Saxony-Anhalt Eviction Process: A Landlord's Step-by-Step Guide
Complete guide to the residential eviction process in Saxony-Anhalt. Notice periods, grounds for termination, extraordinary eviction, and the court process e...
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.
Evicting a residential tenant in Saxony-Anhalt is a multi-step legal process governed almost entirely by federal law. The state has not introduced any additional restrictions beyond what is prescribed by the Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch (BGB). While this makes the process somewhat more predictable than in states with extended conversion freeze periods or additional tenant protections, strong federal protections still require landlords to proceed carefully and formally at every step.
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。
eviction process in saxony anhalt
Prepare
Organize documentation and ensure legal grounding.
Notice
Serve formal notice to the tenant.
Wait
Allow the statutory period to expire.
Execute
Finalize the legal action through proper channels.
Grounds for Ordinary (Regular) Termination
Unlike tenants — who may terminate without stating a reason — landlords must always demonstrate a legitimate interest (berechtigtes Interesse) as defined by § 573 BGB. The three statutory grounds are:
1. Personal Use (Eigenbedarf)
The landlord requires the property as a residence for themselves, a family member, or a member of their household. The need must be genuine, concrete, and not merely speculative. Courts scrutinize Eigenbedarf claims carefully.
2. Significant Breach of Lease (erhebliche Pflichtverletzung)
The tenant has materially violated contractual obligations — for example, persistent, serious noise disturbances after formal warnings, unauthorized subletting, or chronic significant rent delays.
3. Economic Necessity (wirtschaftliche Verwertung)
Continuing the tenancy prevents the landlord from making a reasonable economic use of the property. This is a narrow ground; simply wanting to sell at a higher vacant price does not qualify.
Notice Periods for Ordinary Termination
The notice period depends on how long the tenant has lived in the property (§ 573c Abs. 1 BGB):
The notice letter must be received by the tenant no later than the third business day of a calendar month for that month to count toward the notice period.
Conversion Freeze: Standard 3 Years
When a rented apartment is converted into a condominium (registered as Wohnungseigentum) and subsequently sold to a buyer, the new owner cannot immediately evict the tenant for personal use. The statutory freeze period is 3 years from the date of sale (§ 577a BGB).
Saxony-Anhalt has not issued a regulation extending this period to the maximum of 10 years (which some states have done for areas with tight housing markets). After 3 years, the new owner may give ordinary termination notice for personal use, subject to the applicable notice period.
Extraordinary (Immediate) Termination
When a tenant's conduct is sufficiently severe, the landlord may terminate the lease immediately without notice, under § 543 BGB. The most common grounds are:
Rent Arrears (§ 543 Abs. 2 Nr. 3 BGB)
- Tenant is two consecutive months in arrears for the entire rent or a significant portion (more than one full month's rent), or
- Over a longer period, the accumulated arrears reach the equivalent of two full months' rent.
Catch-Up Payment (Schonfristzahlung)
Unlike commercial leases, a residential tenant can void an immediate termination due to rent arrears by paying the full outstanding amount within two months after the claim is served in court proceedings (§ 569 Abs. 3 Nr. 2 BGB). This cure right can only be exercised once every two years.
The Formal Eviction Process
Critical: A landlord may never change locks, disconnect utilities, or remove the tenant's belongings to force them out ("Kalte Räumung"). This is a criminal offence and exposes the landlord to substantial liability.
Tenant's Objection (Sozialklausel)
Even a fully valid ordinary termination can be defeated or delayed if the tenant invokes hardship grounds (§ 574 BGB). Courts weigh the tenant's interests — such as advanced age, serious illness, imminent school exams, or late-stage pregnancy — against the landlord's legitimate interests. This is highly fact-specific.
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