Commercial Rental Laws in Saxony (2026 Overview)

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Thorough guide to commercial landlord-tenant law in Saxony, Germany. Learn about contract freedom, index-linked rent, and maintenance for 2026.

Melvin Prince
6 min lezen
Geverifieerd Apr 2026Duitsland flag
Commerciële wetgeving SaksenZakelijk huurcontract DuitslandCommerciële verhuur SaksenCommercieel vastgoedrecht

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.

Commercial landlord-tenant law in Saxony-and throughout Germany-differs significantly from residential law. While residential tenants enjoy extensive statutory protections under the German Civil Code (BGB), commercial leasing is governed by the principle of freedom of contract (Vertragsfreiheit).

Lease Duration
Usually fixed (5-10 years)
Social Protection
None
Legal Venue
Landgericht

This freedom allows commercial landlords in Saxony to negotiate almost every aspect of the lease, from security deposits and maintenance duties to operating costs and rent increases. However, this flexibility also demands meticulous drafting of the commercial lease agreement (Gewerbemietvertrag).

Key Differences from Residential Law

TopicResidential LeaseCommercial Lease
Eviction ProtectionVery strong (requires legitimate interest)None (subject to contract terms)
Rent Brake (Mietpreisbremse)Applies in Dresden & LeipzigDoes not apply
Security Deposit LimitMax. 3 months' cold rentFreely negotiable (often 3-6 months)
Notice Period (Landlord)3 to 9 months6 months to the end of a calendar quarter
Form RequirementWritten form for > 1 yearText form for > 1 year (since Jan 1, 2025)
Maintenance DutiesHeavily restricted transfer to tenantBroad transfer to tenant (e.g., Triple Net)

1. Security Deposits (Gewerbekaution)

Unlike residential leases, there is no statutory cap on commercial security deposits. Landlords typically request between 3 and 6 months' rent, but higher amounts are possible depending on the tenant's creditworthiness and the risk profile.

also, the strict rules requiring landlords to hold deposits in separate, insolvency-proof, interest-bearing accounts (BGB § 551) do not automatically apply to commercial leases unless explicitly agreed upon. Bank guarantees (Bankbürgschaft on first demand) are heavily favored over cash deposits in the commercial sector.

See our Commercial Security Deposits guide for more details.

2. Rent Adjustments

The strict rent controls of Dresden and Leipzig (the Mietpreisbremse and Kappungsgrenze) do not apply to commercial real estate. Landlords and tenants are free to negotiate rent increases. The most common mechanisms include:

  • Index-Linked Rent (Indexmiete): The rent adjusts automatically based on the German Consumer Price Index (CPI).
  • Stepped Rent (Staffelmiete): Pre-agreed fixed rent increases at specific intervals.
  • Turnover/Revenue Rent (Umsatzmiete): Common in retail and gastronomy, where rent is a percentage of the tenant's gross revenue (often combined with a base minimum rent).

See our Commercial Rent Increases guide for more details.

3. The New "Text Form" Requirement (Effective 2025)

A monumental shift in German commercial leasing took effect on January 1, 2025. Previously, any commercial lease lasting longer than one year had to strictly comply with the "written form" (Schriftform)-requiring original, wet-ink signatures on a unified physical document.

Now, commercial leases longer than one year only require text form (Textform under BGB § 126b). This means contracts, amendments, and addendums can be legally finalized via email, PDF, or electronic signature platforms without strict physical signatures, drastically streamlining lease negotiations and property management. (Note: Existing contracts signed before 2025 must adhere to the old written form until December 31, 2025).

See our Commercial Lease Requirements guide for more details.

4. Eviction and Termination

The statutory notice period for ordinary termination of a commercial lease is six months to the end of a calendar quarter (BGB § 580a).

However, most commercial leases in Saxony are fixed-term contracts (e.g., 5 or 10 years). An ordinary termination is generally excluded during a fixed term unless special break options are negotiated. Immediate, extraordinary termination (fristlose Kündigung) is possible for severe breaches, such as a two-month rent default, and commercial tenants do not have the "grace period payment" right that residential tenants possess to cure an eviction.

See our Commercial Eviction Process guide for more details.

5. Maintenance and Operating Costs

Commercial landlords can transfer significantly more maintenance responsibilities to the tenant than residential landlords.

  • Triple Net (NNN) Leases are standard, passing all operating costs, property taxes, and insurance to the tenant.
  • Landlords typically only retain responsibility for "roof and structure" (Dach und Fach), while the tenant maintains the interior and all building technology within the leased premises.

See our Commercial Maintenance Obligations guide for more details.

Landager provides commercial property managers with dynamic lease templates updated for the new 2025 text form rules, automated tracking for complex index rent adjustments, and detailed deadline management for multi-year lease options-ensuring your commercial portfolio operates flawlessly under German law.

Explore more Commercial Compliance topics for Saxony:

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, local rent cap compliance, and maintenance requests - making it easy to stay compliant with Saxony regulations.

Back to Saxony Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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