West Virginia CAM Reconciliation Compliance Guide for Landlords
Statutory requirements, tenant audit rights, and landlord obligations for commercial CAM reconciliation in West Virginia.
Primary Statute
W. Va. Code § 37-6-1 et seq. (Landlord and Tenant — general provisions); minimal commercial-specific statutes
Key Takeaway for Landlords
West Virginia's 60% assessment ratio and low overall property tax rates keep tax CAM components modest. Eastern Panhandle properties near the DC metro may see higher values and more sophisticated tenants requiring detailed reconciliation.
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
West Virginia Real Estate Commission
West Virginia CAM Context
West Virginia assesses commercial property at 60% of appraised value. Charleston and the Eastern Panhandle (near the DC metro) are the primary commercial markets. Property taxes are relatively low, and the state's smaller commercial real estate market means CAM disputes are uncommon.
Related Resources
Validate Your West Virginia Reconciliations
CapVeri catches gross-up errors, cap violations, and billing mistakes before tenants or auditors find them — from your Yardi or MRI exports.
Start Free Audit