Commercial Rent Increases & Indexation in the Czech Republic
Learn how commercial landlords in the Czech Republic utilize indexation clauses, European inflation indexes, and market reviews to increase rent.
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Unlike residential properties, which face statutory protections and a 20% cap over three years, commercial rent rates in the Czech Republic are governed strictly by the free market. Because there is no statutory mandate dictating commercial rent increases, every detail regarding financial escalation must be explicitly spelled out in the commercial lease agreement.
Commercial Rent Review Process in national
Review Rent Clause
Check the specific rent review method in the commercial lease (CPI, fixed %, or market review).
Calculate New Amount
Apply the agreed formula to calculate the adjusted rent.
Serve Written Notice
Provide written notice of the new rent per the lease’s required notice period.
Obtain Valuation if Market Review
Commission an independent market rent valuation if required by the lease terms.
The Absolute Power of the Indexation Clause
With commercial leases commonly spanning 3 to 10 years, landlords cannot leave rent levels static, as inflation would rapidly erode rental yields. Consequently, nearly 100% of institutional commercial leases in the Czech Republic rely on an Indexation Clause (inflační doložka) to automatically drive rent increases annually.
Choosing the Correct Index
The exact wording of the inflation index clause is arguably the single most critical financial paragraph in a Czech commercial lease. The clause must explicitly name the specific statistical index used to track inflation. The two most prominent choices are:
- ČSÚ (Czech Statistical Office) CPI: Measures inflation based on the consumer price index in the Czech Republic. Used primarily for leases denominated in Czech Koruna (CZK).
- HICP (Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices) or MUICP: Published by Eurostat, these indexes measure inflation across the European Union or the Eurozone. Because premium logistics, retail, and office rents in the Czech Republic are almost exclusively denominated and paid in Euros (EUR)—rather than CZK—the MUICP is the universal standard for commercial indexation.
Note: It is a critical error to index a Euro-denominated rent using the Czech ČSÚ index, or vice-versa, as the inflation rates and currency values rarely align, leading to severe financial distortion.
Mechanics of the Increase
Most leases stipulate that rent will be increased once per year, typically on January 1st, based on the inflation data from the preceding year.
Because the final statistical data for a given year is usually not published by Eurostat or the ČSÚ until February or March, the landlord will generally invoice the tenant at the old rate for January and February, and then issue a retroactive invoice covering the difference once the official index is published.
Avoid "Deflation" Adjustments
A professionally drafted indexation clause will always contain an "upwards only" provision. It explicitly states that if the chosen inflation index shows a negative value (deflation), the rent will not decrease, but rather remain at the previous year's level.
Stepped Rent (Rampa nájemného)
In new retail developments or newly opened shopping centers, landlords occasionally incentivize tenants by offering a "stepped rent" structure instead of, or in addition to, standard indexation.
Under stepped rent, the landlord scales the rent according to preset numbers attached to specific dates (e.g., Year 1: 15 EUR/sqm; Year 2: 17 EUR/sqm; Year 3: 20 EUR/sqm), acknowledging that the tenant needs time to establish a customer base. Stepped rents require exacting precision in lease documentation to ensure the baseline rent for subsequent indexation relies on the correct stepped value.
Turnover Rent (Obratové nájemné)
In the commercial retail sector (shopping malls, high-street fashion, restaurants), a base-plus-turnover rent structure is the industry standard in the Czech Republic.
Under this model, the tenant pays a guaranteed minimum Base Rent (základní nájemné) every month. At the end of the year, the tenant must disclose their total audited sales revenue (turnover) generated out of that specific location. If a pre-negotiated percentage of that turnover (e.g., 6% to 9%) exceeds the total annual base rent paid, the tenant must pay the landlord the difference as a secondary "Turnover Rent" invoice.
To enforce turnover rent, the lease must include strict provisions giving the landlord complete audit rights over the tenant’s accounting books and electronic point-of-sale systems.
Getting Started with Compliance
Mistakes in rent escalations—whether choosing the wrong Eurostat benchmark, forgetting to invoice retroactively, or miscalculating a turnover percentage—cost commercial landlords millions of crowns annually in lost yield. Landager provides sophisticated indexation engines explicitly built for the European market, automatically tracking Eurostat data, calculating correct escalations, and generating accurate upward-only notifications for every commercial asset you operate.
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