Commercial Landlord Disclosures in Hesse: Information Obligations

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Overview of disclosure obligations for commercial landlords in Hesse: energy certificates, operating costs, pre-contractual duties, and VAT.

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.

Although commercial tenancy law in Hesse is largely governed by freedom of contract, several statutory disclosure obligations still apply. These arise from energy law, contract law, and industry-specific regulations.

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.

Key Disclosure Obligations

ObligationTimingStatute
Energy CertificateAt viewing / marketingGEG §§ 80, 82
Operating Cost BreakdownPer contract (usually annually)Lease agreement
Contamination / Hazardous MaterialsPre-contractualBGB § 311 (2)
Building DefectsPre-contractualBGB § 536
Public Law RestrictionsPre-contractualGood faith principles
VAT OptionAt/before lease signingUStG § 9

1. Energy Certificate

Applies to Commercial Properties

The energy certificate obligation applies to commercial properties in Hesse as well. When leasing, the landlord must:

  • Present the certificate at the latest during viewings
  • Include energy performance data in property listings (certificate type, energy demand/consumption, year of construction, heating system)
  • Provide a copy after signing

Fines

Violations carry fines of up to €10,000 (GEG § 108).

2. Pre-Contractual Disclosure Duties

Despite contractual freedom, landlords have extensive pre-contractual disclosure obligations (culpa in contrahendo, BGB § 311 (2)):

Property Defects

The landlord must inform prospective tenants about material defects relevant to the intended use:

  • Known moisture or mold issues
  • Structural problems or construction defects
  • Hazardous materials (e.g., asbestos in older buildings)

Contamination and Environmental Issues

For properties with known or suspected soil contamination, there is a heightened disclosure duty. Concealing such issues can entitle the tenant to rescind the contract and claim damages.

Public Law Restrictions

The landlord should disclose known restrictions:

  • Zoning regulations that limit the intended use
  • Heritage protection requirements for historic buildings
  • Planned construction in the surrounding area (if known)
  • Missing permits for the intended commercial use

3. Operating Cost Transparency

Contractual Basis

Unlike residential law, there is no mandatory statutory framework for commercial operating cost pass-through. The allocation is governed by the lease agreement:

  • Recoverable costs must be individually listed or defined by reference to the Operating Costs Ordinance (BetrKV § 2)
  • In commercial leases, management fees, center management, and expanded insurance can also be recovered
  • The billing period and deadline should be contractually specified

Transparency Requirement

Operating cost statements must be comprehensible. The tenant has a right to inspect original receipts.

4. VAT Option (Umsatzsteueroptierung)

If the landlord opts for VAT taxation (UStG § 9), this must be clearly communicated. The option is only possible if the tenant uses the premises for VAT-liable business activities. The lease should include clear VAT provisions, as changes in the tenant's tax status can create a retrospective VAT correction risk for the landlord.

5. Fire Safety

Commercial landlords in Hesse should disclose the fire safety status of the premises:

  • Existing fire protection equipment (extinguishers, sprinklers, smoke detectors)
  • Escape and rescue routes
  • Current fire safety certificate — especially for hospitality or industrial use

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Present the energy certificate proactively during marketing
  2. Document pre-contractual disclosures in writing
  3. Check contamination registers — especially for commercial sites in the Rhine-Main area
  4. Detail the operating cost allocation clearly in the lease
  5. Clarify the VAT option upfront and review it periodically

Landager helps you manage all disclosure obligations for your commercial properties in Hesse with structured workflows and deadline reminders.

Back to Commercial Tenancy Law in Hesse – Overview.

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