Commercial Eviction Process in Hesse: Notice Periods and Procedures
Guide to commercial lease termination in Hesse: notice periods, immediate termination, written form risks, and court eviction procedures.
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.
Terminating a commercial lease in Hesse differs fundamentally from residential tenancy law. While residential tenants enjoy comprehensive eviction protections, commercial leases can be structured more flexibly — but may also carry higher financial risks. This guide explains the various termination options for landlords.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial leases require legal review. Information last verified: March 2026.
Types of Termination
| Type | Notice Period | Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Ordinary (open-ended lease) | ~6 months to quarter-end | No reason required |
| Fixed-term lease | Generally excluded | Only by agreement |
| Immediate termination | None | Important cause (BGB § 543) |
| Special termination (>30 years) | Statutory period | Term exceeded (BGB § 544) |
| Written form termination | ~6 months | Written form defect (BGB § 550) |
1. Ordinary Termination (Open-Ended Leases)
For open-ended commercial leases, the statutory notice period under BGB § 580a (2) is:
- Notice must be given by the 3rd business day of a calendar quarter
- The lease ends at the end of the following quarter
- This results in an effective period of approximately 6 months
- Saturday counts as a business day
Example: Notice received January 2 → lease ends June 30. Notice received April 5 → lease ends December 31.
Notice periods can be contractually shortened or extended. No legitimate interest is required — either party can terminate without reason.
2. Fixed-Term Leases
During the fixed term, ordinary termination is excluded for both parties. The lease ends automatically at expiry.
Extension Options
Many commercial leases include renewal options for the tenant. These must be exercised on time and in the agreed form (usually written). If the tenant misses the deadline, the lease ends.
Early Termination
Possible only through:
- Mutual termination agreement
- Immediate termination for important cause
- Special termination for leases exceeding 30 years (BGB § 544)
3. Immediate Termination (Fristlose Kündigung)
Grounds for Landlords
The landlord may terminate immediately if (BGB § 543):
- Significant rent arrears: Two months' rent or more overdue
- Unauthorized use: Using the premises contrary to the lease purpose despite warning
- Property endangerment: Tenant neglects the premises
- Unauthorized subletting despite warning
- Tenant insolvency: Opening of insolvency proceedings (special termination right per InsO § 109 by the insolvency administrator)
No Catch-Up Payment Right
Unlike residential leases, there is no statutory right to avert termination by catching up on payments (Schonfristzahlung). Immediate termination for rent default is not reversed by subsequent payment — significantly strengthening the landlord's position.
4. Written Form Risk (Schriftformkündigung)
The written form risk is a critical feature of German commercial lease law:
- Leases exceeding one year must strictly comply with written form (BGB § 550)
- All essential terms must be in a single unified document signed by all parties
- If any clause, amendment, or annex violates written form, the fixed-term lease becomes open-ended
- Either party can then terminate with approximately 6 months' notice
Risk for landlords: Long-term fixed rents can suddenly become terminable — a major asset value risk for premium properties.
5. Court Eviction
If the tenant does not vacate after effective termination, the landlord must file an eviction lawsuit at the competent court (Regional Court / Landgericht for claims exceeding €5,000):
- File eviction lawsuit at the Regional Court
- Court hearing — examination of termination validity
- Eviction judgment — if successful
- Enforcement by court bailiff
- For urgent cases: temporary injunction for eviction (under strict conditions)
Best Practices for Landlords
- Strictly observe written form for the contract and all amendments
- Establish clear termination provisions in the lease
- Monitor option deadlines digitally and document their exercise
- Respond immediately to rent default — there is no catch-up payment right in commercial leases
- Issue both immediate and subsidiary ordinary termination simultaneously
Landager helps monitor contract terms, option deadlines, and document terminations in full legal compliance.
Sources & Official References
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