Commercial Lease Law in Bavaria: A Landlord's Guide
Overview of commercial rental law in Bavaria, Germany: freedom of contract, fixed-term leases, Triple-Net structures, and key differences from residential law.
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While German residential rental law is heavily regulated to protect tenants, commercial lease law (Gewerbemietrecht) operates under the principle of freedom of contract. The law treats both parties as sophisticated business partners capable of negotiating terms on equal footing. This gives Bavarian landlords significant flexibility when leasing offices, retail spaces, warehouses, and industrial properties.
Key Differences: Commercial vs
Residential
1. Lease Duration and Termination Most commercial leases in Bavaria are concluded as fixed-term agreements (Zeitmietverträge) of 5 to 10 years - no statutory justification required (unlike residential):
- During the fixed term, neither party may ordinarily terminate
- Renewal options are common - allowing the tenant to unilaterally extend for another term
- For open-ended commercial leases, the statutory notice period is approximately 6 months (§ 580a(2) BGB), but this can be freely modified by contract
For details on commercial eviction: Commercial Eviction Process.
2. Maintenance and Operating Costs
Commercial lease law allows landlords to transfer virtually all maintenance and operating costs to the tenant:
- Triple-Net Lease (NNN): Tenant pays base rent plus all taxes, insurance, and maintenance - including structural maintenance ("Dach und Fach")
- Operating costs: All categories (including management fees and certain insurance types) can be passed through - far exceeding what's permissible in residential leases
3. Rent and Deposits Commercial rents and deposits are subject to no statutory caps:
- Deposits are freely negotiable - bank guarantees are the standard form
- Rent increases must be pre-defined in the contract (via index clauses, graduated rent, or turnover-based formulas) - there is no statutory mechanism for mid-lease rent adjustment
4. Competition Protection An implied duty exists: landlords may not lease adjacent space to a direct competitor of an existing tenant (even without an explicit contract clause). This embedded competition protection can be waived contractually, but failure to do so creates liability.
5. The Written Form Trap (§ 550 BGB) Leases exceeding one year must be in strict written form - both parties signing the same physical document. Any essential term that fails to meet this requirement (including later amendments via email) converts the entire fixed-term lease into an open-ended lease terminable at approximately 6 months' notice. This is one of the highest-risk areas in Bavarian commercial property. See: Commercial Lease Requirements. Explore more commercial compliance topics for Bavaria:
How Landager Helps Landager tracks lease terms, multi-property compliance, and commercial portfolio analytics - making it easy to stay compliant with Bavaria regulations.
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