Saxony-Anhalt Commercial Landlord Disclosure Obligations
What commercial landlords in Saxony-Anhalt must disclose: energy certificates for non-residential buildings, known defects, planning status, and contaminatio...
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: April 2026.
Disclosure obligations for commercial landlords in Saxony-Anhalt are significantly narrower than for residential landlords. Commercial tenants are expected to conduct their own due diligence before signing. That said, several mandatory disclosure obligations remain — particularly around energy certificates, contamination, and planning status — and violations can trigger disproportionately large liability.
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。
What Applies vs. What Does Not
1. Energy Performance Certificate for Non-Residential Buildings (GEG)
The German Building Energy Act (GEG) applies to both residential and commercial properties. When marketing or leasing non-residential space:
At Viewings:
- The valid energy performance certificate (Energieausweis) for the building must be legibly displayed or provided to prospective tenants. For commercial premises, this is the non-residential certificate (based on the building's overall energy demand or consumption).
In Commercial Property Advertisements:
- main energy data (energy demand/consumption, primary energy source, efficiency class where applicable) must appear in any public advertisement.
At Lease Signing:
- A copy of the valid certificate must be handed to the tenant.
Fine: Up to €10,000 for non-compliance. This obligation is equally enforceable in commercial as in residential tenancies.
Exception for unheated/unconditioned space: Warehouses and cold storage facilities that are not heated or climatically controlled generally do not require an energy certificate.
2. Duty to Disclose Material Defects (Good Faith — § 242 BGB)
German pre-contractual good faith obligations require landlords to proactively disclose information that materially affects the tenant's decision to lease and the achievability of the tenant's intended use — even in commercial contexts.
Failing to disclose the following can entitle the tenant to extraordinary termination and/or damages:
- Known structural defects that render the space unsuitable for the intended use (e.g., a roof requiring immediate replacement, subsidence)
- Environmental contamination (Altlasten): Saxony-Anhalt has significant industrial legacy areas around Bitterfeld-Wolfen and the chemical industry in Halle. If the landlord knows of contamination on the site, concealing this is a serious violation.
- Planned major works in or adjacent to the building that would significantly disrupt the tenant's business
- Legal encumbrances on the title (easements, charges, development restrictions) that affect the commercial use
Best Practice: Prepare a written property disclosure annex and have the tenant confirm receipt before signing. This creates a clear record of what was disclosed, limiting your liability.
3. Planning Status and Change-of-Use Obligations (BauO LSA)
If you are leasing for a specific commercial purpose (restaurant, medical practice, retail), you must ensure the premises have valid planning permission (Baugenehmigung) for that use.
Under the Bauordnung des Landes Sachsen-Anhalt (BauO LSA), a change-of-use application (Nutzungsänderungsantrag) is required when the new use differs materially from the approved use. Unless the lease clearly allocates the risk of planning failure to the tenant, a landlord who implicitly guarantees fitness of the premises for the stated commercial purpose may be liable if planning permission is refused.
Recommended Clause: Include a contractual allocation of planning risk — e.g., "The landlord provides the premises in their existing state with existing planning permissions. The tenant is solely responsible for obtaining any further permits, consents, or approvals required for the tenant's intended use."
4. Smoke Detector Obligation
The residential smoke detector obligation under § 47 BauO LSA does not apply to commercial properties as such. However, commercial buildings are subject to their own fire safety regulations under the BauO LSA and relevant trade/operating regulations (Arbeitsstättenverordnung for workplaces). Fire alarm systems, emergency lighting, and means of escape all require compliance — these are the subject of fire protection assessments (Brandschutznachweis) rather than simple smoke alarms.
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