Commercial Maintenance Obligations in Saxony: Landlord vs. Tenant

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Understand maintenance and repair obligations in commercial leases in Saxony, Germany. Learn about 'Dach und Fach,' cosmetic repairs, and restoration clauses.

5 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.

In Saxony's commercial real estate market, maintenance obligations are a primary area of negotiation. By default, German law (BGB § 535) places the entire burden of maintenance and repairs on the landlord. However, commercial landlords routinely use the freedom of contract to shift the vast majority of these responsibilities and costs onto the tenant.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Saxony for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

1. Statutory Default vs. Contractual Reality

If a commercial lease says absolutely nothing about maintenance, the landlord is responsible for repairing a broken pipe, a faulty air conditioning unit, or a cracked floor.

Because this is financially untenable for most landlords, commercial leases explicitly transfer these duties. However, the Federal Court of Justice (BGH) scrutinizes standard form contracts (Allgemeine Geschäftsbedingungen or AGBs) heavily. Even in commercial leases, landlords cannot transfer every conceivable risk to the tenant without the clause being deemed "unreasonably disadvantageous" and voided.

2. "Dach und Fach" (Roof and Structure)

The standard compromise in German commercial leasing is the "Dach und Fach" principle.

This model splits the maintenance responsibilities:

  • The Landlord's Duty: The landlord remains responsible for preserving the building's structural integrity. This includes the roof, load-bearing walls, foundations, exterior facades, and major exterior windows.
  • The Tenant's Duty: The tenant is responsible for maintaining, repairing, and eventually replacing everything inside their leased premises. This includes interior walls, doors, flooring, and often the technical installations specific to their unit (e.g., cooling systems, customized lighting).

Building Systems (Haustechnik)

A common point of contention is the central building systems (HVAC, elevators, central heating) that serve multiple tenants.

  • Landlords typically retain the responsibility for repairing these centralized systems but pass the costs of routine maintenance and servicing onto the tenants via the annual operating costs statement (Betriebskostenabrechnung).
  • If a central system breaks entirely and requires replacement, the capital expenditure (CapEx) is generally borne by the landlord.

3. Shifting Duties via Standard Leases (AGB Rules)

If a landlord uses a pre-drafted standard lease template (which most do), they must be careful when transferring maintenance duties, particularly regarding "Cosmetic Repairs" (Schönheitsreparaturen) and "Maintenance and Repair" (Instandhaltung und Instandsetzung).

Cosmetic Repairs

Commercial landlords can effectively require tenants to perform cosmetic repairs (painting walls, cleaning carpets) during the lease term.

  • Rigid Schedules are Void: Just like in residential law, commercial lease clauses demanding that a tenant paint "exactly every 3 years" are void. The duty must be tied to the actual condition of the premises.
  • Unrenovated Handover: If the landlord hands over the commercial space in a completely unrenovated state without offering financial compensation (like a rent-free period), the landlord cannot force the tenant to perform cosmetic repairs upon move-out.

Minor Repairs and Glass Breakage

Landlords routinely insert clauses requiring the tenant to pay for minor repairs (e.g., fixing door handles or light switches).

  • The "Vandalism" Trap: While tenants are responsible for fixing things they break inside their unit, a landlord cannot use a standard template clause to make a retail tenant financially responsible for repairing large exterior display windows broken by vandals or burglars. The tenant must secure glass insurance for such events.

4. The Restoration Clause (Rückbauverpflichtung)

This is one of the most critical maintenance-related duties at the end of the commercial lease.

Commercial tenants frequently customize their spaces—building partition walls in offices, installing grease traps in restaurant kitchens, or mounting heavy server racks.

  • The Landlord's Right: Unless otherwise agreed, the landlord has the right to demand the premises be returned in its original, pre-leased condition.
  • The Restoration Clause: An effective commercial lease contains a strict Rückbauverpflichtung. This legally forces the tenant to remove all their custom installations, fixtures, and cabling at their own expense before handing back the keys, returning the unit to an empty "shell" state ready for the next tenant.
  • The Waiver: Alternatively, the landlord can reserve the right to waive the restoration demand and take ownership of the fixtures (often without compensation) if the modifications increase the property's value for the next tenant.

5. Compliance with Public Safety Ordinances

Commercial premises often require specific fire safety certificates, hygiene approvals (for food service), or emission control permits.

  • Initial Approval: The landlord is generally responsible for ensuring the building's core structure meets general safety codes.
  • Tenant-Specific Operations: The lease should explicitly state that the tenant is solely responsible for obtaining, maintaining, and paying for any specific health, safety, or environmental permits required for their particular business operations.

Best Practices for Landlords in Saxony

  1. Explicitly Define "Dach und Fach": Never leave maintenance ambiguous. Explicitly list what constitutes structural repairs (your responsibility) versus interior maintenance (the tenant's responsibility).
  2. Draft Strong Restoration Clauses: Protect your property's value by ensuring you have the legal right to force a tenant to dismantle their specialized, expensive build-outs when they leave.
  3. Require Maintenance Contracts: Mandate that the tenant enter into regular servicing contracts (Wartungsverträge) with certified technicians for complex systems like internal air conditioning or commercial kitchen ventilation, and demand proof of these contracts annually.

How Landager Can Help

Disputes over whether a repair is structural ("Dach und Fach") or a tenant-responsibility interior fix are incredibly common. Landager provides property managers in Saxony with secure document storage for detailed move-in handover protocols and specialized commercial lease templates that feature carefully drafted, BGH-compliant restoration bounds and operating cost pass-through clauses.

Back to Saxony Commercial Tenancy Law Overview.

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