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Tennessee CAM Reconciliation Compliance Guide for Landlords

Statutory requirements, tenant audit rights, and landlord obligations for commercial CAM reconciliation in Tennessee.

Primary Statute

Tenn. Code § 66-28-101 et seq. (Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act - commercial excluded); commercial governed by contract law

Key Takeaway for Landlords

Nashville's rapid growth means reassessment years can bring large tax increases. No state income tax means municipalities rely more heavily on property tax revenue.

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.

Regulatory Body

Tennessee Real Estate Commission

Tennessee CAM Context

Tennessee has no state income tax (since 2021), which makes property tax revenue more important to municipalities. Nashville's rapid office and industrial growth is adding CAM reconciliation complexity. County reassessments occur on 4-5 year cycles.

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