Required Disclosures in Bulgarian Commercial Leases: VAT and Tax

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Understand the disclosure and registration requirements for commercial (B2B) rentals in Bulgaria. Discover what landlords must declare regarding VAT charging and company registration at the Registry Agency.

5 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.

Unlike residential property regulations, which focus on consumer protection and habitability disclosures, the Bulgarian commercial real estate framework views both the landlord and tenant as professional corporate entities (EOOD, OOD, AD).

Therefore, "disclosures" in a Bulgarian commercial lease are almost entirely financial and focused on strict tax compliance, specifically regarding the handling of Value Added Tax (VAT / ДДС) and the filing of corporate revenues with the National Revenue Agency (NRA).

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial leasing is highly complex and heavily reliant on contract drafting. Always consult a licensed local corporate or tax attorney for advice specific to your business situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

1. VAT (ДДС) Disclosure and Application

The most crucial financial disclosure in a Bulgarian commercial lease relates to Value Added Tax (VAT or ДДС - Данък добавена стойност).

Unlike residential leases (which are generally exempt from VAT), renting commercial property (offices, warehouses, retail shops) between two registered companies triggers complex VAT considerations under the Value Added Tax Act (VATA).

The Mandatory 20% VAT Application

In Bulgaria, if the commercial landlord is a VAT-registered company, the leasing of commercial property to another business is treated as a taxable supply of services.

  • The standard VAT rate in Bulgaria is 20%.
  • The Lease Clause: A legally sound commercial lease must explicitly state whether the negotiated base rent (e.g., €5,000) is exclusive of VAT or inclusive of VAT.
  • The market standard is to quote rents excluding VAT (bez DDS / без ДДС). Therefore, a €5,000 lease requires the tenant to pay €6,000 total (€5,000 rent + €1,000 VAT).

Tenant VAT Registration Status

To ensure smooth financial operations, the landlord will require the commercial tenant to formally disclose their VAT Registration status (usually represented by an active BG preceding their corporate UIC number) prior to signing. If the tenant is VAT-registered, they can reclaim the 20% VAT paid on the rent as input tax, making the VAT cash-flow neutral. However, if the tenant is a small, non-registered entity, the 20% VAT becomes a hard, unrecoverable cost, which often kills the deal.

2. Corporate Tax Disclosures (NRA / НАП)

A commercial lease is a revenue-generating vehicle for the landlord and a recognized operational expense for the tenant. Both parties have strict disclosure obligations to the National Revenue Agency (NRA or NAP / НАП).

Landlord Obligations (CITA)

If the landlord is a registered company, the rental income is not subject to the 10% flat personal income tax (like residential landlords). Instead, it falls under the Corporate Income Tax Act (CITA).

  • The landlord must declare the totality of their rental income combined with their other business revenues.
  • Bulgaria’s Corporate Tax rate is a highly favorable flat 10% on net corporate profits.
  • The landlord is legally required to issue a compliant Tax Invoice (Данъчна фактура) to the commercial tenant every single month within 5 days of the VAT taxable event (usually the rent due date) to formalize the transaction.

Withholding Tax (Non-Resident Corporate Landlords)

A critical disclosure requirement arises if the commercial property is owned by a foreign company (e.g., an Austrian investment fund) that is not registered for tax purposes in Bulgaria.

  • If a Bulgarian corporate tenant pays rent to a non-resident corporate landlord, the tenant is legally required to withhold a 10% Withholding Tax at the source, declare it, and remit it directly to the Bulgarian NRA on behalf of the foreign landlord (unless a Double Taxation Treaty specifies a lower rate).

3. Commercial Registration and The Property Register

To validate the legitimacy of the contract, both parties must disclose their corporate standing.

The Commercial Register (Търговски регистър)

Before signing, both parties will extract and attach a current Certificate of Good Standing (Удостоверение за актуално състояние) from the Bulgarian Commercial Register and Register of Non-Profit Legal Entities. This publicly available data proves:

  1. The company legally exists and is not currently engaged in bankruptcy proceedings.
  2. The specific individual signing the lease (the Manager/Director) actually holds the legal representative power to bind the company to a multi-year financial commitment.

Registration in the Property Register (Имотен регистър)

For long-term commercial leases, especially those involving heavy tenant investments (like building out a restaurant kitchen or converting a warehouse), the tenant will demand the right to register the lease. Unlike a 1-year residential lease, a signed commercial lease longer than 1 year can be inscribed in the Bulgarian Property Register at the Registry Agency (Агенция по вписванията).

  • The Protection: Inscribing the lease requires a Notarized contract. Once inscribed, the lease becomes publicly attached to the title of the property. If the landlord decides to sell the commercial building to a new owner, the inscribed lease survives the sale and is fully binding on the new buyer, preventing the new owner from kicking the tenant out to redevelop the plot.

Ensuring Financial Compliance with Landager

In the B2B commercial sector, failing to issue mandatory monthly tax invoices or miscalculating VAT leads to brutal corporate audits from the Bulgarian NRA and severed tenant relationships. Landager acts as an automated financial controller for your commercial portfolio. Rather than manually generating PDFs every month, our platform connects the tenant's exact rent and Service Charge obligations to their corporate BG UIC profile, automatically generating and dispatching flawlessly formatted, VAT-compliant Фактури (Invoices) exactly on the 1st of the month. Furthermore, Landager stores the digital corporate certificates of good standing of your tenants, ensuring you are never exposed to signing a 10-year lease with a director who lacks the legal authority to bind their company.

Back to the Bulgarian Commercial Overview.

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