Created by potrace 1.10, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2011

Louisiana Commercial Maintenance Obligations

Understand the division of landlord and tenant maintenance responsibilities in Louisiana commercial real estate under Civil Code Art. 2691 vs. commercial p...

Melvin Prince
4 phút đọc
Đã xác minh Apr 2026United States flag
LouisianaThương mạiLuật bảo trì bất động sản thương mại LouisianaAi chịu trách nhiệm sửa chữa điều hòa trong hợp đồng thuê thương mại Louisiana

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Louisiana Commercial Maintenance Obligations

In Louisiana, maintenance responsibilities for commercial properties represent an intersection between the default rules inscribed in the Louisiana Civil Code and the overriding power of the negotiated commercial lease.

The default state law mandates that landlords must keep the premises repaired. However, practically every commercial lease explicitly shifts massive portions of that liability entirely onto the tenant.

Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are heavily reliant on the negotiated lease terms under the Louisiana Civil Code.

The Default Civil Code Rules

If a commercial lease is remarkably poorly drafted or entirely silent on the issue of maintenance, the statutory defaults of the Louisiana Civil Code engage automatically.

  • Landlord Maintenance (La. C.C. Art. 2692 & 2693): The lessor (landlord) is bound to maintain the premises in a condition suitable for the leased purpose (Art. 2692), and perform all necessary repairs throughout the lease term (Art. 2693).
  • Tenant Repairs: The lessee (tenant) is bound to repair damage caused by their own fault (or that of persons on the premises with their consent) and any deterioration exceeding normal or agreed use.

The Commercial Reality: The Lease Overrides the Law

Louisiana courts hold that the Civil Code rules on maintenance are suppletive regarding commercial properties-meaning they only apply if the parties haven't agreed otherwise. Commercial landlords invariably insist on leases that aggressively amend these default protections.

The Shift in Responsibility

Depending on the commercial lease type (Gross, Modified Gross, or Triple Net/NNN), the tenant assumes sweeping financial and operational responsibility for the building's upkeep.

Repair CategoryGross Lease DefaultTriple Net (NNN) Default
Interior Plumbing/ElectricalLandlord or TenantTenant
HVAC System RepairLandlordTenant
HVAC Complete ReplacementLandlordTenant
Roof and StructureLandlordTenant (or Landlord, billed as CAM)
Common Area CleaningLandlordLandlord (billed to Tenant as CAM)

The HVAC Battleground

HVAC (Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning) is the most frequent source of commercial maintenance litigation in Louisiana due to the high cost and intense southern summers.

A bullet-proof Louisiana commercial lease must explicitly state:

  1. Whether the tenant must maintain a professional HVAC preventive maintenance contract.
  2. Who pays for emergency repairs.
  3. Critically, if the unit inevitably dies from old age during the lease, if the tenant is suddenly liable for a $15,000 capital replacement.

Ambiguity regarding HVAC replacement often forces judges back to the Civil Code defaults, leaving the landlord unexpectedly footing the massive capital expense.

See our Commercial Lease Requirements guide.

Tenant Remedies for Unfulfilled Landlord Promises

If a commercial lease definitively assigns a major repair obligation to a Louisiana landlord (e.g., repairing a leaking roof structure), and the landlord blatantly breaches that obligation, the commercial tenant has limited remedies.

  1. Breach of Contract Lawsuit: The tenant can sue the landlord for damages (e.g., inventory destroyed by water).
  2. Repair and Deduct (La. C.C. Art. 2694): While technically available, sophisticated commercial tenants rarely risk utilizing the "repair and deduct" statute because executing it improperly triggers an immediate default and eviction action.
  3. Constructive Eviction: If the landlord's failure renders the commercial space totally unusable for its permitted purpose over a protracted timeline, the tenant may claim constructive eviction, surrender the keys, and dissolve the lease early in court.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, required compliance items, and accounting records - making it easy to stay compliant with Louisiana regulations.

Back to Louisiana Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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