Commercial Rent Increases in North Rhine-Westphalia: Guide for Landlords
Commercial rent adjustments in NRW, Germany: index clauses, graduated rent, turnover rent, and market rent negotiations without statutory caps.
法的免責事項
このコンテンツは、一般的な情報提供および教育目的のみを目的としています。これは法的助言を構成するものではなく、法的助言として依拠されるべきではありません。法律は頻繁に変更されます。常に現在の規制を確認し、あなたの状況に固有のアドバイスについては、あなたの管轄区域のライセンスを持つ弁護士に相談してください。Landagerは不動産管理プラットフォームであり、法律事務所ではありません。最終確認日: March 2026.
In commercial lease law, there is neither a rent cap (Mietpreisbremse) nor a Kappungsgrenze. Rent adjustments for commercial tenancies in North Rhine-Westphalia are governed exclusively by contractual agreements and general contract law. Landlords and tenants have broad freedom in designing rent adjustment mechanisms.
法的免責事項このガイドは一般的な法的情報を提供します。賃貸借法は変更される可能性があります。必ずこの地域のライセンスを持つ公証人または弁護士にご相談ください。
No Rent Cap for Commercial Properties The Mietpreisbremse (§§ 556d ff
BGB) applies exclusively to residential leases — not to commercial properties. The NRW Tenant Protection Ordinance (MietSchVO NRW 2025) also covers only the residential market. In commercial leases, the market rent is the only reference. There is no legal obligation to align with comparative rents or rent indices.
Rent Adjustment Mechanisms
Index Rent (Consumer Price Index) The most common rent adjustment in commercial leases is the index rent — linking rent to the Consumer Price Index (VPI) of the Federal Statistical Office:
How It Works New Rent = Current Rent × (New CPI / CPI at Contract Start)
Key Contract Provisions
- Adjustment interval: Typically annually or upon exceeding a defined threshold (e.g., 5% CPI change)
- Direction: Specify whether only increases or also decreases are permitted
- Reference index: Always use the current CPI of the Federal Statistical Office
Graduated Rent (Staffelmiete) Graduated rent provides automatic increases at contractually fixed dates:
- Dates and amounts must be specifically named in the contract
- Unlike residential law, the increase can also be expressed as a percentage
- Independent rent increases alongside the graduation schedule are generally excluded
Turnover Rent
Particularly common in retail, hospitality, and hotels in NRW (e.g., Cologne city center, Düsseldorf shopping areas):
- Tenant pays a base rent plus a percentage of revenue
- Typical revenue share: 3–10% of net turnover
- Landlord must negotiate a right to audit turnover (Buchsichtigungsrecht)
- Tenant must provide monthly or annual revenue reports
Market Rent and Renegotiation For very long lease terms (10–20 years), contracts often include renegotiation clauses allowing adjustment to market rents after specified periods:
- Obligation for both parties to negotiate (with arbitration as fallback)
- Appointment of an independent appraiser if no agreement is reached
- For NRW: market rents are established through broker comparisons and market reports (Bulwiengesa, JLL, CBRE)
Best Practices for Landlords
- Include index rent with a clear calculation formula and adjustment interval in the contract
- For turnover rent: secure strong reporting duties and audit rights contractually
- Protect escalation clauses for long terms with a minimum rent floor
- Coordinate the VAT option and rent adjustments tax-wise
- Monitor NRW market developments regularly (especially the dynamic Cologne/Düsseldorf office markets)
Landager helps manage complex rent structures, automatic index adjustments, and revenue reporting documentation.
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