Commercial Late Fees in Hesse: Default Interest and Landlord Remedies
Guide to rent default in commercial leases in Hesse: higher default interest, no catch-up payment, contractual penalties, and insolvency rules.
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.
Rent default in commercial leases differs materially from residential law. Landlords in Hesse benefit from higher default interest rates, the absence of catch-up payment rights, and the ability to agree on contractual penalty mechanisms. This guide explains the legal framework and practical remedies.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial leases require legal review. Information last verified: March 2026.
Commercial vs. Residential Default
| Aspect | Commercial Lease | Residential Lease |
|---|---|---|
| Default Interest | 9 percentage points above base rate | 5 percentage points above base rate |
| Catch-Up Payment | Not available | Within 2 months of lawsuit service |
| Contractual Penalties | Generally permissible | Generally void |
| Immediate Termination | At 2 months' arrears | At 2 months' arrears |
| Reminder Fees | Freely negotiable | Limited to reasonable amounts |
1. Commercial Rent Due Date
The due date is governed by the lease agreement. Without an explicit provision:
- Rent is due at the beginning of each payment period (typically the 1st or 3rd business day)
- Banking days and holidays must be considered
2. Default and Interest
Automatic Default
Default occurs automatically when rent is not received by the contractually or statutorily determined due date (BGB § 286 (2) No. 1). No prior reminder is required.
Higher Default Interest Rate
For commercial transactions, the default interest rate is 9 percentage points above the base interest rate (BGB § 288 (2)) — significantly more than the 5 points for residential leases. With a base rate of 3.37% (2025), this yields 12.37% p.a.
Example
On arrears of €5,000 at 12.37% p.a., monthly default interest is approximately €51.54.
3. Contractual Provisions
Contractual Penalties
In commercial leases, contractual penalties for late payment are generally permissible, provided:
- The amount is reasonable (typically 0.1–0.5% of arrears per day of delay)
- An upper limit is defined (e.g., max. 5% of annual rent)
- The clause is clear and specific
Liquidated Damages
Landlords may also agree on flat-rate compensation for administrative costs caused by late payment (e.g., €50 per reminder). The tenant retains the right to prove a lower actual loss.
Additional Termination Grounds
Beyond statutory grounds, the lease may define additional termination triggers for late payment:
- Termination upon one month's arrears
- Termination for repeated late payments (even without reaching the 2-month threshold)
4. Immediate Termination
Statutory Requirements (BGB § 543 (2) No. 3)
The landlord may terminate without notice if the tenant:
- Is in arrears for two consecutive months with rent or a significant portion, or
- Has accumulated arrears exceeding two months' rent over a longer period
No Catch-Up Payment Right
The critical difference from residential law: commercial tenants have no statutory right to avert termination by paying arrears after the fact. Immediate termination is not reversed by subsequent payment — significantly strengthening the landlord's position.
Subsidiary Ordinary Termination
It is advisable to issue an ordinary termination as a subsidiary alongside the immediate termination, in case the latter is invalidated (e.g., due to a formal defect).
5. Tenant Insolvency
When insolvency proceedings are opened over the tenant's assets:
- The tenancy initially continues (InsO § 108)
- The insolvency administrator has a special termination right (InsO § 109) with 3 months' notice
- Pre-insolvency rent arrears are ordinary insolvency claims (typically minimal recovery)
- Post-opening rent arrears are estate liabilities (priority payment from the estate)
6. Enforcement of Rent Claims
- Payment order via the central debt collection court
- Payment lawsuit at the Regional Court (for claims exceeding €5,000)
- Asset freeze (Arrest): In urgent cases, a court-ordered asset freeze can be requested (ZPO §§ 916 ff.)
- Enforcement: After obtaining an enforceable title, the tenant's assets and bank accounts can be seized
Best Practices for Landlords
- Monitor payment receipts consistently on the due date
- Include contractual default provisions (higher interest, penalties, expanded termination grounds)
- Act immediately on rent default — commercial tenants have no catch-up payment right
- Issue immediate and subsidiary ordinary termination simultaneously
- Regularly assess tenant creditworthiness
Landager supports automatic payment monitoring, default interest calculations, and compliant documentation of collection procedures for your commercial properties.
Sources & Official References
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