Louisiana CAM Reconciliation Compliance Guide for Landlords
Statutory requirements, tenant audit rights, and landlord obligations for commercial CAM reconciliation in Louisiana.
Primary Statute
La. Civ. Code art. 2668 et seq. (Lease - general provisions); La. R.S. 9:3251 et seq. for commercial
Key Takeaway for Landlords
Louisiana's civil law tradition means ambiguous lease terms are not automatically read against the drafter, unlike in common law states. The parish-based assessment system and 15% commercial ratio keep effective tax rates low.
Reconciliation Timing Requirements
No statutory deadline for commercial CAM reconciliation.
Tenant Audit Rights
No statutory commercial tenant audit rights.
Required Disclosures
No statutory commercial CAM disclosure requirements.
Penalty Provisions
No CAM-specific penalties for commercial leases.
Regulatory Body
Louisiana Real Estate Commission
Louisiana CAM Context
Louisiana uses the parish system instead of counties. Its civil law tradition (from French/Spanish law, not English common law) shapes lease dispute interpretation. Commercial property is assessed at 15% of fair market value. New Orleans and Baton Rouge are the primary commercial markets.
Need lease data before you reconcile?
lextract.io abstracts commercial leases into 126 structured fields in minutes - CAM definitions, pro-rata share, caps, base year, and more. No manual data entry.
Go to lextract.ioRelated Resources
Validate Your Louisiana Reconciliations
CapVeri catches gross-up errors, cap violations, and billing mistakes before tenants or auditors find them. Works from your Yardi or MRI exports.
Start free trial