LEED v5 places significantly greater weight on verified, ongoing building performance, making commissioning, Monitoring-Based Commissioning (MBCx), and retro-commissioning three of the most important strategies for achieving and maintaining certification. This guide breaks down what each process involves, how they differ, and how building owners, property managers, and chief engineers can use them to meet LEED v5's decarbonization and performance requirements — for new construction and existing buildings alike.
LEED, or Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, is the world's most widely used green building certification system. LEED v5 was developed to address today's most pressing environmental and operational challenges while creating a framework for healthier, more resilient, and lower-carbon buildings.
LEED v5 is organized around three primary impact areas:
Reducing operational and embodied carbon emissions that contribute to climate change. Approximately 50% of LEED v5's available points are tied to decarbonization-related objectives (USGBC; AIA).
Improving occupant health, comfort, safety, indoor environmental quality, and overall building experience (USGBC; Verdani).
Supporting responsible land use, protecting ecosystems, and reducing environmental impacts associated with the built environment (USGBC; Verdani).
Together, these pillars represent a major shift from simply constructing sustainable buildings to creating buildings that perform sustainably throughout their lifecycle — which is exactly why commissioning, MBCx, and retro-commissioning have become central to the standard.
Buildings account for a significant portion of global energy consumption and carbon emissions. Historically, many sustainability programs focused on design intent and projected performance. The problem: a building can be designed to operate efficiently and still perform poorly once occupied.
LEED v5 recognizes this challenge and places greater emphasis on actual operational outcomes, including:
This is particularly important for owners seeking lower operating costs, improved occupant satisfaction, stronger ESG performance, and reduced environmental impact (Engenium Group; AIA).
The most notable difference between LEED v5 and previous versions is the emphasis on carbon. LEED v5 incorporates new evaluation criteria that encourage project teams to actively reduce both operational carbon emissions and embodied carbon associated with building materials (USGBC; Engenium Group).
One of the new prerequisites in LEED v5 is a Climate Resilience Assessment. Project teams must evaluate how weather events and long-term climate conditions — flooding, extreme heat, severe storms, utility disruptions, water shortages — could affect building performance throughout its lifespan (USGBC; Engenium Group).
LEED v5 introduces two new prerequisites: a Human Impact Assessment, which evaluates how projects affect occupants and surrounding communities, and a Carbon Assessment, which requires project teams to evaluate anticipated emissions and carbon impacts (USGBC; AIA).
As organizations pursue decarbonization goals, reducing dependence on fossil-fuel-based systems becomes increasingly important. LEED v5 encourages electrification strategies such as electric heating systems, air-source and water-source heat pumps, electrified domestic hot water, and renewable energy integration (Engenium Group; AIA). Projects pursuing LEED Platinum certification face additional expectations related to electrification, renewable energy use, energy efficiency, and embodied carbon reduction (USGBC; AIA).
For property managers and facility leaders, this is especially relevant in healthcare and critical environment settings, where indoor air quality directly affects patient outcomes and HVAC performance is a business, health, and compliance issue.
LEED v5 substantially raises the baseline for Fundamental Commissioning, converting several activities that were previously optional or loosely defined into hard requirements — and, unlike most energy codes, LEED v5 grants no small-project exemption from commissioning. A building may have the most efficient design in the world, but if systems are installed incorrectly, programmed improperly, or operated outside design parameters, much of that efficiency is lost. Commissioning closes the gap between design intent and operational reality, and LEED v5's updated requirements are built specifically to close that gap earlier and more thoroughly than prior versions did.
Commissioning is a systematic quality assurance process that verifies building systems are planned, designed, installed, tested, operated, and maintained according to the owner's project requirements. Commissioning typically evaluates HVAC systems, building automation systems, lighting controls, domestic hot water systems, renewable energy systems, energy management systems, and indoor environmental quality systems.
LEED v5's EA Prerequisite, Fundamental Commissioning, expands the baseline scope required of every project. Compared to LEED v4.1, the reference guide now requires:
Commissioning is not a single inspection — it's a process that runs through the full project lifecycle, and LEED v5 pulls key activities earlier into that timeline:
Because LEED v5 moved early CxA engagement and envelope commissioning into the Fundamental prerequisite, the Enhanced Commissioning credit is narrower — and, for most teams already meeting the new prerequisite, more achievable — than it was under LEED v4.1. Enhanced Commissioning is available through two paths:
Point values vary by rating system and project type — for example, LEED v5 BD+C New Construction projects can earn up to 4 points for Enhanced Commissioning, while Core and Shell projects can earn up to 3 (USGBC).
The Commissioning Authority is an independent party responsible for leading and documenting the commissioning process — developing the commissioning plan, writing and executing functional test scripts, tracking issues to resolution, and producing the final commissioning report required for LEED documentation. Under LEED v5, that independence requirement is explicit for smaller projects, and the CxA's involvement starts well before construction begins, giving them influence over design decisions rather than just verifying what's already been built.
A major theme throughout LEED v5 is accountability. Rather than rewarding documentation alone, the framework increasingly emphasizes measurable results (Engenium Group; AIA). Commissioning helps verify that energy-saving strategies function properly, carbon reduction goals are achievable, HVAC systems operate efficiently, control sequences work as intended, and occupant comfort requirements are met. Without proper commissioning, owners risk investing in sustainable design features that never fully deliver their intended benefits.
Even newly constructed facilities frequently experience issues that affect performance:
Improper control sequences: Heating and cooling systems may operate simultaneously, wasting energy and increasing operating costs.
Sensor calibration errors: Temperature, humidity, pressure, and airflow sensors often require calibration adjustments before providing reliable data.
Ventilation problems: Outside air systems may fail to meet design requirements, affecting both energy performance and indoor air quality.
Scheduling issues: Equipment frequently runs during unoccupied periods due to scheduling or programming errors.
BAS integration problems: Building automation systems may not properly communicate with connected equipment.
Identifying these problems early can significantly improve building performance and reduce operational expenses. Learn more about our building commissioning services.
Testing and Balancing (TAB) is one of the most important components of successful commissioning. While commissioning verifies that systems function correctly, TAB verifies that mechanical systems actually deliver the required air and water flow rates needed to support efficient operation.
TAB supports LEED objectives by helping ensure proper airflow distribution, ventilation compliance, indoor air quality, occupant comfort, HVAC efficiency, and hydronic system performance. Without accurate TAB data, even the most sophisticated HVAC systems can fail to achieve expected performance levels. Read more about our testing and balancing services.
Modern building performance depends heavily on automation. Commissioning teams often evaluate economizer operation, occupancy schedules, demand-controlled ventilation, static pressure optimization, supply air temperature resets, chilled water reset strategies, alarm sequences, and trend logging. Proper BAS operation often represents one of the greatest opportunities for ongoing energy savings — and it's the foundation that makes Monitoring-Based Commissioning possible.
Monitoring-Based Commissioning is one of the most significantly expanded credits in LEED v5, reflecting the standard's broader shift toward measuring actual, ongoing building performance rather than one-time documentation. LEED v5 extends the post-occupancy monitoring commitment, adds automated fault detection requirements, and treats MBCx — alongside retro-commissioning — as an essential decarbonization tool for both new and existing buildings (USGBC).
One limitation of traditional commissioning is that it represents a snapshot in time. Building performance changes: occupancy changes, equipment ages, control sequences drift, and operators modify settings. A building commissioned successfully at handover can still drift out of optimal operation within months — which is exactly the gap LEED v5's expanded MBCx requirements are designed to close.
LEED v5 divides the MBCx credit into two distinct paths and raises the bar on both:
MBCx applies analytics and fault-detection rules to trend data already being collected by a building's BAS — points like temperatures, valve and damper positions, energy meters, and equipment status. Software continuously compares actual system behavior against expected behavior and flags deviations for facility teams to investigate, rather than waiting for a scheduled inspection to catch the same issue. Under LEED v5's Enhanced Software path, this fault detection must be automated rather than manually reviewed.
Traditional commissioning verifies performance at a specific milestone — typically project handover. MBCx extends that verification for a minimum of three years under LEED v5 by continuously monitoring the same systems long after occupancy. The two are complementary rather than competing: Fundamental Commissioning establishes the performance baseline, and MBCx keeps the building from drifting away from it over the extended monitoring period LEED v5 now requires. Explore our Monitoring-Based Commissioning solutions.
LEED v5 explicitly names retro-commissioning, alongside Monitoring-Based Commissioning, as one of the essential tools for decarbonizing existing buildings — a notably stronger emphasis than in prior LEED versions. Retro-commissioning applies commissioning principles to buildings that were never formally commissioned, or that have drifted from their original design performance over time. Many owners assume LEED only applies to new construction — in reality, retro-commissioning is one of the most accessible ways for existing buildings pursuing LEED v5 through the Operations + Maintenance (O+M) rating system to capture decarbonization and performance gains without major capital investment.
Retro-commissioning (RCx) is a systematic process for identifying and correcting operational deficiencies in existing buildings, typically focused on HVAC and control systems. Unlike new construction commissioning, RCx starts with an existing, occupied building rather than a design document — the process begins by investigating how the building actually operates today.
Common triggers for retro-commissioning include buildings that were never commissioned when built, rising energy costs without a clear cause, persistent occupant comfort complaints, aging control sequences that no longer match current occupancy patterns, or a desire to pursue LEED for existing buildings.
Owners of existing buildings can apply retro-commissioning, alongside Monitoring-Based Commissioning and energy benchmarking, to improve energy efficiency, occupant comfort, carbon reduction, building resilience, asset value, and sustainability reporting — often without requiring major capital investments. See how our facility services for existing buildings support this work.
| Requirement | LEED v4.1 | LEED v5 |
|---|---|---|
| CxA engagement timing | Often engaged after construction began | Must be engaged before the 100% Design Development milestone |
| Building envelope commissioning | Optional, part of the Enhanced Commissioning credit | Mandatory, part of the Fundamental Commissioning prerequisite |
| CxA independence | Not explicitly required by project size | Required for projects under 20,000 square feet or data centers |
| Small-project exemptions | N/A — commissioning still required, but scope varied by credit path | No exemptions from Fundamental Commissioning regardless of project size or type |
| Reference standards | ASHRAE 90.1-2016; ASTM E2947-16 for envelope testing | ASHRAE 90.1-2019 or 2022 (by registration date); ASTM E2947-21a for envelope testing |
| MBCx monitoring duration | Minimum one-year post-occupancy monitoring | Minimum three-year post-occupancy monitoring |
| MBCx fault detection | Manual review of monitoring data | Automated fault detection and diagnostics (FDD) required on the Enhanced Software path |
| MBCx formal reviews | One review, typically around the 10-month mark | Two formal reviews of systems, equipment, and controls during the monitoring period |
| Existing buildings | Retro-commissioning available but not emphasized as a decarbonization strategy | Retro-commissioning named alongside MBCx as an essential decarbonization tool for existing buildings |
| Process | When It's Used | Primary Focus | LEED v5 Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fundamental Commissioning | New construction or major renovation | Verifying MEP and building envelope systems perform to design intent before and at handover | Required EA prerequisite for all projects, no size exemptions; CxA must be engaged before 100% Design Development |
| Enhanced Commissioning | New construction, pursued for additional certification points | Supplemental deliverables beyond the prerequisite: systems manual, added site visits, envelope field testing | Optional EA credit; up to 4 points (New Construction) or 3 points (Core and Shell) via MEP and/or Building Enclosure paths |
| Retro-Commissioning (RCx) | Existing, occupied buildings — often never previously commissioned | Identifying and correcting operational deficiencies that developed over time | Named alongside MBCx as an essential decarbonization tool for existing buildings pursuing LEED v5 O+M |
| Monitoring-Based Commissioning (MBCx) | Ongoing, after initial commissioning or retro-commissioning | Continuous, automated fault detection to catch performance drift before it compounds | Optional EA credit; minimum three-year monitoring commitment (up from one year in LEED v4), with Basic and Enhanced Software paths |
LEED v5 represents a fundamental evolution in green building certification. The framework moves beyond sustainable design intentions and places greater emphasis on actual building performance, carbon reduction, resilience, and occupant well-being.
Organizations pursuing LEED v5 should expect increased focus on decarbonization, electrification, carbon assessments, climate resilience, indoor environmental quality, commissioning, testing and balancing, building automation optimization, and ongoing performance monitoring.
The facilities that achieve the greatest value from LEED v5 will not be those that simply pursue points. They will be the facilities that use commissioning, testing and balancing, retro-commissioning, and monitoring-based commissioning together to translate sustainability goals into measurable operational results.
LEED v5 is the latest version of the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design rating system, focused on decarbonization, quality of life, and ecological conservation and restoration (USGBC; Verdani).
Yes. Fundamental Commissioning is a required prerequisite under LEED v5 with no exemptions for small projects or specific building types, and it now includes mandatory building envelope commissioning that was previously optional. Project teams can pursue additional points through Enhanced Commissioning.
LEED v5 requires the Commissioning Authority to be engaged before the 100% Design Development milestone, makes building envelope commissioning mandatory rather than optional, requires CxA independence from the design or construction team on projects under 20,000 square feet or data centers, and updates reference standards to ASHRAE 90.1 (2019 or 2022) and ASTM E2947-21a.
A Commissioning Authority leads and documents the commissioning process, including reviewing design intent, developing functional test procedures, verifying installed systems perform as designed, and producing the commissioning report required for LEED documentation. Under LEED v5, the CxA must be engaged earlier in the design process than in prior versions.
Fundamental Commissioning is the baseline LEED v5 prerequisite, now including building envelope commissioning and earlier CxA involvement. Enhanced Commissioning is an optional credit worth up to 4 points (New Construction) or 3 points (Core and Shell), earned through an MEP systems path, a building enclosure path, or both.
Fundamental Commissioning verifies new construction systems at handover. Retro-commissioning applies the same verification process to existing buildings to correct deficiencies that developed over time. Monitoring-Based Commissioning continuously monitors systems for a minimum of three years under LEED v5 to catch performance drift on an ongoing basis.
Testing and balancing verifies airflow and hydronic system performance, helping support indoor air quality, ventilation effectiveness, occupant comfort, and HVAC efficiency.
LEED v5 requires a minimum three-year post-occupancy monitoring commitment for the MBCx credit, up from one year under LEED v4, along with two formal system reviews and annual performance reporting during that period.
Retro-commissioning is typically pursued when a building was never formally commissioned, energy costs are rising without a clear cause, occupants report persistent comfort issues, or an owner wants to pursue LEED v5 certification for an existing building through the O+M rating system.
Retro-commissioning can improve energy efficiency, occupant comfort, carbon reduction, building resilience, and asset value, often without requiring major capital investment.
Yes. Healthcare facilities can benefit from LEED v5's focus on resilience, indoor environmental quality, ventilation effectiveness, energy efficiency, and life-cycle building performance.