7 Red Flags in Your Elevator Contract
That Are Costing You Thousands
The ElevatorBlueprint team analyzed hundreds of elevator service contracts. These are the clauses that cost building owners the most money — and almost nobody reads them.
Scan Your Contract Free →The Evergreen Auto-Renewal Clause
Your contract automatically renews for another 3-5 years if you miss a narrow cancellation window — often just 90 days. Miss it by a week, and you are locked in at whatever rate they set.
Examination Disguised as Full Maintenance
Many contracts use language that sounds like full coverage but only includes labor. Parts get billed separately — often at steep markups. The difference can be tens of thousands per year.
Unlimited Escalation Clauses
Annual price increases with no cap. Some contracts allow 5-8% compounding increases year over year — with no performance benchmarks tied to the cost.
Vague Maintenance Scope
Terms like "routine maintenance" and "as needed" give contractors full discretion over what work gets done — and what gets skipped. No verification system exists by default.
Contractor-Defined Obsolescence
Your service provider decides when parts are "obsolete" — even if they have years of functional life left. That declaration triggers expensive upgrades on their timeline, not yours.
No Response Time Guarantees
Many contracts contain zero binding commitments on callback response time. When a tenant is trapped, the contract says nothing about how quickly help arrives.
Liability Shift to Building Owner
Buried indemnification clauses transfer safety liability from the contractor back to the building owner. In most states, you carry non-delegable liability — the contract makes that worse.
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