Yes No Share to Facebook
Delegating Maintenance Obligations:
a Reduction of Liability Risk Concerns by Hiring Qualified Contractors
Last Updated: July 05 2026
Question: What are the benefits of hiring a professional property maintenance services provider instead of handling landlord maintenance yourself in Ontario?
Answer: Denali Paralegal can help Ontario landlords and tenants understand how property maintenance duties under the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, S.O. 2006, Chapter 17 require maintaining a residential complex in good repair and fit for habitation, while also reducing risk tied to injuries by ensuring work is done safely and by properly qualified contractors under the Occupier’s Liability Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. O.2, including the reasonable-steps protection for independent contractors in Occupier’s Liability Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. O.2 at section 6. By using licensed and qualified maintenance providers for items like snow clearing, ice control, landscaping, plumbing, electrical, roofing, structural repairs, pest control, and similar upkeep, you can improve compliance, document diligence, and lower the chance of disputes or liability claims when something goes wrong, and if you need family law services provider paralegal guidance alongside your housing concern, call (877) 414-4377 to get next steps and plain-language support.
Benefits of Hiring Professional Property Maintenance Services
By law, it is the landlord that is legally required to provide various property maintenance services, among other things, to the tenant; however, the landlord is also legally free to hire a contractor as a service provider engaged for the purpose of performing the maintenance duties as statutorily prescribed per section 20 of the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, S.O. 2006, Chapter 17 which says:
20 (1) A landlord is responsible for providing and maintaining a residential complex, including the rental units in it, in a good state of repair and fit for habitation and for complying with health, safety, housing and maintenance standards.
As above, per the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, exterior maintenance of the rental complex such as tree care, lawn mowing, snow plowing, ice salting, among many other things, as well as interior maintenance of rental units, such as repairs to plumbing, electrical, windows, doors, and even reasonably necessary painting, are legally the responsibility of the landlord. With this said, and although maintenance responsibilities are statutorily mandated upon the landlord, a landlord is permitted to delegate tasks to contractors, among other service providers. Indeed, it is common sense that although the landlord is responsible to ensure that maintenance is performed, the landlord may hire others to perform that maintenance. The right to outsource maintenance is obviously necessary as undoubtedly a landlord is personally unqualified and unequipped to perform each and every task that may be required such as snow plowing, plumbing repairs, electrical work, pest control, etc.).
In addition to the section 20 of the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 requirement that the landlord be responsible for ensuring that maintenance work gets done, per the Occupier's Liability Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. O.2, the landlord also holds duties to ensure that the premises are reasonably safe for all persons, other than trespassers, while upon the premises. Accordingly, the landlord is both responsible to ensure that the work is done and the landlord is potentially liable if the work is done unreasonably and an injury results. Specifically, the Occupier's Liability Act states:
3 (1) An occupier of premises owes a duty to take such care as in all the circumstances of the case is reasonable to see that persons entering on the premises, and the property brought on the premises by those persons are reasonably safe while on the premises.
As an "occupier", per section 1 of the Occupier's Liability Act, and the duty prescribed in section 3 as above, a landlord must act reasonably in the performance of maintenance to ensure that persons, including the tenant but also guests of the tenant as well as strangers to the premises such as delivery persons, neighbours, etc., are reasonably safe. Furthermore, when the landlord diligently hires a contractor to perform services for which the contractor is adequately qualified to perform, the landlord may become protected from liability should the contractor fail to fulfill the Occupier's Liability Act obligations as delegated to the contractor by the landlord. This protection is provided by section 6 of of the Occupier's Liability Act which says:
6 (1) Where damage to any person or his or her property is caused by the negligence of an independent contractor employed by the occupier, the occupier is not on that account liable if in all the circumstances the occupier had acted reasonably in entrusting the work to the independent contractor, if the occupier had taken such steps, if any, as the occupier reasonably ought in order to be satisfied that the contractor was competent and that the work had been properly done, and if it was reasonable that the work performed by the independent contractor should have been undertaken.
With the above said, it is an obvious concern that the section 6 protection is likely unavailable where the landlord hires an unqualified contractor, such as the tenant, whereas the landlord may use a separate contract or clauses severable from a lease so to hire the tenant to perform the maintenance. While there are ways to legally hire the tenant, and thereby delegate the performance of maintenance to the tenant, the downside to the landlord is the loss of the protection provided within section 6 of the Occupier's Liability Act. Of course, if the tenant is genuinely a qualified contractor, the section 6 protection may be in place. Even more simply said, when a landlord hires a genuinely qualified contractor, the landlord is better protected from potential liability if a person is injured upon the premises due to a maintenance concern.
Conclusion
A landlord is both responsible to ensure that maintenance is performed as well as potentially liable for injuries if a person is injured upon the premises due to poor maintenance. A landlord may find certain liability defence avenues available when the landlord reasonably outsourced the property maintenance services to a properly qualified contractor.
NOTE: A substantial amount of inquiries featuring “lawyers near me” or “best lawyer in” often indicate a demand for prompt and effective legal assistance rather than a particular job title. In Ontario, licensed paralegals operate under the same Law Society that governs lawyers and have the authority to represent clients in specific litigation issues. Skills in advocacy, legal analysis, and understanding of procedures are fundamental to this profession. Denali Paralegal provides legal representation within its licensed framework, focusing on strategic formulation, evidentiary readiness, and compelling advocacy aimed at securing efficient and advantageous outcomes for clients.