Maintenance Obligations in Qatar: A Guide for Landlords
A reference guide for landlords regarding their obligations in ongoing maintenance and property repair for residential properties under Qatar's rental laws.
法律免责声明
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: March 2026.
With modern properties dominating the Qatari market, the balance between maintenance rights and obligations serves as a core point of contention if not clarified from the beginning. Both the Civil Code and the Leasing Law have laid down clear foundations for landlord responsibilities.
Landlord Obligations: Readiness and Major Maintenance
Pursuant to Article (5) of the Leasing Law, the landlord is obligated to deliver the leased property and its annexes in a condition fit for the agreed-upon use. This obligation extends beyond the handover moment into the lease term itself:
Necessary and Preservative Maintenance
The landlord is committed throughout the lease period to carry out all necessary and fundamental maintenance to keep the property viable for its intended use. Unless otherwise explicitly agreed in the contract, this typically covers:
- Structural maintenance of the building or apartment (e.g., roofs and walls to prevent water leaks).
- Repair and maintenance of major durable appliances provided by the landlord (such as central AC units, split ducted units, water pumps, and tower elevators).
- Fixing major plumbing systems and electrical faults not resulting from tenant misuse.
What Happens if the Landlord Fails to Maintain?
If the property requires necessary maintenance and the landlord refuses after being formally notified, the tenant has the right (according to Article 6) to resort to the "Rental Dispute Settlement Committee" to obtain permission to carry out the urgent repairs themselves and deduct the documented cost from the rent value. The tenant is not entitled to independently make these deductions or withhold rent as a pressure tactic without a formal decision or explicit permission.
Tenant Obligations: Routine Daily Maintenance
Conversely, customary law and continued practice dictate that the tenant bears the costs of minor, periodic maintenance arising from daily use and consumption to keep the premises clean and decent. Known as routine or tenantable maintenance, this includes items such as:
- Changing light bulbs and lamps.
- Unclogging standard kitchen or bathroom drains caused by daily blockages.
- Replacing batteries and changing AC filters, if agreed upon.
- Minor maintenance of private gardens belonging to the unit (unless covered by compound service payments).
The Contractual Clause (Freedom of Contract)
The Qatari legislator grants parties the right to modify maintenance obligations. The parties can mutually agree to include an explicit clause relieving the landlord of all maintenance responsibilities, shifting them entirely onto the tenant (Full Repairing Lease), provided this is stated clearly and unambiguously in the signed lease agreement.
Recommendation: It is preferable for landlords to utilize a professional platform like Landager to manage and process maintenance requests from tenants. This empowers you to electronically log faults, assign certified contractors, document repair costs, and accurately designate whether the liability falls on the landlord or the tenant—ensuring costs caused by tenant misuse can correctly be deducted from the security deposit later.
Back to Qatar Residential Laws Overview.
📬 获取这些法律的变更通知
当房东与租客法律在以下地区更新时,我们会通过邮件通知您: 绝无垃圾邮件 — 仅发送法律变更通知。




