity with Landager
Disputes over whether a repair falls under a tenant's internal maintenance obligation or the landlord's CAPEX responsibility are common in Serbia. Landager minimizes this friction by providing a centralized communication portal. Corporate tenants can submit direct, timestamped maintenance requests, creating an irrefutable log. Landlords can track these inputs, dispatch preferred facility management teams, and utilize Landager’s unified financial dashboards to seamlessly calculate, apply, and reconcile complex proportional Service Charges across a multi-tenant tower.
Sources & Official References
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