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Netherlands Commercial Maintenance Obligations

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Guide to maintenance responsibilities in Dutch commercial leases: ROZ model division, NEN standards, triple net arrangements, and handover procedures.

Melvin Prince
4 phút đọc
Đã xác minh Mar 2026Hà Lan flag
Bảo trìHà LanThương mạiMặt bằng kinh doanhMẫu ROZ

Tuyên bố Miễn trừ Trách nhiệm Pháp lý

Nội dung này chỉ dành cho mục đích thông tin và giáo dục chung. Nó không cấu thành tư vấn pháp lý và không nên dựa vào đó. Luật pháp thường xuyên thay đổi — luôn xác minh các quy định hiện hành và tham khảo ý kiến luật sư có giấy phép hành nghề tại khu vực của bạn để được tư vấn cụ thể cho tình huống của bạn. Landager là một nền tảng quản lý bất động sản, không phải là một công ty luật.Thông tin được xác minh lần cuối: March 2026.

For commercial leases in the Netherlands, maintenance responsibilities are largely defined by contract. Unlike residential leases, there is no implied warranty of habitability — the maintenance division is determined by the lease agreement and applicable General Conditions.

Maintenance Split
Landlord: Structure; Tenant: Fit-out

Legal Starting Point

Art. 7:206 BW requires the landlord to remedy defects. However, for commercial leases, this obligation can be contractually modified — which is standard practice via the ROZ General Conditions.

Maintenance Division per ROZ Model

Landlord Responsibilities

The landlord is typically responsible for:

  • Structural construction — foundation, load-bearing walls, roof (shell)
  • Exterior facades — window frames, windows (exterior)
  • Common areas — stairwells, elevators, parking garages
  • Structural installations — that form part of the shell
  • Structural defects — subsidence, construction faults

Tenant Responsibilities

The tenant is typically responsible for:

  • Interior of the premises — walls, floors, ceilings (finishes)
  • Tenant installations — installations added by the tenant
  • Minor daily maintenance — similar to residential
  • Exterior painting — sometimes contractually assigned to tenant
  • Interior fit-out — all fixtures and fittings installed by the tenant

Installations (Gray Area)

Responsibility for installations varies by contract:

InstallationLandlord (Shell)Tenant
Heating/heat pumpPresent at handoverReplacement (sometimes)
Air conditioningBase installationMaintenance and filters
Sprinkler systemInstallationPeriodic inspection
ElevatorInstallation and replacementService contract (sometimes)

Triple Net Maintenance

Under a triple net (NNN) lease, almost all maintenance shifts to the tenant:

  • All maintenance including structural (excluding shell in many cases)
  • Insurance — building insurance
  • Taxes — property tax and other levies
  • It is essential to clearly define what falls under "shell"

Defects and Repair Procedure

What is a Defect?

In commercial leases, a defect is any condition that prevents the tenant from enjoying the expected use of the premises.

Procedure

  1. Written notification — tenant reports the defect to the landlord
  2. Assessment — is the defect the landlord's or tenant's responsibility?
  3. Repair — the responsible party remedies the defect
  4. Dispute — if parties disagree, the court can intervene

Rent Reduction

For serious defects, the tenant can claim rent reduction from the court. Note: the ROZ model often contractually excludes this right, so check the General Conditions.

Handover and Inspection Report

At Lease Start

  • Prepare a detailed handover report
  • Document the condition of all areas with photographs
  • Record the state of installations
  • Both parties sign the report

At Lease End

  • Compare condition with the handover report from lease start
  • Normal wear and tear is the landlord's account
  • Excessive wear and damage are charged to the tenant
  • The ROZ model typically requires the tenant to return the premises in original condition

Long-Term Maintenance Plan (MJOP)

For commercial property, a long-term maintenance plan is strongly recommended:

  • Planning major maintenance over 10–25 years
  • Budgeting future costs
  • Reserving funds via a maintenance reserve
  • Prevents unexpected large expenses

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Define maintenance clearly — specify exactly who maintains what
  2. Prepare a handover report — at start and end of lease
  3. Create a long-term maintenance plan — plan ahead for major maintenance
  4. Verify insurance coverage — who insures what?
  5. Monitor property condition — conduct periodic inspections

Back to Netherlands Commercial Lease Laws Overview.

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