Commercial Rent Increases in Germany: Index, Graduated, and Turnover Rents
How to increase commercial rent in Baden-Württemberg: CPI index clauses, graduated rent, turnover rent, and the Price Indexation Act requirements.
Juridische Disclaimer
Deze inhoud is uitsluitend bedoeld voor algemene informatieve en educatieve doeleinden. Het vormt geen juridisch advies en mag daar niet op worden vertrouwd. Wetten veranderen voortdurend — verifieer altijd de huidige regelgeving en raadpleeg een bevoegde advocaat in uw rechtsgebied voor advies specifiek voor uw situatie. Landager is een vastgoedbeheerplatform, geen advocatenkantoor.Informatie laatst geverifieerd: April 2026.
In commercial tenancy law, the residential concepts of "comparable rent adjustment," "rent brake," and "rent cap" simply do not exist. Commercial landlords in Baden-Württemberg — and throughout Germany — must contractually secure any rent escalation mechanism. Without an escalation clause, the rent remains frozen for the entire (often 5- to 15-year) fixed term.
Juridische DisclaimerDeze gids biedt algemene juridische informatie. Huurwetten kunnen veranderen. Raadpleeg altijd een bevoegde notaris of advocaat in deze regio.
Index Rent (CPI-Linked Escalation)
The dominant mechanism for protecting commercial rental income against inflation is the index rent, tied to the Consumer Price Index (CPI / Verbraucherpreisindex) published by the Federal Statistical Office.
Price Indexation Act (PrKG) Requirements
Escalation clauses that link a monetary obligation to external price indices are governed by the Price Indexation Act and are generally prohibited — unless the contract meets specific exemption criteria:
- The landlord commits to leasing the premises for a minimum of 10 years (fixed term, or term plus tenant extension option totaling 10 years).
- The tenant has a unilateral right to extend the lease to a total of at least 10 years.
If the minimum-term requirement is not contractually secured, the index clause is void and rent remains static throughout the term.
Types of Index Escalation
- Automatic adjustment (Gleitklausel): Rent changes automatically by the exact percentage the CPI changes — no action required.
- Threshold-triggered adjustment (Leistungsvorbehaltsklausel): The rent adjusts only once the CPI has moved by a contractually defined threshold (e.g., 5% or 10%). The party invoking the adjustment must issue a written notification.
Graduated Rent (Staffelmiete)
An alternative to index-linking is the graduated rent, where fixed euro increases are agreed at the time of lease signing.
- Example: Year 1: €5,000/month, Year 2: €5,200, Year 3: €5,400, etc.
- No reference to external indices is needed, so the Price Indexation Act does not apply.
- Provides certainty for both parties but does not adapt to actual inflation.
Turnover Rent (Umsatzmiete)
Particularly common in retail and food-service properties in prime Baden-Württemberg locations (e.g., Stuttgart's Königstraße), turnover rent links a portion of the rent to the tenant's actual revenue.
- Structure: A base rent (Mindestmiete) plus a percentage (typically 5–8%) of the tenant's net turnover at the location.
- Reporting obligation: The tenant must regularly disclose revenue figures through management accounts (BWA) or audited annual statements.
- These clauses require careful legal drafting to be enforceable and to comply with AGB (standard terms) requirements.
Rent Increases Without a Contractual Clause?
If no escalation mechanism, graduated rent, or turnover rent is contractually agreed, the landlord cannot unilaterally increase the rent during the fixed term. A "change-of-terms termination" (Änderungskündigung — terminate and simultaneously offer a new, higher-priced contract) is only possible for open-ended leases and requires compliance with the full statutory notice period (approximately 6 months under § 580a BGB).
Bronden & officiële referenties
📬 Ontvang meldingen wanneer deze wetten veranderen
We e-mailen je wanneer huurrechtwetten updaten in Geen spam - alleen wetswijzigingen.




