Commercial Renting and the Tenancy Act: Overview for B2B in Norway

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A guide to commercial renting (property) in Norway. Learn about the Tenancy Act's chapter 11, freedom of contract, and Norsk Eiendom's standard contracts.

5 min read
Verified Mar 2026
norwaycommercial-leasehusleielovenb2bnorsk-eiendom

Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.

Commercial renting in Norway differs massively from the highly regulated residential market. Although commercial renting is also anchored in the Tenancy Act (Husleieloven), the law provides very extensive freedom of contract (waivability) when the tenant is a company (Business-to-Business, B2B). The law is mainly used as "background law", while the signed contract – often in a standard format – dictates everyday life.

Disclaimer: This guide provides guidance for commercial renting. In B2B, the contract takes precedence. Ensure that you use industry-standardized contracts for commercial property. Information is last verified in March 2026.

1. Freedom of Contract in Commercial Relations

In residential rentals, you cannot write agreements that place the tenant in a worse position than the law. In commerce (Tenancy Act § 1-2), the parties are basically free to agree on almost anything, with a few mandatory exceptions (such as that one cannot take the law into one's own hands to physically evict the tenant).

  • The Law's Standard Fallback: If the parties forget to address an issue in the contract (such as who should maintain the floors), the Tenancy Act's resident-favorable regulation will "kick in" as standard.
  • Therefore the law is waived: To avoid the landlord being stuck with the bill for the tenant's extensive operational wear and tear, B2B contracts are explicitly designed to push responsibility onto the tenant. E.g.: "Tenancy Act § 5-3 is waived – the tenant has full internal maintenance responsibility."

2. Norsk Eiendom's Standard Contracts

There is no "statutory" standard form, but in practice, the entire Norwegian industry is dominated by the standard contracts prepared by the organizations Norsk Eiendom, the Norwegian Association of Real Estate Agents (NEF) and the Forum for Commercial Real Estate Agents. These agreements are often referred to as the "Standard Commercial Lease Contract" or "Meglerstandarden" (The Broker Standard).

  • They are widely recognized as the industry norm and balance the risk in a way that is accepted in the market, while simultaneously explicitly waiving the Tenancy Act on critical points to protect the owner's cash flow (Landlord-friendly positioning for maintenance, VAT, and guarantees).

3. Typical Commercial Terms (B2B Standard)

TermThe Law's Starting Point (If unregulated)Practice (According to Standard Contracts)
Rent Sum / RegulationNo CPI without 1 month notice / 1 year restCPI 100% annually - without prior notice before adjustment on the bill
Minimum Lease Time3 years (fixed-term)3 - 10 years (very common with long fixed-term binding B2B)
Termination3 months for indefiniteFixed minimum lease time, thereafter e.g., 6 months notice. No right to regret mid-period
Internal MaintenanceOften left to owner for large equipment100% transferred to the corporate tenant's budget
Bank Guarantee (Security)Max 6 months' depositTargeted Bank Guarantee/On-Demand Guarantee of typically 6 months' rent plus VAT

4. Turnover-based Rent and CPI

Particularly in shopping centers or in retail, the norm is often turnover-based rent. Then the contract has a minimum rent floor (e.g., 50,000 NOK/month), and then the company pays a percentage (e.g., 6%) if the turnover tips over a certain limit (threshold). Regulation of the minimum rent occurs annually with the Consumer Price Index (CPI), but liberated from the Tenancy Act's strict procedural rules.

5. Value Added Tax (VAT) Trap

Perhaps the biggest trap a Norwegian landlord can fall into concerns VAT. Renting out real estate is basically exempt from VAT in Norway. However, the vast majority of commercial landlords choose voluntary registration for VAT, to be able to deduct VAT on their own construction costs and maintenance!

  • The Risk: The landlord can ONLY maintain this VAT claim if the Commercial tenant actually conducts VAT-liable business in the building (e.g., IT consultant, clothing store).
  • If the owner consciously or unconsciously moves a doctor, physiotherapist, or dentist (tax-exempt industry) into 50% of the area, perhaps tens of millions in previous construction VAT deductions must be paid retrospectively back to the tax authorities in so-called "adjustment rules". Standard contracts always have heavy and binding VAT appendices / assurances.

Automate Your B2B Management with Landager

Manually monitoring turnover figures from stores for threshold calculation or annual 100% CPI indexation on a massive office portfolio undermines the yield and takes valuable management time. Landager's cloud-based software for commercial property processes Norsk Eiendom's framework conditions into the hardware. It connects directly to public VAT registers to check BrĂžnnĂžysund AS statuses, activates annual rent revision flawlessly once in November, and integrates directly into the company's accounting for seamless and flawless rental invoicing.

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