Required Disclosures for Commercial Landlords in Saxony
Discover the mandatory disclosures commercial landlords must provide in Saxony, including energy certificates, CO2 cost splitting, and environmental hazards.
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.
While commercial leasing in Saxony allows for broad freedom of contract, landlords are still bound by strict federal reporting and disclosure requirements. Failing to meet these obligations—particularly regarding environmental regulations and building safety—can result in severe fines, voided contracts, or claims for damages from 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. Energy Performance Certificate (Energieausweis)
Just as in the residential sector, the German Building Energy Act (GEG) demands transparency regarding the energy efficiency of non-residential (commercial) buildings.
- Advertising: Any commercial real estate advertisement (online portals, print media, brochures) must include the energetic parameters: type of certificate (demand or consumption), final energy demand/consumption in kWh/(m²·a), main heating source, and the building's age.
- Viewing and Handover: The landlord must present the valid certificate to prospective commercial tenants during property viewings and hand over a copy (physical or digital) when the lease is signed.
Penalty: Landlords risk administrative fines of up to €10,000 for failing to present a valid Energy Performance Certificate or omitting required data in advertisements.
2. Preadulitory Disclosure Duties (Vorvertragliche Aufklärungspflichten)
Under general German contract law, a commercial landlord has an implicit duty to disclose significant facts about the property that could prevent the tenant from using the space for their intended commercial purpose.
Environmental Hazards and Contamination (Altlasten)
If the landlord is aware of any soil contamination, asbestos, or other hazardous materials on the property, they must disclose this before the contract is signed. Failure to do so constitutes fraudulent concealment, allowing the tenant to terminate the lease instantly and demand extensive damages.
Building Permits and Zoning (Baugenehmigung)
The landlord must disclose if the property lacks the necessary building permits or zoning approval for the tenant's specific intended use (e.g., opening a restaurant in a space previously zoned only for retail). If specific fire safety upgrades or hygiene requirements are mandated by the city for that use, the landlord must disclose these known hurdles.
3. Operating Cost Settlements (Betriebskostenabrechnung)
Unlike residential leases, which restrict landlords to billing only the costs listed in the statutory Operating Costs Ordinance (BetrKV), commercial landlords can negotiate which operating costs the tenant bears.
- The Disclosure: The commercial lease must contain a highly specific, exhaustive list of which operating and maintenance costs are passed on to the tenant. Often, landlords attach an extensive annex detailing these items to avoid ambiguity.
- The Deadline: Unlike residential landlords who strictly lose the right to demand back payments if they miss the 12-month annual settlement deadline, commercial landlords historically retain their claims even if the settlement is delivered late (unless the lease explicitly states a hard deadline).
4. CO2 Cost Apportionment (Non-Residential Buildings)
The CO2 Cost Apportionment Act (CO2KostAufG) applies to non-residential commercial buildings as well. This law aims to incentivize landlords to improve energy efficiency by forcing them to share the cost of the federal CO2 tax on heating fuels (gas, oil) with the tenant.
- The Split: For non-residential commercial buildings, the law mandates a flat 50:50 split of the CO2 costs between the commercial landlord and the commercial tenant.
- The Disclosure: The landlord must explicitly calculate and disclose the total CO2 costs and clearly detail the 50:50 split in the annual operating cost statement.
- (Note: A tier-based system similar to residential buildings is planned for non-residential buildings in the coming years, but the 50:50 split remains the current standard).
5. Value Added Tax (VAT) Option
Leasing commercial real estate is generally exempt from Value Added Tax (VAT or Umsatzsteuer). However, a commercial landlord can "opt-in" to charge VAT on the rent (currently 19%). This is highly advantageous for the landlord, as it allows them to reclaim input tax on construction, modernization, and maintenance costs.
Disclosure and Requirements:
- The landlord must explicitly declare the VAT option in the commercial lease agreement.
- The landlord may only opt-in if the tenant uses the premises almost exclusively (at least 95%) to generate taxable revenue.
- For example, landlords cannot opt to charge VAT to doctors, insurance brokers, or banks, as their services are largely VAT-exempt.
6. Disclosure of Rent Brake Exemptions (Mixed-Use Properties)
The strict rent controls of Dresden and Leipzig (the Mietpreisbremse) do not apply to purely commercial leases.
However, if a property is "mixed-use" (e.g., an apartment that is used 60% as a primary residence and 40% as a commercial home office), residential law often dominates. If a landlord applies a Rent Brake exemption to such a mixed-use unit, they must provide the mandatory spontaneous disclosure regarding prior rents or modernization before the lease is signed.
How Landager Can Help
Managing complex commercial leases means navigating a maze of tax options and environmental regulations. Landager helps property managers in Saxony organize mandatory Energy Certificates, automate the 50:50 CO2 cost splits for commercial property statements, and track VAT-eligibility across diverse tenant portfolios.
Sources & Official References
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