South Australia Commercial Lease Requirements

Review essential SA commercial lease requirements, including the 5-year minimum term, exclusionary clauses, and mandatory disclosures.

Melvin Prince
7 分钟阅读
已验证 Apr 2026澳大利亚 flag
南澳大利亚商业租赁协议最低5年零售租赁

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本内容仅供一般信息和教育目的。它不构成法律建议,不应作为法律建议依赖。法律法规经常变化——请务必核实当前法规并咨询您所在司法管辖区的持证律师,以获取针对您具体情况的建议。Landager 是一个物业管理平台,而非律师事务所。信息最后验证时间: April 2026.

South Australia Commercial Lease Requirements

The Retail and Commercial Leases Act 1995 (SA) imposes specific structural requirements on commercial leases, most notably the mandatory minimum 5-year lease term for retail shop leases. Understanding these requirements is essential for both landlords and tenants.

The 5-Year Minimum Term

For retail shop leases covered by the Act, the total term of the lease (including any option periods) must be at least 5 years. This provision is designed to give small business tenants the security they need to establish and grow their operations.

Example: A landlord can offer a 3-year initial term with a 2-year option to renew (3 + 2 = 5 years minimum).

Exceptions to the 5-Year Minimum

The minimum term does not apply if:

  • The tenant has received independent legal advice about the effect of waiving the minimum term, and a certified exclusionary clause is included in the lease.
  • The lease is for a term of 6 months or less.
  • The tenant is a publicly listed company or a subsidiary of one.
  • The lease is for certain specific short-term or seasonal uses.

Written Lease Required

While there is no absolute statutory requirement that every commercial lease be in writing, practically all commercial leases in SA are in writing. Given the complexity of commercial terms (outgoings, fit-out, make-good, rent reviews), an oral commercial lease would be virtually unenforceable.

Essential Clauses

A comprehensive SA commercial lease should include:

  1. Permitted Use: The specific business activity the tenant is authorised to conduct on the premises.
  2. Rent and Rent Review: The initial rent, payment frequency, and the exact methodology for future rent reviews (CPI, fixed percentage, market review).
  3. Outgoings: A clear, itemised list of which operating expenses the tenant must contribute to (noting that land tax cannot be recovered from tenants under the Act).
  4. Security Bond / Bank Guarantee: The amount and form of security required.
  5. Maintenance and Repairs: A clear delineation of which repairs are the landlord's responsibility (typically structural) and which are the tenant's (typically internal fit-out and fixtures).
  6. Make Good Obligations: What the tenant must do to restore the premises when the lease expires (e.g., remove fit-out, repair walls, repaint).
  7. Assignment and Subletting: Under what conditions the tenant can transfer the lease or sublet part of the premises.
  8. Option to Renew: Any options for the tenant to extend the lease beyond the initial term.

Land Tax Prohibition

A distinguishing feature of SA commercial law is that landlords cannot recover land tax from tenants under the Retail and Commercial Leases Act. This is a cost the landlord must absorb. Any lease clause requiring the tenant to pay land tax is void.

Common Misconceptions in

Don't fall for these common myths. Know what the law actually says.

The Myth

"I can offer a 12-month commercial lease to test the market with a new tenant."

The Law

A 12-month lease is below the 5-year minimum total term required by the RCLA 1995 for retail shop leases. To do this lawfully, the tenant must obtain independent legal advice and a certified exclusionary clause must be included in the lease.

The Myth

"I can include a clause requiring the tenant to pay my land tax as part of outgoings."

The Law

The RCLA 1995 expressly voids any lease clause that requires a retail shop tenant to pay land tax. This cost remains with the landlord regardless of what the lease says.

The Myth

"A verbal commercial lease is fine for a month-to-month tenancy."

The Law

While oral commercial leases are technically recognisable in law, they are virtually unenforceable given the complexity of commercial lease terms (outgoings, make-good, fit-out, permitted use). All commercial leases should be in writing, drafted by a commercial property solicitor.

Best Practices

  • Always Use Experienced Commercial Solicitors: Commercial lease drafting is a specialised discipline. Never use a residential lease form or a generic template for a commercial tenancy.
  • Obtain Certified Exclusionary Clauses (If Applicable): If both parties genuinely want a lease term shorter than 5 years, ensure the tenant obtains independent legal advice and the solicitor provides the necessary certificate.

How Landager Can Help

Landager stores all your commercial lease agreements centrally, allowing you to instantly verify permitted use clauses, check option renewal dates, and confirm make-good obligations. Our system tracks the critical 6-to-12-month renewal negotiation window required under the Act, ensuring you never miss a compliance deadline.

Frequently Asked Questions:

Under the RCLA 1995, the lease must clearly itemise which operating expenses the tenant must contribute to. Common outgoings include council rates, water and sewerage rates, building insurance, strata levies, cleaning, and security. The lease must explicitly exclude land tax (which cannot be recovered from tenants). Each year, the landlord must provide an estimate of outgoings at the beginning of the year and an audited reconciliation at the end.

Make good obligations define what the tenant must do to restore the premises at the end of the lease. Common requirements include: removing all tenant-installed fit-out (shelves, counters, partitions); repairing any damage caused during fit-out installation or removal; repainting all internal walls in a neutral colour; restoring flooring to its original condition; and decommissioning any specialised services (restaurant grease traps, additional electrical fit-out). The lease should be very specific — vague make good clauses are a primary source of end-of-lease disputes.

For retail shop leases in shopping centres (and best practice for all retail leases), if the tenant has a preferential right of renewal, the landlord must proactively begin renewal negotiations between 6 and 12 months before the lease expires. If there is no right of renewal, the landlord must provide written notice and reasons for not renewing within the same 6-to-12-month window before expiry. These long-lead disclosure obligations are designed to give tenants time to plan their business continuity.

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