Required Disclosures in Queensland Commercial Leasing
Understand the strict, mandatory Lessor Disclosure Statements required under Queensland's Retail Shop Leases Act 1994, and the severe penalties for non-compliance.
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 Queensland commercial real estate, the disclosure requirements vary enormously based on a single factor: Does the lease fall under the Retail Shop Leases Act 1994 (RSLA)?
If the lease is a standard commercial office or industrial warehouse (Non-Retail), the legal doctrine of caveat emptor (buyer/lessee beware) largely applies. However, if the lease is a "Retail Shop Lease," the landlord is legally burdened with some of the strictest pre-lease disclosure rules in Australia.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The RSLA is a highly technical piece of legislation. Always consult a licensed commercial property solicitor for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Non-Retail Commercial Disclosures
For standalone offices, industrial sheds, and medical suites not located in a retail shopping center, there is no mandatory statutory disclosure statement required prior to signing the lease.
The tenant is entirely responsible for conducting their own due diligence to ensure the property is zoned correctly for their intended medical or industrial use, checking for asbestos, or investigating previous environmental contamination. A landlord relies on general contract law regarding fraud—meaning they cannot actively conceal material defects or lie when directly questioned during negotiations.
Retail Shop Leases: The Lessor Disclosure Statement
If the premises falls under the RSLA, the landlord must provide the prospective tenant with a legally binding Lessor Disclosure Statement and a copy of the draft lease.
Mandatory 7-Day Rule
Under Section 21B of the RSLA, the landlord must provide these documents to the prospective tenant at least seven (7) days before the prospective tenant executes the lease.
Important Note: The tenant can waive this 7-day period (allowing them to sign the lease the day after receiving the disclosure statement) if they obtain a waiver certificate from an independent solicitor confirming they understand their rights.
Contents of the Disclosure Statement
The Lessor Disclosure Statement is a comprehensive, heavily legislated document that must accurately summarize the financial and operational realities of the lease, including:
- The precise premises details (lettable area).
- The term of the lease and any options to renew.
- The starting rent, rent review methodologies, and any "turnover rent" percentages.
- A detailed estimate of the tenant's proportion of Outgoings (property taxes, insurance, security, cleaning).
- Details regarding the tenant’s requirements to pay for the landlord's legal costs in drafting the lease (though the RSLA actually prohibits landlords from passing on the costs of preparing the lease itself to the tenant).
- Details on the tenant's "Make Good" obligations at the end of the lease.
The Consequences of Failing to Disclose
The RSLA is designed to be highly punitive to non-compliant landlords.
If a retail landlord:
- Fails to provide the Lessor Disclosure Statement at least 7 days before the lease is signed; or
- Provides a Lessor Disclosure Statement that is "defective" (incomplete, or contains false or misleading information regarding outgoings or rent).
The tenant gains the legal right to terminate the lease.
A tenant can terminate the lease within six (6) months of entering into it if the landlord breached the disclosure obligations, walking away from the business without facing massive "break-lease" financial penalties.
Furthermore, if the landlord provides a falsely low estimate of the building’s outgoings (e.g., claiming CAM charges are $10,000 a year when they are actually $30,000) to entice the tenant to sign, the tenant can seek compensation through the Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal (QCAT) for the discrepancy.
Perfecting Due Diligence Workflows
Ensuring your commercial property managers hit the 7-day milestone metric when onboarding a new retail tenant is critical to maintaining a legally binding RSLA lease. Landager automates commercial leasing workflows, generating compliant Lessor Disclosure Statements populated directly from the property’s audited outgoings ledger. The system timestamps the delivery to the prospective tenant, locking down the 7-day statutory wait period digitally before unlocking the final signature packet.
Back to Queensland Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
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