North Rhine-Westphalia Security Deposit Laws: Guide for Landlords

Også tilgængelig på:

Security deposit rules in NRW, Germany: maximum amount, investment requirements, return deadlines, and permitted deductions for landlords.

Melvin Prince
4 min. læsning
Verificeret Apr 2026Tyskland flag
security-deposit-nrwkautionDepositumnorth-rhine-westphaliaUdlejer

Juridisk ansvarsfraskrivelse

Dette indhold er udelukkende til generel information og uddannelsesmæssige formål. Det udgør ikke juridisk rådgivning og bør ikke betragtes som sådan. Love ændres ofte – verificer altid gældende regler og konsulter en autoriseret advokat i din jurisdiktion for rådgivning specifikt til din situation. Landager er en ejendomsadministrationsplatform, ikke et advokatfirma.Oplysninger sidst verificeret: April 2026.

The security deposit (Mietkaution) is a fundamental element of German rental law. In North Rhine-Westphalia, the federal provisions of the German Civil Code (BGB) apply, supplemented by case law from the Federal Court of Justice (BGH). Landlords who fail to comply with these rules risk having the deposit agreement declared void or facing compensation claims.

Juridisk ansvarsfraskrivelseDenne guide giver generel juridisk information. Lejelove kan ændre sig. Konsulter altid en autoriseret notar eller advokat i denne region.
Security Deposit
3 Months’ Cold Rent
Notice Period
3 Months (Tenant)
Rent Control
Varies by City

Maximum Deposit Amount

Under § 551(1) BGB, the security deposit may not exceed three months' net cold rent (base rent excluding operating costs)

Tenants are entitled to pay in three equal monthly installments, with the first installment due at the start of the tenancy.

FeatureRule
Maximum amount3 months' net cold rent (§ 551(1) BGB)
First installment dueAt the start of the tenancy

Agreements requiring a higher amount are void to that extent — though the tenant must actively reclaim any overpayment.

Investment Requirements Under § 551(3) BGB, the landlord is obligated to:

  1. Keep the deposit separate from personal assets
  2. Invest it at a credit institution — typically in a separate savings account with a three-month notice period
  3. Earn market-rate interest on the deposit

The interest earned belongs to the tenant and is paid out together with the principal upon return of the deposit. Investing in higher-risk instruments (stocks, funds) without the tenant's explicit consent is not permitted.

Alternative deposit forms (if agreed in the lease):

  • Bank guarantee (Bankbürgschaft)
  • Pledged savings book
  • Deposit insurance (Kautionsversicherung)

Return of the Deposit After the tenancy ends, the landlord has a reasonable period to inspect and settle accounts

Courts generally accept a timeframe of three to six months, depending on the complexity of outstanding items.

Permitted Deductions

Permitted DeductionExplanation
DamageDamage beyond normal wear and tear
Operating costsExpected shortfalls from the annual statement

A deduction for end-of-tenancy cleaning is generally only permitted if the tenant was validly obligated to clean upon departure and the apartment was left in an unclean condition.

Impermissible Deductions

  • Normal signs of use and age-related wear
  • Damage that existed at move-in
  • Repairs qualifying as the landlord's maintenance obligation

Statute of Limitations

ClaimPeriodLegal Basis
Landlord's damage claims6 months after return of keys§ 548(1) BGB
Tenant's deposit refund claim3 years (from awareness)§ 195 BGB
Operating cost statement12 months after billing period§ 556(3) BGB

Best Practices for Landlords

  • Create a handover protocol — detailed written record with photos at both move-in and move-out
  • Maintain a separate deposit account — always keep a dedicated account
  • Retain interest certificates — keep bank interest statements for the final settlement
  • Respect deadlines — issue operating cost statements within 12 months after the billing period
  • Do not offset without prior written notice

Landager helps you centrally manage deposit payments, returns, and deadlines with automatic reminders for due dates.

Back to North Rhine-Westphalia Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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Større byer underlagt North Rhine Westphalia jurisdiktion

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