Commercial Security Deposits in North Rhine-Westphalia: Guide for Landlords

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Commercial security deposits in NRW, Germany: no statutory cap, bank guarantees, return procedures, and key differences from residential deposits.

Melvin Prince
3 min di lettura
Verificato Apr 2026Germania flag
commercial-deposit-nrwGaranzia bancariacommercial-kautionnorth-rhine-westphaliaCommerciale

Disclaimer Legale

Questo contenuto è solo a scopo informativo ed educativo generale. Non costituisce consulenza legale e non deve essere considerato tale. Le leggi cambiano frequentemente: verifica sempre le normative vigenti e consulta un avvocato abilitato nella tua giurisdizione per consulenza specifica sulla tua situazione. Landager è una piattaforma di gestione immobiliare, non uno studio legale.Informazioni verificate l'ultima volta: April 2026.

Security Deposit
3 Months’ Cold Rent
Notice Period
3 Months (Tenant)
Rent Control
Varies by City

In commercial lease law, security deposits are governed by contractual freedom. Unlike residential tenancy law, where § 551 BGB caps the deposit at three months' net cold rent, there is no statutory limit for commercial tenancies. The type and amount of security are determined exclusively by the lease agreement.

Disclaimer LegaleQuesta guida fornisce informazioni legali generali. Le leggi sui contratti di locazione possono cambiare. Consulta sempre un notaio o avvocato abilitato in questa regione.

No Statutory Maximum

Unlike residential leases, commercial leases have no mandatory cap on security deposits

Typical amounts in practice:

Property TypeTypical Deposit Amount
Office space3–6 months' rent
Warehouse / logistics2–4 months' rent
Production facilities3–6 months' rent

For higher-risk tenants (e.g., hospitality, startups without credit history), landlords may require higher deposits or additional security.

Forms of Commercial Security

Cash Deposit Cash payment into a deposit account

Recommended: keep separate from personal assets to minimize insolvency risk, even though there is no statutory obligation.

Bank Guarantee The most common form for commercial tenancies — especially as a first-demand, self-debtor guarantee (selbstschuldnerische Bürgschaft auf erstes Anfordern)

This allows the landlord to call the guarantee immediately without court proceedings.

Parent Company Guarantee / Letter of Comfort For chain operators or subsidiaries, the parent company may provide a guarantee or letter of comfort (Patronatserklärung).

Pledged Securities In rare cases: pledging a securities portfolio as collateral.

Return of the Deposit In commercial lease law, there is no statutory return deadline (§ 551 BGB applies only to residential leases)

The landlord must return the deposit after the tenancy ends once:

  • No outstanding claims (rent, operating costs, damages) exist
  • Settlement has been completed

In practice, 3–6 months is considered a reasonable timeframe; for complex commercial properties, longer periods may be accepted if operating cost statements or expert assessments are pending.

Permitted Uses for the Deposit The landlord may apply the deposit toward:

  • Outstanding rent or operating cost payments
  • Damage to the commercial property (beyond normal wear and tear)
  • Costs for reinstatement (Rückbau) if the tenant fails to meet contractual obligations
  • Other contractual claims

A reinstatement clause is particularly in commercial leases: tenants are frequently required to remove fit-out and modifications at the end of the tenancy.

Best Practices for Landlords

  • Prefer first-demand bank guarantees — faster enforcement
  • Size the deposit based on tenant risk profile and use type (hospitality: higher)
  • For cash deposits: separate investment recommended — prevents issues in landlord insolvency
  • Include reinstatement clauses clearly in the contract and secure them with the deposit
  • Adjust deposit amounts at regular intervals when extending the commercial lease

Landager helps manage security deposits, monitor return deadlines, and document damage claims systematically.

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