Berlin Commercial Lease Requirements: Contracts, Text Form, and NNN
lease agreement berlin, germany. A guide to commercial lease agreements in Berlin. Learn about the new Text Form requirement for 2025, operating costs, NNN l...
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The commercial lease agreement (Gewerbemietvertrag) forms the absolute core of the landlord-tenant relationship in Germany. Because statutory protections are practically nonexistent for commercial tenants, the exact wording of the contract is paramount.
The Form Requirement (Huge Change for 2025)
The most critical aspect of German commercial leasing is the formal requirement for fixed-term contracts exceeding one year (BGB § 550).
The Shift from "Written" to "Text" Form
The "Text Form Trap"
While the new Text Form makes closing deals faster, it introduces massive risks:
- Under the old law, informal emails discussing rent reductions or space swaps were legally irrelevant unless physically signed as an addendum.
- Now: A simple email exchange like "Sure, you can use the adjacent basement space for €100 less" can legally alter the contract.
- The Risk: If these informal "Text Form" changes are not comprehensively documented and physically attached to the main contract, a subsequent buyer of the building could claim the entire fixed-term lease is void due to a form violation, allowing them to evict the high-paying commercial tenant.
Essential Lease Components
A commercial lease in Berlin should address the following points in excruciating detail:
1. The Rental Object and Purpose (Mietzweck)
It is crucial to define exactly what is being rented and for what explicit purpose.
- Broad definition: "Commercial Space." (High risk for landlord; the tenant could open an office, a loud gym, or a controversial political headquarters).
- Narrow definition: "Operation of an IT consulting firm." (Safer; if the tenant changes their business model, they need your explicit permission).
2. Rent and Operating Costs (Triple-Net / NNN)
Unlike residential leases, commercial landlords can transfer nearly all costs to the tenant:
- Single-Net: Tenant pays property taxes.
- Double-Net (NN): Tenant pays property taxes and building insurance.
- Triple-Net (NNN): Tenant pays taxes, insurance, and bears the cost of all structural maintenance and roof repairs (Dach und Fach). Extremely common for single-tenant logistics or large retail buildings in Berlin.
- Caution: When using standard, pre-formulated lease templates (AGB), shifting "Dach und Fach" to the tenant is often ruled invalid by German courts. It must be individually negotiated.
3. Tenant Options (Optionsrecht)
A standard feature wherein the tenant has the unilateral right to extend the lease (e.g., a 5-year lease with a "2 x 5-year option").
- Landlord Strategy: Ensure the option explicitly triggers a market rent review or an index rent adjustment. Otherwise, the tenant extends the lease at a decade-old, vastly undervalued rent.
- Deadline: The contract must state exactly when the option must be exercised (e.g., "in writing, at least 6 months before the original term expires").
4. Non-Compete Clauses (Konkurrenzschutz)
Under German case law (BGH), a commercial landlord owes a tenant "protection from competition" within the same building-even if it is not written in the contract.
- If you rent the ground floor to a pharmacy, you generally cannot rent the adjacent unit to another pharmacy or a dominant drugstore chain.
- Landlord Strategy: You can explicitly limit or entirely exclude this non-compete duty in the lease agreement. If you own a shopping mall or a large mixed-use building, excluding the statutory Konkurrenzschutz is vital.
Subleasing (Untervermietung) Subleasing is rampant in Berlin, particularly among fast-growing startups in tech hubs like Mitte or Kreuzberg.
- The landlord should explicitly prohibit subleasing without prior written consent.
- Include a clause allowing you to charge a "Subletting Surcharge" (Untermietzuschlag) to offset the increased wear and tear on common areas and elevators.
Reinstatement and Handover (Rückbaupflicht)
Commercial tenants often heavily modify the space (moving walls, changing flooring, installing heavy IT infrastructure).
- Default Law: The tenant must remove everything and restore the original condition upon moving out (Rückbaupflicht).
- The Contract: Detail exactly what "original condition" means. Does the tenant leave the expensive glass partitions, or must they rip them out? Attach an extremely thorough initial handover protocol (Übergabeprotokoll) with photographs.
Best Practices for Commercial Landlords
- Beware of Informal Emails (Post-2025): Implement strict internal company rules that no property manager may agree to lease modifications via email or WhatsApp without drafting formal contract addendums to preserve the fixed term.
- Draft a Utility Catalog: Do not simply reference the standard residential utility ordinance. Commercial properties incur different costs (center management, security services, extensive cooling). List them all.
- Limit the Non-Compete Scope: Explicitly state the boundaries of any Konkurrenzschutz to avoid being sued by an existing tenant when you sign a new one.
- Negotiate Individual Triple-Net terms: If you want the tenant to repair the roof, document that this clause was heavily negotiated and not just boilerplate text, or a court will strike it down.
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How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, lease requirements requirements, and deadline notifications - making it easy to stay compliant with Berlin regulations.
Back to Berlin Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
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