Anatomy of a BC Strata Landscape Maintenance Contract (2026 Council Guide)

Quick answer: A BC strata landscape maintenance contract should contain 13 sections: scope of work, visit frequency, inclusions and exclusions, change orders, snow add-ons, plant warranty, insurance and indemnification, service level agreements, reporting requirements, pricing structure, term and termination, auto-renewal clauses, and dispute resolution. Per BCFSA, the most common formal complaints against BC strata managers involve contracts signed without council authorization, undisclosed commissions, and auto-renewal escalators. The vendor’s contract template controls by default unless council reads and negotiates each section.

Why Most BC Strata Councils Get the Contract Wrong

BC’s Strata Property Act regulates how stratas make decisions. It does not dictate what a landscape maintenance contract contains.

That gap means the contractor’s template controls. The template was written to protect the contractor. The 2024 Michaels v. The Owners CRT decision and the BCFSA’s published top complaints both trace back to the same root cause: contracts signed without anyone on council reading the fine print.

This guide breaks down what each section should contain. Use it as a checklist before signing or renewing. For procurement-stage decisions (RFP, vendor due diligence, switching contractors), see our switching strata landscaper guide.

Section 1: Scope of Work

Scope is the most disputed clause in any strata landscape contract. A good scope answers four questions: what services, what areas, what level of finish, and what’s explicitly excluded.

Per the Canadian Landscape Standard (CLS) 2nd Edition (2020), professional maintenance contracts should reference specific CLS sections for measurable standards. A scope that says only “general maintenance services as required” is unenforceable.

Demand a 1-3 page scope with measurable specifications: mowing height (e.g., 2.5-3 inches), edging frequency, hedge dimensions, weed tolerance threshold, irrigation monitoring scope, and explicit area maps.

Section 2: Visit Frequency and Schedule

Specify visits by month, not by season. “Bi-weekly during growing season” is too vague to enforce.

Enforceable: “April through October: 24 visits at approximately 2-week intervals. November through March: 4 visits at approximately 6-week intervals.”

Required sub-clauses: what counts as a visit (90+ minutes on site), what happens when weather cancels a visit (rescheduled within 7 days), what credit applies for missed visits, and who verifies attendance. For frequency benchmarks by property size, see our visit frequency guide.

Section 3: Inclusions and Exclusions

Read the exclusions list before the inclusions list. Standard contractor exclusions that catch councils off-guard:

  • Storm debris cleanup over a defined threshold (e.g., branches above 4 inches diameter)
  • Plant replacement beyond “normal mortality” (typically 1-3% annually)
  • Irrigation repairs beyond seasonal startup and shutdown
  • Snow and ice management beyond immediate building entries
  • Major tree pruning requiring climbers
  • Pest control applications beyond basic monitoring
  • Fertilizer and lawn treatment product costs
  • Mulch refresh beyond a defined annual allowance
  • Special event preparation (AGMs, real estate showings)

Demand a single-page exclusion summary attached to the contract. Including more services upfront usually costs less than the disputes that arise when extras appear on monthly invoices.

Section 4: Change Order Procedure

Per BCFSA, scope-creep change orders signed by the property manager without council direction is a top regulator complaint.

The contract must specify: who can authorize a change order (council resolution required, not PM discretion), maximum hours of unauthorized work (typically 2-4), written estimate required before work begins, and hourly rate for change order work.

Section 5: Snow and Ice Add-Ons

BC snow service is usually a separate add-on or defined add-on within the maintenance contract. Four pricing structures exist:

StructureBest ForRisk
Per-event flat rateSimple budgetingVendor over-bills events
Per-hour with minimumTransparent costHard to budget
Seasonal retainerPredictable budgetExpensive in mild winters
Hybrid retainer + per-eventMost BC propertiesMost common structure

Required clauses: defined trigger (e.g., “any accumulation over 2cm”), response time (“crew on-site within 4 hours”), scope (which surfaces), ice management (salt/sand/both), and commercial snow insurance certificate on file.

Section 6: Plant Warranty

Industry-standard BC plant warranty: 1-year against death due to plant defect, supplier error, or installation failure for plants installed by the contractor. Excludes vandalism, animal damage, drought during owner-controlled watering, and weather extremes beyond hardiness range.

Plants present before the contractor took over: no warranty. Define “death” precisely (e.g., “more than 50% canopy loss persisting through one full growing season”). Get the warranty attached to a plant list with quantities and species.

Section 7: Insurance and Indemnification

Minimum insurance requirements for any BC strata landscape contractor:

  • Commercial General Liability (CGL): $2M per occurrence, $5M aggregate. Higher for properties over 50 units.
  • WCB clearance letter: Dated within 60-90 days, refreshed throughout the contract term.
  • Certificate of Insurance naming the strata corporation as additional insured. Without this, the CGL policy is meaningless to your strata.
  • Commercial auto insurance: Required if contractor brings vehicles on-site.
  • Commercial snow insurance: Required if snow service is bundled. Standard CGL excludes snow events.

Read indemnification carve-outs carefully. Template clauses excluding “acts beyond reasonable control” can be stretched to exclude most claims.

Section 8: Service Level Agreement

Strong SLAs specify response times by category:

Issue CategoryRequired Response Time
Emergency hazards (fallen tree, downed branch, exposed sprinkler line)Same-day, ideally within 4 hours
Urgent issues (irrigation leak, broken sprinkler head, safety concern)Next business day
Standard service requests (extra trimming, new planting)5-7 business days
Council communications (written)Acknowledged within 1 business day, substantive reply within 3
AGM prep site walksWithin 14 days of request

Specify the consequences when SLAs are missed: financial credits, escalation procedure, or termination triggers if the pattern persists. Without consequences, an SLA is aspirational, not enforceable.

Section 9: Reporting Requirements

Per CHOA guidance, any contract over $10,000 annually should include monthly summary reporting. The report should contain: visit log (dates, crew, tasks), hazard documentation with photos, plant health observations, weather impact notes, items proposed for billing outside scope, and before/after photos of significant work.

Reporting is your Occupiers Liability Act defense documentation. Invoices alone don’t prove maintenance was performed.

Section 10: Pricing Structure

Three primary pricing structures used in BC strata landscape contracts:

StructureBest ForMain Risk
Flat-rate annual contractPredictable properties with stable scopeVague scope = unenforceable services
Per-visit pricingVariable seasonal needsVendor over-schedules visits
Time-and-materials (T&M)Irregular project workHardest to budget; must have monthly not-to-exceed cap

For market benchmarks and cost-cutting strategies that actually work, see our affordable strata landscaping guide.

Section 11: Term and Termination

Real BC contract dispute (documented on JustAnswer, 2024): a maintenance contractor was given 60 days notice to end a 1-year auto-renewing contract. The legal answer: “If your contract has a clause that either party can terminate with 60 days notice, then it would be enforceable.”

Termination clauses to negotiate:

  • Notice period: 30 days is reasonable. 60 days is common. 90 days is excessive for routine maintenance.
  • Symmetry: The notice the council must give should match what the contractor must give. Asymmetric clauses favor the contractor.
  • For-cause vs convenience: Both should be allowed. Define what constitutes “cause” (e.g., 3+ missed visits in a quarter, SLA failures, insurance lapse).
  • Wind-down obligations: Contractor must complete in-progress work and hand off documentation before termination effective date.

Section 12: Auto-Renewal and Escalator Clauses

The same 2024 BC contract dispute also contained this clause: “Unless terminated with specified notice, the contract will continue after expiry date for an additional year including a 2% annual rate of increase.” That council now owes year-by-year escalating fees until they specifically terminate.

Required negotiations for any auto-renewing contract:

  • Termination notice window: Calendar the date 60-90 days before expiry. Miss it and you’re locked in.
  • Escalator cap: “The lesser of 3% or CPI.” Open-ended escalator clauses are expensive to challenge.
  • Right to renegotiate scope: Even at renewal, scope should be open to amendment.
  • Written renewal notification: Contractor must send written notice 60 days before auto-renewal triggers, summarizing new terms.

Per BCFSA, auto-renewal at higher rates without council resolution is a top regulator complaint. The contract should require council resolution to renew, not just absence of termination notice.

Section 13: Dispute Resolution

Default contracts route disputes to BC Supreme Court, which is impractical for most issues. Better terms: mediation first, then CRT for eligible disputes under $5,000, then BC courts only as last resort.

Specify British Columbia as venue (especially important for out-of-province contractors). Consider adding a “loser pays” fee allocation clause to discourage frivolous disputes.

Common Omissions: Clauses Your Contract Probably Lacks

Missing ClauseWhy It Matters
Subcontractor disclosureContractor must disclose subcontractors and ensure equivalent insurance coverage
No-poaching of residentsCrews should not solicit private work from individual unit owners while servicing the property
Equipment damage liabilityTemplate language often shifts liability for damage caused by contractor equipment to the strata
Resident communication protocolsDefines how crews interact with residents (or do not)
Privacy and securitySpecifies whether crews can use unit-attached water sources, restroom access, etc.
Force majeureDefines what events excuse performance (wildfires, severe weather, pandemic restrictions)
Property additions pricingWhat happens to pricing if the strata adds buildings or expands common property during the contract term

Where to Get a Strata Landscape Contract Reviewed in BC

For contracts over $25,000 annually or multi-year contracts, consider professional review through:

  • BC strata-specialized law firms. A 30-minute paid review costs $200-$500 and routinely identifies $5,000+ of contract issues annually.
  • BC Branch of the Canadian Bar Association Lawyer Referral Service. First 30 minutes with a referred lawyer costs $25.
  • CHOA (Condominium Home Owners Association of BC). Member benefits include contract review guidance and template clauses.
  • BCLNA (BC Landscape and Nursery Association). Member contractors can provide BCLNA-template contracts as a starting point.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a strata landscape maintenance contract be?

One-year initial terms with optional renewal are standard in BC. Multi-year contracts (2-3 years) are appropriate if pricing is locked, but auto-renewal escalators make them risky. Avoid contracts longer than 3 years.

What’s the typical notice period to terminate a BC strata landscape contract?

30-60 days for routine maintenance. 90-day notice clauses are excessive and negotiable. Asymmetric notice (council 90 days, contractor 30) should be made symmetric before signing.

Can our strata manager sign a landscape maintenance contract without council resolution?

No. Per BCFSA, signing service agreements without council direction is one of the most common formal complaints filed against BC strata managers. Multi-year contracts signed without council authorization may be challengeable.

What insurance documents should we require from a strata landscape contractor?

Three minimums: (1) WCB clearance letter dated within 60 days, (2) Certificate of Insurance for CGL of at least $2M naming your strata as additional insured, (3) commercial snow insurance if snow service is bundled.

Does the BC Strata Property Act regulate what’s in a landscape maintenance contract?

No. The SPA regulates how the strata makes decisions but does not dictate contract contents. The vendor’s template controls by default. Council must read and negotiate the specific terms.

What’s the difference between a maintenance contract and a service agreement?

In BC strata practice, the terms are interchangeable. Both define what the contractor will do, when, and for what price.

Splendid’s Strata Landscape Service

Splendid maintains strata properties across Langley, White Rock, Delta, Surrey, Aldergrove, and Maple Ridge. We also handle commercial landscape maintenance for property managers.

Related strata council guides: switching strata landscapers (procurement), affordable strata landscaping (cost), strata landscaping frequency (visit schedules + CRT precedent).

Request a free site walk and contract consultation or call 604-260-0348.