Landlord Maintenance Obligations in Baden-Württemberg, Germany

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Who pays for broken heating and plumbing? Landlord maintenance duties, minor repair clauses, and tenant cosmetic repair obligations under German law.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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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 assigns the primary obligation for maintenance and repair of the rental property to the landlord. The property must be kept in a usable condition throughout the entire tenancy period. Understanding how to validly shift certain costs to the tenant — and the limits of doing so — is essential for landlords in Baden-Württemberg.

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.

The Landlord's Duty to Maintain

The landlord must provide the rental property in a condition suitable for its intended use and maintain it in that condition throughout the tenancy (§ 535 Abs. 1 BGB). This means the landlord bears the cost of all repairs arising from wear and tear, aging, and normal use of the building fabric and built-in fixtures (e.g., installed kitchens, heating systems, plumbing).

If the landlord fails to address a defect after the tenant has reported it, the tenant has several legal remedies:

  1. Rent reduction (Mietminderung): The rent is automatically reduced by law in proportion to the severity of the defect (e.g., a heating failure in winter can justify 50–100% reduction).
  2. Right of retention: The tenant may withhold 3 to 5 times the reduction amount until the defect is remedied.
  3. Self-help remedy (Ersatzvornahme): After giving the landlord a deadline, the tenant may hire a professional themselves and demand reimbursement or offset the cost against rent (§ 536a Abs. 2 BGB).

The Tenant's Obligations

The tenant must report defects without undue delay. Failure to report may make the tenant liable for consequential damage (e.g., unreported water damage spreading). The tenant is also fully liable for damage caused intentionally, through gross negligence, or by incorrect use (e.g., drilling into tiles improperly).

Cosmetic Repairs (Schönheitsreparaturen)

Cosmetic repairs — painting walls and ceilings, wallpapering, caring for floors, painting radiators — are legally the landlord's responsibility under the BGB. However, virtually all German leases attempt to transfer this obligation to the tenant through standard clauses.

This transfer is legally valid only if:

  • The clause does not impose a rigid renovation schedule regardless of actual condition (per BGH case law)
  • The property was handed over to the tenant in a renovated condition at the start of the tenancy

If the unit was handed over unrenovated, the cosmetic repair clause is generally void unless the tenant received adequate compensation (e.g., a rent-free month).

The Minor Repair Clause (Kleinreparaturklausel)

One of the most important cost-shifting tools for landlords is the minor repair clause. Although the landlord is generally responsible for all repairs, this clause can pass the cost of small repairs to the tenant.

Requirements for a Valid Clause:

  1. Items subject to frequent tenant use only: e.g., window handles, door handles, light switches, faucets, roller blind cords, showerheads. Internal wiring, plumbing behind walls, or gas lines do not qualify.
  2. Per-repair cap: The clause must state a maximum cost per individual repair. Courts currently accept amounts of approximately €100 to €120 net. If a repair exceeds the cap (e.g., €150 for a faucet), the landlord must pay the entire amount — not just the excess.
  3. Annual cap: The clause must also include an annual maximum (commonly 6–8% of the annual net cold rent, or a fixed amount of €250–400).
  4. No DIY requirement: The clause cannot require the tenant to arrange the repair themselves. The landlord arranges the work, pays the contractor, and then invoices the tenant.

Baden-Württemberg Specifics: The Kehrwoche

Baden-Württemberg is famous for the traditional "Kehrwoche" — the rotating weekly duty to clean stairways, sidewalks, and common areas, as well as winter snow clearing. While technically the landlord's responsibility (§ 535 BGB), this obligation has historically been delegated to tenants via the lease and house rules in the "Ländle." A properly drafted delegation clause is legally binding.

Maintenance Management with Landager

Broken heating or burst pipes require fast action. With Landager, tenants can report damage instantly with photos through the app. The integrated contractor management feature dispatches orders to local tradespeople in Baden-Württemberg. Track invoices and easily offset amounts falling under a minor repair clause against the tenant.

Back to Baden-Württemberg Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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