Saxony-Anhalt Commercial Eviction Process: Landlord's Guide

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Step-by-step guide to terminating commercial leases in Saxony-Anhalt. Notice periods, extraordinary termination for arrears, and the court eviction process explained.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
commercial-evictionsaxony-anhaltgermanylease-terminationräumungsklage

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 and, if necessary, obtaining a court order for eviction in Saxony-Anhalt follows a different — and generally faster — process than residential eviction. There is no social hardship clause, no cure window, and no requirement to state grounds for ordinary termination of indefinite commercial leases. However, strict procedural formality still applies.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial eviction disputes involve high financial stakes; always engage a specialist attorney. Information last verified: March 2026.

Fixed-Term vs. Indefinite-Term Commercial Leases

Fixed-Term Leases (The Norm)

The vast majority of commercial leases in Saxony-Anhalt are fixed-term (5, 10, or 15 years). Key characteristics:

  • No ordinary termination is possible by either party before the term expires.
  • The lease ends automatically on its expiry date — though written non-renewal notice may be contractually required to prevent automatic extension.
  • Extraordinary termination for statutory cause (§ 543 BGB) remains available.

Indefinite-Term Leases

If a fixed-term lease is voided for lack of written form (§ 550 BGB), it becomes indefinite. Ordinary termination is then available:

  • Notice must be given no later than the third business day of a calendar quarter
  • The lease ends at the close of the following calendar quarter (approximately 6 months' notice)
  • No grounds are required — unlike residential, a commercial landlord can terminate for any business reason, or none

Contractually agreed notice periods may increase or decrease the statutory defaults.

Extraordinary (Immediate) Termination

Available under § 543 BGB when continuing the tenancy would be unreasonable. Most common trigger:

Rent Arrears (§ 543 Abs. 2 Nr. 3 BGB)

  • Tenant is in arrears for two consecutive months, with the total exceeding one month's rent, or
  • Total accumulated arrears reach two full months' rent over any period

Critical difference from residential: There is no Schonfristzahlung (cure right) for commercial tenants. Once valid extraordinary notice is served, the lease is terminated even if the tenant subsequently pays in full.

Other Grounds

  • Unauthorized sub-lease or change of use without consent
  • Wilful damage to the property
  • Cessation of business in a retail lease requiring continuous trading

The Written Form Requirement for Termination

A valid lease termination (whether ordinary or extraordinary) for a commercial tenancy must:

  • Be in written form (§ 126 BGB — handwritten signature on paper; email is generally insufficient unless the contract expressly permits it)
  • Be delivered with proof of receipt — use registered mail (Einschreiben mit Rückschein) or hand delivery witnessed by a neutral third party
  • For extraordinary termination, briefly state the grounds

The Court Process

If a commercial tenant refuses to vacate after valid termination:

StepDetail
File RäumungsklageAt the competent court — for high-value commercial leases (annual rent > €5,000), typically the Landgericht (in Magdeburg, Halle, Dessau, or Stendal)
Legal representationMandatory (Anwaltszwang) before the Landgericht
No social clauseNo hardship arguments available to the commercial tenant
Judgment enforcementCourt-appointed bailiff (Gerichtsvollzieher) enforces physical eviction

Commercial eviction proceedings tend to move somewhat faster than residential, as the court is not weighing tenant welfare considerations.

Landlord's Lien (Vermieterpfandrecht)

Under § 562 BGB, landlords have a statutory lien over movable property owned by the tenant that has been brought into the premises. This includes business equipment, inventory, and machinery. If the tenant is insolvent or uncooperative, the landlord can exercise this lien to:

  • Prevent removal of assets
  • Satisfy outstanding rent claims from the proceeds of the pledged assets

Note: The lien does not apply to assets subject to prior reservation of title (Eigentumsvorbehalt) held by third parties.

How Landager Helps

Landager monitors all rent payment activity in real time, flags when commercial arrears reach legally significant thresholds (approaching the § 543 BGB extraordinary termination threshold), and archives all communications for use in eviction proceedings. The platform's automated alert system means you always enforce your rights within the legally optimal window.

Back to Saxony-Anhalt Commercial Property Laws Overview.

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