Maintenance Responsibility in contracts: Who Is Responsible for What
Maintenance disputes are the second most common source of landlord-tenant conflict after security deposits — and the root cause is almost always vague contract language. Many residential and commercial contracts improperly shift major repair obligations to tenants that state law and industry standards place firmly with the landlord. HVAC replacement, structural repairs, appliance maintenance, and pest control are frequent targets. Employment Contract Review analyzes your maintenance and repair provisions in detail — mapping every obligation, flagging improper cost-shifting, and identifying the legal protections that apply regardless of what your contract says.
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Why Use Employment Contract Review?
Complete Obligation Mapping
We identify every maintenance and repair clause and map exactly who — landlord or tenant — is responsible for each item. From structural repairs to light bulbs, nothing is assumed; every obligation is traced to specific contract language.
HVAC and Major System Analysis
HVAC replacement (typically $5,000–$20,000) is one of the most disputed cost-shifting provisions. We verify whether your contract properly assigns major system maintenance to the landlord, and flag any language that makes you responsible for equipment replacement.
Habitability Protection Review
In residential contracts, landlords cannot lawfully waive the implied warranty of habitability — their duty to maintain safe, livable premises — regardless of contract language. We flag any provisions that attempt to circumvent these non-waivable obligations.
Appliance Responsibility Identification
Whether you or the landlord maintains and replaces appliances is frequently unclear in residential contracts. We identify exactly what your contract says and flag provisions that assign responsibility for aged appliances at move-in to the tenant.
Emergency Repair Rights
In many states, tenants have a statutory right to make emergency repairs and deduct reasonable costs from rent when the landlord fails to act within a reasonable time. We verify whether your contract preserves or attempts to waive this right.
Commercial contract NNN Analysis
In triple-net (NNN) commercial contracts, tenants bear most maintenance costs — including structural repairs in some cases. We analyze the full scope of your NNN obligations and flag provisions that exceed market norms for your property type.
What Your AI contract Review Looks Like
Here's a preview of the kind of analysis Employment Contract Review provides for this type of contract.
Risk Score
Flagged Issues
contract language such as "Tenant shall maintain HVAC systems in good working order, including replacement" shifts a $5,000–$20,000 cost to the tenant for equipment that typically fails at end-of-useful-life, not due to tenant misuse.
"Tenant accepts the premises in as-is condition" language that waives the right to request repairs for pre-existing defects — including conditions that may affect habitability or safety — is a serious red flag.
contracts that prohibit or restrict the tenant's right to make emergency repairs and deduct costs from rent when the landlord fails to respond within a statutory or reasonable period.
Any provision shifting foundation, roofing, load-bearing wall, or structural repair obligations to the tenant — costs that can run $50,000–$500,000 and are universally considered the landlord's responsibility.
Clauses making tenants responsible for all extermination costs, including structural infestations (rodents, bedbugs, roaches in shared buildings) caused by building-wide conditions rather than tenant behavior.
Provisions requiring tenants to service and replace all appliances regardless of age or condition at move-in — effectively shifting the cost of aged appliances to tenants who had no control over their prior use.
Disclaimer: Employment Contract Review provides AI-powered informational analysis and is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice.
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Employment Contract Review provides AI-powered informational analysis and is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice.