Commercial Eviction and Termination in Brandenburg
A landlord's guide to ordinary and extraordinary termination of commercial properties, as well as the eviction lawsuit process in Brandenburg.
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.
When a commercial lease ends, it usually involves a lot of money and the need for a swift re-letting for the landlord. Because commercial tenancy law in Brandenburg lacks social eviction protections or hardship provisions, terminations and evictions are structurally more straightforward than in the residential sector—but require a clean contractual basis.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a specialized attorney for commercial terminations. Information last verified: March 2026.
Ordinary Termination for Indefinite Contracts
Many commercial lease agreements do not run indefinitely but are "fixed-termers" (e.g., 5 or 10 years with extension options). A fixed-term lease can generally not be ordinarily terminated; it ends by expiration of time.
However, if the commercial lease was concluded for an indefinite period (or is considered indefinite due to a formal defect under § 550 BGB), either party can exercise the right of ordinary termination. A legitimate interest, such as personal use, is not necessary in commercial leases.
The Notice Period (§ 580a Para. 2 BGB): Termination is permissible no later than the third working day of a calendar quarter to the end of the next calendar quarter. The notice period is therefore almost six months, and a termination is only possible four times a year (at the end of a quarter), provided no deviating (and thus permissible) periods were agreed upon in the contract.
Immediate (Extraordinary) Termination
An extraordinary termination for an important reason (§ 543 BGB) is possible at any time for all contracts—even those with a fixed term—provided there is severe misconduct that makes continuation unreasonable for the landlord.
Common Reasons in Commercial Properties:
- Payment Default:
- The tenant is in default with the payment of rent or a not insubstantial part of the rent for two consecutive dates.
- The tenant is in arrears with an amount of at least two full months' rent over a longer period.
- Failure to Provide the Deposit: If the often high security deposit amount is not provided as contractually required.
- Breach of Contract: Serious violations, such as unauthorized types of use, structural changes without consent, or illegal activities on the premises.
Note: The statutory "healing" of a termination due to payment default (expiration of the termination by settling all arrears within a court-granted grace period) does not apply in commercial tenancy law. A lawful immediate termination cannot be averted by subsequent payment.
The Eviction Process
If the tenant of an office, retail space, or logistics center does not vacate voluntarily, the judicial route (eviction lawsuit / Räumungsklage) must obligatorily be taken. "Cold evictions" (e.g., shutting off the electricity or changing locks independently) are prohibited self-help (verbotene Eigenmacht), make the landlord liable for damages, and partly count as coercion.
The Procedure for Landlords in Brandenburg:
- Filing the Eviction Lawsuit: In commercial tenancy law, regardless of the value in dispute, the local Regional Court (Landgericht) is often responsible if the value in dispute (annual net cold rent) exceeds €5,000; otherwise, the District Court (Amtsgericht).
- Documentary Proceedings (Urkundsprozess) for Payment Default: Since it often concerns clear numbers, the landlord can sue in documentary proceedings. Here, only documents (i.e., the lease agreement and bank statements) are permitted as evidence, eliminating tedious witness interviews and allowing for a faster preliminary judgment.
- "Berlin Eviction": In commercial leases as well, the landlord can choose the "Berlin Eviction" method. The court bailiff merely changes the locks and places the landlord in sole possession; the inventory remains in the space. To utilize the tenant's inventory, the landlord uses their applicable Landlord's Lien (Vermieterpfandrecht).
- Utilization of Inventory: In the commercial sector, fixtures and product inventories are often worth considerable sums. By enforcing the landlord's lien, the landlord can sell these items to compensate for rent arrears.
Support with Landager
Proper documentation is indispensable for the success of an eviction lawsuit. With the Landager dashboard, landlords in Brandenburg archive the lease agreement legally securely (protection against lack of written form) and always keep a clear numerical overview of rent reductions or payment defaults, allowing required warning letters to be initiated promptly and securely.
Sources & Official References
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