Required Disclosures for Commercial Leases in Hungary
Understand the limited statutory disclosures for Hungarian commercial real estate, focusing on Energy Performance Certificates and Corporate Due Diligence.
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.
Unlike highly regulated commercial markets in the US (where landlords drown in asbestos, lead paint, and ADA compliance forms), the Hungarian commercial real estate market operates on the fundamental legal principle of caveat emptor—let the buyer (or in this case, the corporate tenant) beware. The burden of discovery rests almost entirely on the tenant's legal team during the pre-lease Due Diligence phase.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant laws change, and contracts dictate most rules. Always consult a licensed local attorney for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
The Statutory Requirement: The Energy Performance Certificate
The only universally enforced, statutory physical disclosure mandated by the Hungarian government for commercial properties is the Energy Performance Certificate (Energetikai Tanúsítvány), mandated by EU directive.
If a developer or landlord is leasing an entire Class A office building, a retail shop, or a logistics warehouse, they must:
- Display the building’s energy rating (from A to I) on all public marketing and leasing materials.
- Present a valid, certified copy of the EPC to the corporate tenant before the lease is executed.
- Formally hand over or annex the certificate (or its registration number) to the final signed lease agreement.
In the commercial sector, where tenants pay massive Triple-Net Service Charges, the EPC rating is highly scrutinized. A low rating indicates poor insulation and outdated HVAC systems, which directly translates to skyrocketing utility consumption that the tenant will bear entirely.
Corporate Due Diligence (The Tenant's Burden)
Because Hungarian law assumes commercial entities are legally sophisticated, there is no standardized "Landlord Disclosure Packet." Instead, the tenant's attorneys conduct exhaustive Legal and Technical Due Diligence.
Before a corporate tenant signs a 5-year lease for 2,000 square meters of office space, they will legally demand the landlord disclose:
1. Title and Encumbrances (Tulajdoni Lap)
Tenants pull the official Land Registry Extract (Tulajdoni Lap) to verify:
- The landlord actually owns the property.
- There are no pending execution rights, bankruptcies, or massive developer mortgages that could result in the building being foreclosed upon and the tenant being evicted mid-lease. (If a heavy mortgage exists, the tenant will demand a Non-Disturbance Agreement from the financing bank).
2. Occupancy Permits (Használatbavételi Engedély)
A commercial space must be legally zoned and permitted for the tenant's specific use. A landlord leasing a ground-floor retail space to a restaurant must disclose the specific building permits. If the space is only permitted for "general administrative office use," the tenant cannot legally operate an industrial kitchen there without a massive, expensive rezoning process, which the landlord must explicitly disclose during negotiations.
The Definitive Disclosure: The Fit-Out Handover Protocol
The most critical localized disclosure event in Hungarian commercial leasing happens on the day the keys are exchanged: The Handover Protocol (Átadás-átvételi jegyzőkönyv).
Whether the landlord is delivering the space precisely as "Shell and Core" (bare concrete floors and exposed ceilings) or fully fitted-out (Category A finish with specific carpeting and partition walls), the exact physical condition must be meticulously documented.
This multi-page, heavily photographed protocol legally serves as the definitive disclosure of fact. If a tenant signs the protocol acknowledging that the HVAC system was functioning and the raised floors were flawless, they cannot later claim the landlord concealed a defect to escape paying for repairs.
Institutional Grade Document Management
Relying on scattered email threads and paper files to prove a corporate tenant received their Energy Performance Certificate or signed their Fit-Out Handover Protocol exposes landlords to millions of Forints in liability during exit negotiations. Landager provides institutional-grade digital document vaults. Automatically store, timestamp, and link Every EPC, Land Registry Extract, and 50-page photographic Handover Protocol directly to your corporate tenant’s profile, ensuring bulletproof compliance and instantaneous retrieval during high-stakes lease audits.
Back to Hungary Commercial Laws Overview.
Sources & Official References
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