Hamburg Commercial Landlord Disclosure Requirements
What Hamburg commercial landlords must disclose — energy certificates for non-residential buildings, floor area methodology, and material defect disclosure duties.
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 tenancy law in Hamburg operates on the principle of party autonomy between sophisticated entities — so formal disclosure requirements are far fewer than in consumer-facing residential law. Nevertheless, there are mandatory transparency obligations that landlords must comply with, and failure to disclose material known defects can expose landlords to contract rescission claims.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial disclosure questions often arise in the context of significant financial negotiations. Always consult a specialist attorney in Hamburg. Information last verified: March 2026.
Energy Performance Certificate for Non-Residential Buildings
The Buildings Energy Act (GEG) requires energy performance certificates for non-residential buildings (offices, retail, warehouses, hotels) just as it does for residential buildings, but with different technical parameters.
Disclosure Timeline
| Stage | Obligation |
|---|---|
| Property listing | Key energy values (final energy demand/consumption in kWh/m²a, primary energy demand, energy efficiency class) must appear in adverts |
| Viewing/inspection | Certificate must be available for inspection — visible display or handout |
| Lease signing | A copy must be handed to the tenant |
Certificate Types for Commercial Buildings
Non-residential certificates are technically more complex than residential ones, as they must account for:
- Heating and cooling energy
- Ventilation systems
- Built-in lighting (where applicable)
- Process energy (if integrated into the building infrastructure)
A valid non-residential energy certificate is required regardless of the building's age. Fines for non-compliance can reach €15,000 per infringement.
Floor Area Measurement — A Critical Disclosure Point
One of the highest-risk areas in Hamburg commercial leasing is the measurement of lettable floor area. Unlike residential leases (governed by the standardized Dwelling Area Ordinance / WoFlV), no single mandatory calculation standard applies to commercial spaces.
Common measurement standards used in Hamburg:
- DIN 277: German standard measuring gross floor area subdivided into net user area, circulation area, and technical area.
- gif MF-G (Mietfläche für Gewerbespace): Industry standard for office lettings, published by the Society for Real Estate Research (gif) — widely used in Hamburg prime office market.
- Gross Internal Area (GIA): Used by some international investors applying UK/international standards.
The disclosure risk: If a landlord states a specific area figure in the lease or pre-contract negotiations, this often becomes a binding description of a material characteristic (Beschaffenheitsvereinbarung). If the actual measured area is less than stated:
- Unlike residential law (where a 10% tolerance threshold exists), commercial courts in Hamburg have accepted much smaller discrepancies as grounds for proportional rent reduction — sometimes recoverable for years retroactively.
- Include the measurement standard used in the lease (e.g., "2,000 m² according to gif MF-G") to avoid ambiguity.
Duty to Disclose Known Hidden Defects
Hamburg landlords are bound by the principle of good faith (§ 242 BGB) to proactively disclose material hidden defects that a reasonable tenant would consider important, including:
- Contaminated land (Altlasten): Hamburg has numerous former industrial and port areas; if a site is registered in the Hamburg contaminated sites register (Altlastenkataster), this must be disclosed.
- Planning permission gaps: If the intended commercial use (e.g., restaurant requiring food business approval, creative studio requiring specific ventilation) does not yet have the required building or operational permit.
- Fire safety issues: Outstanding fire safety enforcement notices or documented non-compliance.
- Asbestos: Known asbestos-containing materials with release risk, particularly relevant in older Hamburg warehouses and industrial buildings.
Concealing a known material defect constitutes fraudulent misrepresentation (arglistige Täuschung), potentially entitling the commercial tenant to rescind the lease and claim all consequential losses.
Landager helps Hamburg commercial landlords maintain a complete, auditable property data room — including energy certificates, floor area calculations, and building condition reports — accessible to stakeholders at every stage of the letting process.
Sources & Official References
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