NSW Retail Property Law
Retail Lease Disputes NSW
Retail Leases Act 1994
The Retail Leases Act 1994 (NSW) gives retail tenants stronger protections than standard commercial leases. When those protections trigger a dispute, landlords need a clear map of their options. This guide covers what the Act governs, the eight most common retail lease disputes, and the mandatory resolution pathway before NCAT.
The Retail Leases Act 1994 (NSW) — what it governs
The Retail Leases Act 1994 (NSW) applies to retail shop leases in New South Wales, including shops, food premises, and service retail. It does not apply to industrial, warehouse, or office leases. Those fall under standard commercial lease terms and the common law, with no equivalent statutory overlay.
Key protections the Act imposes that cannot be contracted out of:
- Mandatory disclosure (s.11): the landlord must provide a disclosure statement at least 7 days before the lease is signed or the tenant takes possession. Failure gives the tenant a right to rescind within 6 months.
- Outgoings estimate and reconciliation (ss.27-28): the landlord must provide a written outgoings estimate before the lease starts and a reconciliation within 3 months of the end of each outgoings period.
- Land tax excluded (s.26): land tax cannot be recovered from a retail tenant. Any lease clause to the contrary is void.
- Management fees excluded (s.26): the landlord's own management costs are not recoverable as outgoings.
- Rent abatement for damaged premises (s.36): if the premises are damaged and not fully usable, rent abates proportionately during the repair period.
- Mandatory mediation before NCAT: the NSW Small Business Commissioner must mediate before the matter goes to NCAT (with limited exceptions).
- NCAT jurisdiction (s.68B): disputes up to $750,000 for leases entered from 1 July 2017 can proceed at NCAT without going to the District or Supreme Court.
Understanding which protections apply is the first step in any retail dispute. A dispute about land tax recovery, for example, is not a negotiating point. Section 26 makes the clause void regardless of what the lease says.
The most common retail lease disputes in NSW
Eight dispute types account for the large majority of retail matters reaching the NSW Small Business Commissioner each year.
Outgoings shortfall and non-recoverable items
Tenant challenges the reconciliation. Common triggers: land tax included in the schedule, management fees passed through, or estimates that significantly understated actual costs.
Rent review deadlock
Disagreement over the CPI or market review mechanism. Missed notice dates, disputed valuer appointments, or conflicting interpretations of the review clause.
Make-good at end of lease
Tenant contests the scope of make-good obligations. Condition reports at entry and exit carry most of the weight here. Disputes are common when those reports were never done properly.
Damaged premises and rent abatement (s.36)
Tenant claims abatement for a period when premises were partially unusable. The Act requires abatement; disputes centre on the degree of unusability and the quantum.
Security bond and Retail Bond Scheme
NSW requires retail lease bonds to be lodged with NSW Fair Trading within 10 days of receipt. Deductions on exit are a frequent source of dispute.
Options and renewal notice failures
Tenant argues a renewal option was not properly notified as lapsed, or landlord disputes that the option notice was valid. Strict time limits apply under most retail leases.
Assignment and subletting (ss.39-40)
Landlord's right to withhold consent is limited under the Act. Disputes arise when consent is delayed unreasonably or conditions attached to consent exceed what the Act allows.
Disclosure statement defects
Tenant claims the disclosure statement was late, missing, or materially inaccurate, triggering a right to rescind. Rescission rights run for 6 months from entry in most cases.
How retail lease disputes are resolved in NSW
NSW retail lease disputes follow a defined pathway. Unlike standard commercial disputes where parties can go straight to court, the Act imposes mandatory mediation first.
Resolution pathway
- Direct negotiation. Most disputes start and end here. A written position letter, clear evidence bundle, and a firm but commercially reasonable position resolves many disputes without external cost.
- Property-manager-led negotiation. An experienced commercial property manager acts as the intermediary, presenting the landlord's position, managing documentation, and keeping the dispute factual rather than personal.
- NSW Small Business Commissioner mediation. Mandatory for retail leases before NCAT. Cost is $195 per party. A mediator from the SBDC facilitates. Around 75% of retail disputes settle here. The process usually completes within 4 to 6 weeks of lodgement.
- NCAT (NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal). Available after failed mediation for disputes up to $750,000 (leases from 1 July 2017). NCAT hearings are less formal than court, but legal representation is common from the filing stage.
- Supreme Court. For disputes above $750,000 or where a final injunction is needed (for example, to restrain a tenant from trading or to enforce a make-good obligation). Legal costs become significant at this tier.
Most retail lease disputes settle at step 1 or step 3. The cases that reach NCAT typically involve large quantum (above $50,000 outgoings shortfalls, contested make-good scopes, or significant bond deductions) or a breakdown in the relationship that makes negotiation impossible.
Free dispute pathway assessment
BLOX operates a Dispute Navigator for NSW commercial and retail landlords. Answer a short set of questions about your dispute and receive a recommended pathway, a likely timeline, and a view of the evidence you will need at each stage.
The Navigator covers both standard commercial leases and retail leases under the Act. It flags whether your dispute is likely to resolve at mediation or whether the facts suggest a harder fight at NCAT.
Free dispute pathway assessment
Takes 3 minutes. No obligation. Covers retail and commercial leases.
If your tenant is in a retail lease, the Retail Leases Act 1994 applies additional rules on top of the lease itself. An assessment through the Navigator will flag which Act provisions are relevant to your specific dispute type.
How active management prevents retail lease disputes
Most retail lease disputes are predictable in advance. Outgoings shortfalls happen when estimates are not tracked against actuals through the year. Make-good disputes happen when condition reports were not done at entry. Bond disputes happen when deductions are not supported by documentation prepared at the time of damage, not after the tenant vacates.
BLOX manages these exposure points proactively for every retail and commercial property under management:
The management bridge
- Outgoings tracking: monthly actual vs estimate variance reporting, so reconciliation does not produce surprises for either party.
- Bond lodgement management: all retail bonds lodged with NSW Fair Trading within the 10-day statutory window.
- Make-good condition reports: photographic entry and exit reports signed by both parties. Disputes at exit are rare when the entry report is detailed.
- Rent review scheduling: all review trigger dates and notice windows tracked, so missed deadlines cannot be used as leverage by a tenant.
- Disclosure statement preparation: retail lease renewals and assignments trigger disclosure obligations. BLOX tracks these as part of the lease administration cycle.
A property manager who tracks these obligations through the lease term puts the landlord in a position where disputes have less surface area. When a dispute does arise, the documentation to support the landlord's position already exists.
Phone (02) 8883 4559 or email [email protected] to discuss your retail lease situation.