Thuringia Commercial Eviction Process: Terminating a Business Tenancy
How to legally end a commercial tenancy in Thuringia: statutory notice periods, immediate termination for rent arrears, and the court eviction process explai...
Avis de non-responsabilité légale
Ce contenu est fourni à titre d'information générale et éducative uniquement. Il ne constitue pas un avis juridique et ne doit pas être considéré comme tel. Les lois changent fréquemment – vérifiez toujours la réglementation en vigueur et consultez un avocat agréé dans votre juridiction pour obtenir des conseils spécifiques à votre situation. Landager est une plateforme de gestion immobilière, pas un cabinet d'avocats.Informations vérifiées pour la dernière fois le : April 2026.
Terminating a commercial tenancy in Thuringia is significantly more straightforward than ending a residential tenancy. German law does not require commercial landlords to have a "legitimate reason" for an ordinary termination — the contractual or statutory notice period simply needs to be observed. However, the rules differ considerably between fixed-term and indefinite-term leases.
Avis de non-responsabilité légaleCe guide fournit des informations juridiques générales. Les lois sur les baux peuvent changer. Consultez toujours un notaire ou un avocat agréé dans cette région.
commercial eviction process in thuringia
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.
Ordinary Termination — Indefinite-Term Leases
When a commercial lease is concluded for an indefinite term (or has been rendered indefinite through a written-form defect), either party may terminate under § 580a Abs. 2 BGB:
- Notice deadline: The notice must be received no later than the third working day of a calendar quarter (January, April, July, October).
- Effective date: The tenancy ends at the close of the following calendar quarter.
- Effective notice period: Roughly six months.
- No reason required: Unlike residential tenancies, no justification is needed for an ordinary commercial termination.
Notice periods can be extended by contract but not reduced below the statutory minimum if one party is a consumer.
Fixed-Term Leases — No Ordinary Termination Mid-Term
The vast majority of commercial leases in practice are concluded for a fixed term (e.g., 5 or 10 years, often with tenant renewal options). During the fixed term, ordinary termination is excluded for both parties. The lease runs to its contractual end date automatically — with no requirement for either party to serve a termination notice unless an option period needs to be triggered.
: If the written form requirement is violated (see the Commercial Lease Requirements guide), the fixed-term lease is deemed converted to indefinite term — suddenly exposing both parties to early termination on approximately six months' notice.
Extraordinary (Immediate) Termination — Fixed and Indefinite Leases
Regardless of lease type, either party may terminate immediately if a good cause (wichtiger Grund) under § 543 BGB makes continuing the tenancy unreasonable.
Rent Arrears — Primary Ground for Landlords
Landlords may terminate immediately (no notice required) when:
- The tenant is in arrears for two consecutive due dates with a significant portion of the rent, OR
- The total accumulated arrears equal or exceed two full months' rent
main difference from residential law: In commercial tenancies, there is no statutory "remedy payment" mechanism that allows the tenant to undo the termination by paying arrears within two months of the eviction lawsuit. Once the immediate termination is validly given, payment after the fact generally does not automatically nullify it (absent express contractual or judicial discretion otherwise).
Other Grounds
- Serious and repeated disturbance of co-tenants or neighbours
- Fundamental change of use without consent
- Subletting the entire commercial premises without landlord approval
- Material breach of specific use restrictions (e.g., operating a different type of business)
Court Eviction Procedure
As with residential properties, self-help (changing locks, removing property) is strictly forbidden in Germany regardless of how clear the legal grounds. The landlord must follow the court route:
- Send a formal termination notice — in writing, specifying the legal basis.
- File a Räumungsklage at the competent Amts- or Landgericht in Thuringia (jurisdiction depends on claim value — commercial leases with higher rents often fall at the Landgericht level).
- Obtain an enforceable judgment.
- Enforce via a bailiff (Gerichtsvollzieher) who carries out the physical eviction.
Commercial eviction proceedings, while generally faster than residential cases (no equivalent of the residential Räumungsschutzantrag delay mechanism), can still take 4–12 months depending on court capacity and tenant appeals.
Best Practices
- Track lease expiry and option dates meticulously: Fixed-term leases require no notice to end naturally — but option exercises by tenants rarely need a response. Using Landager automates all these deadline alerts.
- Always issue a paper-trail demand letter first: Even for immediate terminations, sending a formal payment demand (Zahlungsaufforderung) before the termination notice reinforces the legal basis.
- Combine immediate and ordinary termination notices: Issue both simultaneously so the ordinary termination serves as a backstop if the immediate termination is later legally challenged.
Források és hivatalos hivatkozások
📬 Soyez informé lorsque ces lois changent
Nous vous enverrons un e-mail lorsque les lois sur les propriétaires et les locataires seront mises à jour dans Pas de spam — uniquement des changements de loi.




