Landlord Disclosures in Saxony (2026 Guide)
Detailed guide to mandatory landlord disclosures in Saxony, Germany. Learn about energy certificates, previous rent, and local ordinances for 2026.
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.
Landlords in Saxony must comply with several mandatory disclosure rules dictated by German federal law and specific regional rent control ordinances. Failing to provide these required documents and notifications to tenants can result in severe fines, the inability to legally charge higher rents, or tenant claims for rent reduction.
1. Energy Performance Certificate (Energieausweis)
The German Building Energy Act (GEG) places strict energy disclosure requirements on all residential landlords.
Advertising Requirements When listing an apartment for rent online or in print, the landlord must include specific energy data from a valid Energy Performance Certificate:
- The type of certificate (Energy Demand or Energy Consumption).
- The final energy consumption or demand value in kWh/(m²·a).
- The main energy source for heating (e.g., gas, district heating).
- The building's year of construction.
- The energy efficiency class (A+ to H) for buildings built or certificates issued after May 2014.
Viewing and Handover
The landlord must proactively present the Energy Performance Certificate to prospective tenants during the property viewing. Upon signing the lease, a copy of the certificate must be physically or digitally handed over to the tenant.
Penalty: Failure to provide the energy certificate or missing required information in advertisements can result in administrative fines of up to €10,000.
2. Rent Brake Exemptions (Dresden and Leipzig)
Saxony has imposed the "Rent Brake" (Mietpreisbremse) in Dresden and Leipzig to stabilize housing costs. In these cities, new leases generally cannot exceed the local comparable rent by more than 10%.
However, there are exceptions. If a landlord applies an exception to charge a rent higher than the Rent Brake allows, they must disclose this reason to the tenant spontaneously before the lease is signed (BGB § 556g).
Mandatory disclosures include:
- Prior Rent: Disclosing the exact rent amount paid by the previous tenant, if the landlord is using the "prior rent protection" exception.
- Modernization: Providing proof and details of detailed modernization carried out within the last three years.
- New Construction: Stating that the apartment is a new build first occupied after October 1, 2014.
Crucial Note: If the landlord fails to provide this disclosure before the contract is signed, they cannot invoke the exception. They will be limited to the standard 10% cap until two years after the information is finally disclosed.
3. Annual Operating Cost Statement (Betriebskostenabrechnung)
If the tenant pays advance monthly installments for utilities and operating costs (which is standard practice), the landlord has a strict legal obligation to provide a detailed, itemized annual settlement.
- Deadline: The statement must reach the tenant within 12 months after the end of the specified billing period.
- Consequence: If the landlord misses this 12-month deadline, they forfeit any right to demand a supplementary payment from the tenant for that year (though they must still refund any overpayments to the tenant).
- Transparency: The statement must clearly detail the total costs, the distribution key used (e.g., square meters or consumption), the tenant's specific share, and the advance payments made. Tenants have the right to inspect the original invoices.
4. CO2 Cost Apportionment
Under the CO2 Cost Apportionment Act (CO2KostAufG) introduced in 2023, the costs for CO2 pricing on heating fuels (like natural gas and oil) are no longer borne entirely by the tenant. They are split between the landlord and tenant based on the building's energy efficiency.
Landlords must:
- Determine the building's specific CO2 emissions.
- Classify the building into the correct tier of the statutory 10-tier model.
- Transparently disclose the calculation and the landlord's share of the CO2 costs in the annual operating cost statement.
5. Modernization Notices
If a landlord plans to carry out modernization measures (e.g., energetic refurbishments, installing an elevator) that will result in a subsequent rent increase, they must formally notify the tenant at least three months before the work begins (BGB § 555c).
The notification must include:
- The exact type and anticipated scope of the measures.
- The expected start date and duration of the work.
- The calculated estimated rent increase.
- The expected future operating costs.
- Information on the tenant's right to claim hardship.
6. Remote Reading of Heating Meters
By the end of 2026, all heating and hot water meters in multi-family homes must be readable remotely (fernablesbar). If remote meters are installed, landlords must provide tenants with monthly billing and consumption information for heating and hot water.
Failure to install the meters or provide the consumption information gives the tenant the right to reduce the heating cost portion of their bill by 3%.
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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