Commercial Lease Requirements in the Czech Republic

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Key rules for drafting commercial lease agreements in the Czech Republic, including mandatory clauses, guarantees, and subleasing rights.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
czech-republiccommercial-leasingbusiness-contractsproperty-managementcompliance

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.

The cornerstone of commercial property management in the Czech Republic is the commercial lease agreement. Because the Civil Code’s specialized provisions for commercial leasing (§ 2302–2315) are almost entirely dispositive—meaning they only apply if the contract doesn't state otherwise—parties must draft highly detailed, comprehensive agreements to govern their relationship.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial landlord-tenant laws change, and contracts dictate most rules. Always consult a licensed local attorney for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

Form of the Lease

While the Civil Code practically allows oral lease agreements for business space, professional commercial landlords in the Czech Republic exclusively use written complex contracts. A standard institutional commercial lease for an office or retail unit often exceeds 50 pages, accompanied by dozens of annexes including architectural drawings, fit-out specifications, and service charge schedules.

Mandatory Identifications

To be valid and enforceable, the lease must clearly identify:

  1. The Contracting Parties: Including exact corporate names, registered addresses, and identification numbers (IČO).
  2. The Leased Premises: Detailed with absolute precision according to the Cadastre of Real Estate (Katastr nemovitostí).
  3. The Subject and Purpose of the Lease: While residential leases are simple (for living), commercial leases must precisely define the business purpose (e.g., "retail sale of athletic footwear," "administrative offices," or "warehousing of non-hazardous automotive parts").
  4. Rent and Payment Terms: The exact base rent (základní nájemné), currency (usually EUR), indexation mechanisms, and service charge prepayment systems.

Key Commercial Clauses and "Triple Net" (NNN)

Czech commercial real estate, particularly in logistics and premium office sectors, has increasingly adopted international standards, moving heavily toward Triple Net (NNN) Leases.

In an NNN standard lease, the tenant agrees to pay their base rent plus all real estate taxes, building insurance, and all maintenance costs (both common area maintenance and individual unit repairs).

To enforce this, landlords incorporate a comprehensive Service Charge (Služby) clause. This clause outlines exactly how running costs are apportioned to each tenant (typically based on their percentage of the gross leasable area) and paid as monthly advances, subject to an audited end-of-year reconciliation.

Currency Risks

Because institutional developments are financed in Euros by international banks, landlords almost exclusively draft commercial leases with rent denominated in EUR. Usually, the tenant is required to pay in EUR directly. If the lease allows payment in CZK, it will include an aggressive exchange rate clause shifting all currency depreciation risk to the tenant.

Subleasing and Assignment

Subleasing (Podnájem)

Under the Civil Code (§ 2305), a commercial tenant may sublease the space to a third party. If the tenant requests permission in writing, the landlord is deemed to have consented if they do not explicitly refuse within one month.

Institutional Practice: Landlords eliminate this statutory rule entirely. Every commercial lease explicitly states that subleasing is strictly forbidden without the prior, explicit written consent of the landlord, which the landlord may withhold in their absolute discretion.

Assignment (Postoupení nájemní smlouvy)

A tenant generally cannot assign or transfer the entire lease to a new corporate entity without the landlord’s written consent. The lease should outline specific conditions under which assignment is permitted (e.g., in the case of a corporate merger or acquisition of the tenant’s holding company, provided the new entity meets specific financial covenants).

Signage and Alterations

Alterations (Stavební úpravy)

Commercial leases always distinguish between the landlord’s delivery condition (e.g., Shell & Core) and the tenant’s required fit-out. Tenants cannot make structural alterations without written consent. Most leases mandate that upon expiration, the tenant must either "make good" (reinstate the premises to their original bare condition) or leave the fit-out improvements in place without compensation, entirely at the landlord’s discretion.

Signage (Označení provozovny)

Under the default Civil Code rule, a tenant has the right to place signage on the exterior of the property, and the landlord can only refuse for a "serious reason." Professional leases reverse this: the tenant has no right to install signage without prior explicit approval of the exact design, size, and location by the landlord (and the local historical preservation authority, especially in central Prague).

Getting Started with Compliance

Drafting commercial leases in the Czech Republic requires meticulous attention to international NNN standards, EUR indexation mechanisms, and robust security guarantees. A poorly drafted clause regarding fit-out reinstatement or service charge definitions can result in millions of CZK in unrecoverable expenses. Landager streamlines commercial property management by accurately tracking these complex, highly customized lease metrics across your entire portfolio, ensuring timely service charge reconciliations and vital indexation application.

Back to Czech Republic Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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