Required Disclosures for Commercial Rentals in Lithuania
guide to mandatory disclosures for commercial property leases in Lithuania, including environmental and structural requirements.
Avis de non-responsabilité légale
Ce contenu est fourni à titre d'information générale et éducative uniquement. Il ne constitue pas un avis juridique et ne doit pas être considéré comme tel. Les lois changent fréquemment — vérifiez toujours la réglementation en vigueur et consultez un avocat agréé dans votre juridiction pour obtenir des conseils spécifiques à votre situation. Landager est une plateforme de gestion immobilière, pas un cabinet d'avocats.Informations vérifiées pour la dernière fois le : April 2026.
Unlike residential property where disclosures lean heavily toward health and habitability, commercial real estate disclosures in Lithuania focus on technical specifications, regulatory limitations, and ensuring the property is fundamentally suitable for the tenant's specific commercial intent.
Mandatory Disclosures The Lithuanian Civil
Code dictates that a landlord must transfer the property in a state compliant with the terms of the lease and fit for its intended use. This implies a duty of good faith to disclose relevant information that could impede the tenant's business.
1. Fitness for Intended Commercial Use The landlord must disclose any latent defects or regulatory restrictions that would prevent the tenant from operating their specific business. - Example: If a tenant is leasing space for a restaurant, the landlord must disclose if the building's infrastructure cannot accommodate commercial ventilation systems or if local municipal zoning explicitly prohibits food service establishments in that location.
2. The Handover Protocol The Handover Protocol (Act of Transfer and Acceptance) is the most critical joint disclosure document in commercial leasing. - It is a highly exhaustive assessment of the "shell and core" or existing fit-out conditions. - It must document any existing damages to structural elements, the status of HVAC, electrical capacity, and fire safety systems. - This document forms the absolute baseline against which the tenant must restore the property at the end of the lease, making meticulous disclosure needed for both parties.
3. Encumbrances, Servitudes, and Legal Status Commercial landlords must disclose any third-party rights over the property that could affect the tenant.
- Servitudes: Disclose if third parties have rights of way through the property (e.g., access to central utility hubs located within the leased retail unit).
- Subleasing Constraints: If the landlord is a master tenant sub-leasing the space, they must definitively prove and disclose they hold the right to sublet under the master lease.
- Impending Reconstruction: A landlord must generally act in good faith to disclose known, substantial building renovations that will disrupt the tenant's operations.
Lease Registration Disclosure A commercial lease generally must be registered with the Real Estate Registry (Registrų centras) to be binding against third parties. It is standard practice to disclose and agree upon who will shoulder the administrative burden and fees for registering and eventually deregistering the commercial contract during the negotiation phase.
Getting Started with Compliance Ensure all property technical capabilities, defects, and joint responsibilities are documented explicitly. Landager provides a secure repository to organize and store these needed commercial disclosures, lease agreements, and Handover Protocols for immediate enterprise reference.
How Landager Helps
Landager automates your Centre of Registers filing deadlines, tracks CPI-based rent escalations, and ensures your commercial property meets all Lithuanian Civil Code requirements.
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