Baden-Württemberg Eviction Process: Notice Periods, Grounds, and Court Procedures
Guide to residential eviction and lease termination in Baden-Württemberg: statutory notice periods, personal-use evictions, and the court eviction process.
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.
German tenancy law grants residential tenants some of the strongest eviction protections in Europe. A landlord cannot simply terminate an open-ended residential lease at will — every termination must be justified by a legally recognized "legitimate interest" (berechtigtes Interesse). Baden-Württemberg follows federal law in this area, though tight housing markets in cities like Stuttgart and Freiburg mean courts may apply hardship defenses more generously.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Baden-Württemberg for guidance specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Ordinary Termination (§ 573 BGB)
A landlord may only terminate an open-ended residential lease if they can demonstrate a legitimate interest. The three most common grounds are:
1. Personal Use (Eigenbedarf)
The landlord needs the property for themselves, their close family members (children, parents, grandchildren), or members of their household. The need must be concrete and specifically documented. Sham personal-use claims can result in substantial damage claims from the tenant.
2. Serious Breach of Contract
The tenant has significantly violated their contractual obligations, such as:
- Persistent late rent payments
- Unauthorized subletting despite warnings
- Repeated, serious violations of house rules (e.g., noise disturbances)
3. Economic Necessity (Hindrance of Reasonable Economic Use)
Continuation of the tenancy would prevent the landlord from making reasonable economic use of the property and would cause substantial financial harm (e.g., the building requires demolition and reconstruction). A termination solely to raise rent is expressly prohibited by law.
Statutory Notice Periods
The landlord's notice period depends on the duration of the tenancy (§ 573c BGB):
| Tenancy Duration | Landlord Notice Period |
|---|---|
| Up to 5 years | 3 months |
| 5 to 8 years | 6 months |
| Over 8 years | 9 months |
The termination letter must reach the tenant no later than the third business day of a calendar month for that month to count toward the notice period.
Extraordinary Termination Without Notice (§ 543 / § 569 BGB)
In serious cases, the landlord may terminate the lease with immediate effect (fristlose Kündigung). This requires an "important reason" making continuation of the tenancy unreasonable.
Non-Payment of Rent
The most common ground for extraordinary termination:
- The tenant is in arrears for two consecutive months with the rent or a substantial portion (exceeding one month's rent), OR
- The tenant has accumulated arrears reaching two months' rent over a longer period.
Cure by Late Payment (Schonfrist): The tenant can retroactively render the extraordinary termination void by paying all arrears within two months of being served with the eviction lawsuit. However, this only works if the tenant has not already been given this remedy within the past two years for the same reason.
Best Practice: Always accompany an extraordinary termination for non-payment with a subsidiary ordinary termination in the same letter. The ordinary termination is not automatically cured by the late payment (per BGH case law).
The Court Eviction Process (Räumungsklage)
If the tenant refuses to vacate after the notice period expires, the landlord may not resort to self-help measures (such as changing locks). Self-help eviction constitutes "prohibited self-remedy" (verbotene Eigenmacht) under German law. The landlord must file a Räumungsklage (eviction lawsuit) with the local district court (Amtsgericht).
Steps in the Process:
- Filing: The landlord files the eviction lawsuit at the Amtsgericht for the location of the property.
- Court Hearing: The tenant is given the opportunity to respond. Proceedings often take several months.
- Eviction Judgment: The court orders the tenant to vacate.
- Enforcement: With the court order, the landlord can instruct a court bailiff (Gerichtsvollzieher) to carry out the physical eviction.
The landlord must initially bear the court and attorney fees.
Baden-Württemberg Specifics
While Baden-Württemberg does not have state-level modifications to the federal eviction framework, courts in cities with tight housing markets (Stuttgart, Freiburg, Tübingen, Heidelberg) tend to be more receptive to tenant hardship defenses. For example, if a tenant claims they cannot find replacement housing at comparable terms, the court may grant an extension of the eviction deadline. Landlords in these areas should plan for a potentially longer timeline when pursuing personal-use evictions.
Managing Terminations with Landager
Tracking notice periods, documenting lease violations, and ensuring proper formal notice is critical for a legally sound termination. Landager helps landlords automate deadline calculations, store warning letters and evidence digitally, and generate court-ready termination documentation.
Sources & Official References
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