Hamburg Commercial Rent Late Fees: B2B Default Interest and the €40 Flat Fee
How Hamburg commercial landlords can recover late payment costs — the statutory €40 flat fee, 9-percentage-point B2B default interest under § 288 BGB, and how to escalate toward extraordinary termination.
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.
When a Hamburg commercial tenant misses a rent payment, the legal consequences are significantly more punitive than in the residential sector. German law implementing the EU Late Payment Directive provides commercial landlords (creditors) with two immediate statutory remedies that arise automatically, without any additional agreement: a flat-fee compensation and higher default interest than in residential tenancies.
Juridische DisclaimerDeze gids biedt algemene juridische informatie. Huurwetten kunnen veranderen. Raadpleeg altijd een bevoegde notaris of advocaat in deze regio.
When Does Default Arise in Commercial Leases
Commercial rent is typically due at the beginning of each monthly period — usually by the third business day of the month, or as contractually agreed. Since commercial tenants are acting as businesses, the legal default position is clear: Under § 286 Para. 2 No. 1 BGB (time-specific obligation), default arises automatically on the day after the due date, without any reminder being required. This is the same rule as for residential tenants, but the consequences of default are more severe in B2B contexts.
The Statutory €40 Flat Fee (§ 288 Para. 5 BGB)
This provision, introduced to implement the EU Late Payment Directive (2011/7/EU), applies exclusively to business-to-business transactions:
- Amount: A flat fee of exactly €40.00 is due in addition to any other claims, from the first day of default.
- No proof of costs required: The landlord does not need to demonstrate any actual administrative costs — the right to the €40 arises automatically upon default.
- One fee per default event: If the tenant is in default on multiple invoices simultaneously, a separate €40 fee attaches to each overdue payment.
- Set-off against collection costs: If the landlord subsequently incurs attorney or collection agency fees to recover the debt, the €40 is credited against (not added on top of) those recovery costs.
This €40 fee does not apply to residential tenancies — it is exclusively a B2B remedy.
Default Interest Rate for Commercial Leases (§ 288 Para. 2 BGB)
For business-to-business transactions, the statutory default interest rate in Germany is:
9 percentage points above the base interest rate (Basiszinssatz)
Compare this to the residential rate of only 5 percentage points above the base rate. This elevated rate reflects the assumption that commercial parties incur higher opportunity costs when capital is withheld.
How interest is calculated:
- Interest accrues on the gross overdue amount (including VAT, where applicable)
- Accrual begins the day after default (the day after the payment due date)
- Interest compounds if proceedings are lengthy
Key distinction: BGB § 551 (deposit cap), § 573c (3-month notice), and § 556d (Mietpreisbremse rent control) are all residential-only statutes and have no legal standing in commercial B2B lease relationships in Hamburg.
Reminder Letters in a Commercial Context
Unlike residential tenancies (where courts strictly limit reminder fees to €2.50–€5.00 per letter), commercial landlords typically exercise their default rights through more formal escalation:
- Day 1 of default: Automatic entitlement to €40 flat fee and default interest — no action required.
- Days 1–7: Many Hamburg commercial landlords issue a courtesy reminder email or letter citing the amount outstanding and the default interest accruing.
- If unpaid for 2+ months: The landlord's right to extraordinary termination (Fristlose Kündigung) crystalizes — in commercial leases, this cannot typically be cured by subsequent payment (see Commercial Eviction Process).
- Instruction of attorneys: Once extraordinary termination is contemplated, immediate attorney instruction is strongly advisable.
Contractual Late Fees: Are They Enforceable
Parties to a Hamburg commercial lease may contractually agree to late payment fees beyond the statutory minimums. However, even in B2B contexts:
- Fees set as a percentage of the outstanding amount (e.g., 1% per month) must not be so high as to constitute an unenforceable penalty clause.
- Courts assess reasonableness; fees above the equivalent of the statutory 9% interest rate annualized are at risk of challenge.
- Individually negotiated clauses (not standard form / AGB) enjoy more latitude.
Practical Recommendations for Hamburg Commercial Landlords
- Invoice clearly with an explicit due date on every rent demand.
- Track default from day 1 — your €40 claim and interest rights begin automatically.
- Keep a ledger of arrears accumulation — the two-month threshold for extraordinary termination is reached faster than many landlords realize.
- Engage legal counsel early — before serving extraordinary termination notices in commercial cases.
Landager's automated payment tracking instantly flags commercial rent arrears, calculates accruing default interest, and generates audit-ready records for enforcement proceedings.
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