Newfoundland and Labrador Commercial Maintenance Obligations: Landlord and

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Guide to commercial property maintenance obligations in NL including NNN lease

Melvin Prince
5 phút đọc
Đã xác minh Apr 2026Canada flag
Bảo trì thương mạiNewfoundland và LabradorBảo trì tài sảnHợp đồng thuê NNNPhí CAM

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

Maintenance responsibilities in commercial leases in Newfoundland and Labrador are primarily determined by the lease agreement. Unlike residential tenancies, which have statutory habitability standards, commercial maintenance obligations are largely a matter of contract.

Maintenance Allocation by Lease Type

Lease TypeLandlord Responsible ForTenant Responsible For
Gross LeaseAll maintenance and repairsInterior cleanliness, trade fixtures
Single NetBuilding maintenance + insuranceProperty taxes + interior maintenance
Double NetStructural and common area maintenanceTaxes + insurance + interior maintenance
Triple Net (NNN)Structural (varies by lease)Nearly all maintenance, taxes, insurance

Landlord's Core Obligations

Regardless of lease type, landlords typically retain responsibility for:

Structural Components

  • Foundation — Settlement issues, cracks, waterproofing
  • Roof — Structure, membrane replacement, and major repairs
  • Exterior walls — Structural integrity, cladding, and masonry
  • Load-bearing elements — Beams, columns, and structural steel

Building Systems (Varies by Lease)

  • HVAC — Central heating and cooling systems
  • Plumbing — Main supply lines and building-wide plumbing
  • Electrical — Main panels, building-wide wiring
  • Elevators — Maintenance and inspections
  • Fire safety systems — Sprinklers, fire alarms, emergency lighting

Common Areas

  • Lobbies, hallways, and stairwells
  • Parking areas and loading docks
  • Landscaping and exterior lighting
  • Snow removal and ice control (critical in NL's climate)

Tenant Maintenance Obligations

Tenants are typically responsible for:

Interior Maintenance

  • Interior walls, flooring, and ceiling finishes
  • Interior doors, windows, and hardware
  • Lighting fixtures within the leased premises
  • Plumbing fixtures within the premises
  • Interior painting and decorating

Trade Fixtures and Equipment

  • All trade fixtures installed by the tenant
  • Specialized equipment (e.g., kitchen equipment, specialized ventilation)
  • Point-of-sale systems and technology infrastructure

Housekeeping

  • Daily cleaning and janitorial services
  • Waste management and recycling
  • Pest control within the premises

Common Area Maintenance (CAM) Charges

In multi-tenant buildings, CAM charges allow landlords to recover the costs of maintaining common areas. Key provisions include:

ComponentDetails
CalculationTypically proportional to the tenant's share of leasable area
Included costsCleaning, landscaping, snow removal, security, lighting, common area repairs
Excluded costsUsually capital improvements, landlord's administrative overhead (varies by lease)
CapsSome leases include annual caps on CAM increases (e.g., 5% per year)
AuditsTenants may have the right to audit CAM expense records

Seasonal Considerations for NL

Newfoundland and Labrador's harsh climate requires specific attention to:

SeasonKey Maintenance Items
FallService heating systems, inspect roof drainage, seal building envelope
WinterSnow removal, ice control, frozen pipe prevention, heating system monitoring
SpringInspect for winter damage, check foundation drainage, roof inspection
SummerExterior painting, parking lot repair, HVAC servicing, landscaping

Emergency Repairs

The lease should address:

  • Definition of emergency — What constitutes an emergency repair
  • Responsibility — Whether the tenant can authorize emergency repairs
  • Cost allocation — Who pays for emergency repairs
  • Notification — Tenant's obligation to notify the landlord immediately
  • Access — Landlord's right of entry for emergency repairs

Capital Expenditures vs. Operating Expenses

TypeDescriptionTypically Paid By
Capital expenditureMajor improvements or replacements (e.g., new roof, HVAC replacement)Landlord (may be amortized and passed through)
Operating expenseRoutine maintenance and repairsTenant (in net leases) or Landlord (in gross leases)

The lease should clearly define how capital expenditures are treated — whether the landlord bears the full cost, or whether it is amortized and passed through to tenants as an additional charge.

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Define maintenance responsibilities clearly in the lease — avoid ambiguity
  2. Conduct regular building inspections — At least twice annually
  3. Maintain a capital reserve fund — Budget for major repairs and replacements
  4. Document all maintenance — Keep records of inspections, repairs, and costs
  5. Address NL's climate — Prioritize winter readiness and spring damage assessment
  6. Include an estoppel provision — Require tenants to confirm maintenance compliance periodically

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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