Czech Republic Commercial Real Estate Laws: Overview
Comprehensive guide to commercial property laws in the Czech Republic, including lease requirements, rent increases, evictions, and landlord obligations.
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.
Commercial leasing in the Czech Republic is governed by the specialized provisions for the lease of space for business purposes under the Civil Code (Act No. 89/2012 Coll.). Unlike residential leasing, which heavily prioritizes tenant protection, commercial leasing grants landlords and business tenants an exceptionally high degree of contractual freedom.
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.
Freedom of Contract in Commercial Leases
The overarching principle of Czech commercial real estate law is the "freedom of contract" (smluvní volnost). Professional parties—businesses and corporate landlords—are presumed to be capable of protecting their own interests negotiation. Therefore, almost every statutory rule governing commercial leases in the Civil Code can be opted out of, modified, or entirely superseded by the text of the lease agreement.
Because statutory defaults only apply where the lease is silent, an expertly drafted, comprehensive commercial lease agreement is the most important element of commercial property management in the Czech Republic.
Key Commercial Leasing Rules at a Glance
| Topic | Statutory Default | Civil Code Section |
|---|---|---|
| Form of Lease | Written or oral (written highly recommended) | § 2302 |
| Duration | Fixed-term or indefinite term | § 2204 |
| Notice Period | 3 or 6 months (depending on specified terms) | § 2310, 2312 |
| Rent Increases | Free market; explicit indexation clauses required | General Provisions |
| Subleasing | Permitted with landlord consent | § 2305 |
| Signage | Tenant can install signs with landlord consent | § 2305 |
Commercial Security Deposits
The stringent residential deposit caps (maximum 3 months' rent) do not apply to commercial leases. The amount and nature of a commercial security deposit (jistota) or a bank guarantee are purely matters of negotiation between the landlord and commercial tenant.
In practice, a bank guarantee ranging from three (3) to six (6) months of rent plus estimated service charges is common for high-value office, retail, and logistics spaces, while simple cash deposits are more common for smaller retail or workshop rentals.
For more detail, see our Commercial Security Deposits deep dive.
Commercial Rent and Escalation (Indexation)
The Czech state imposes zero rent control restrictions on commercial spaces. Initial base rent, operating expenses (utilities, common area maintenance), and marketing fund contributions for retail spaces are established by the market and the contract.
Because there is no statutory "20% cap" protecting a commercial tenant, commercial leases universally rely on an inflation indexation clause (inflační doložka). Most institutional and international developers use the European Index of Consumer Prices (MUICP) or the Czech Statistical Office's index (ČSÚ) to annually adjust the base rent upward, typically occurring each January or February.
For more detail, see our Commercial Rent Increases guide.
Eviction and Termination Procedures
The Civil Code distinguishes between early termination of a fixed-term lease and termination of an indefinite lease.
In a fixed-term commercial lease, neither party can unilaterally terminate early unless the grounds are explicitly stated in the Civil Code or the lease agreement.
- Landlord Grounds for Early Termination: The tenant delays paying rent or services for more than one month; the tenant uses the premises in violation of the contract; the tenant subleases without consent.
- Tenant Grounds for Early Termination: The tenant loses their business license; the premises become unfit for agreed use.
If grounds are met, the statutory notice period is three (3) months. Notice periods for indefinite leases are generally six (6) months. Crucially, the parties can agree to completely different terms in the contract.
Compensation for Takeover of Customer Base
A unique facet of Czech commercial lease law is the "compensation for customer base" (náhrada za převzetí zákaznické základny) under § 2315. If a lease ends due to a notice given by the landlord, and the landlord or a new tenant subsequently benefits from the customer base built in that specific location by the departing tenant, the departing tenant is entitled to financial compensation. Professional landlords almost universally include a clause in the lease wherein the tenant waives this right.
For more detail, see our Commercial Eviction Process guide.
Subleasing and Property Underletting
A commercial tenant may sublease the space to a third party. However, unlike residential tenants who can sometimes sublease without permission if they still reside there, a commercial tenant must generally obtain the landlord’s written consent. The Civil Code assumes consent is granted if the landlord doesn't reject a written request within one month, but this rule is invariably modified in commercial leases, replacing it with an absolute requirement for explicit written consent by the landlord.
For more detail, see our Commercial Lease Requirements guide.
Maintenance and Repairs
Historically, the structural fabric of the building was the landlord’s responsibility. Today, Czech commercial leases largely adopt the "Triple Net" (NNN) or "Double Net" structure common in the UK and USA. The landlord explicitly passes the financial burden of almost all property maintenance, building insurance, and property taxes to the tenant through "service charges."
While the landlord may organize the roof repair, the cost is apportioned and billed to the commercial tenants. The wording defining exact maintenance responsibilities—specifically delineating structural defects from routine wear-and-tear—is among the most heavily negotiated sections of the lease.
For more detail, see our Commercial Maintenance Obligations guide.
Getting Started with Commercial Compliance
Standardization across a commercial portfolio requires precision. Given the immense freedom of contract in the Czech Republic, landlords must ensure every new lease includes vital waivers (like customer base compensation) and clear indexation mechanisms. Landager offers specialized features helping commercial property owners track critical lease expiry dates, automatically calculate indexation escalations, and manage robust corporate guarantees, ensuring you maximize yield while minimizing risk.
Sources & Official References
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