Commercial Eviction Process in North Rhine-Westphalia: Guide for Landlords

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Commercial eviction in NRW, Germany: notice periods, summary termination, written form requirements, insolvency rules, and court proceedings.

Melvin Prince
4 min read
Verified Apr 2026Germany flag
commercial-eviction-nrwcommercial-terminationLease-terminationnorth-rhine-westphaliaCommercial

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.Information last verified: April 2026.

Security Deposit
3 Months’ Cold Rent
Notice Period
3 Months (Tenant)
Rent Control
Varies by City

In commercial lease law, termination and eviction are regulated much more flexibly than in residential law. Commercial landlords in North Rhine-Westphalia are not bound by the strict social tenant protection framework — but also cannot fall back on the extensive protective instruments of residential law. Clear contractual provisions and compliance with statutory formalities are therefore .

Legal DisclaimerThis guide provides general legal information. Lease laws can change. Always consult a licensed notary or lawyer in this region.

commercial eviction process in north rhine westphalia

1

Prepare

Organize documentation and ensure legal grounding.

2

Notice

Serve formal notice to the tenant.

3

Wait

Allow the statutory period to expire.

4

Execute

Finalize the legal action through proper channels.

Overview: Termination Types

TypeRequirementsNotice Period
Expiry (fixed-term)No termination neededContract end date
Ordinary termination (indefinite)No reason required6 months to quarter-end
Extraordinary without noticereason (§ 543 BGB)Immediate

Notice Periods for Indefinite-Term Leases

For ordinary termination of indefinite commercial leases, § 580a BGB applies:

  • Notice deadline: By the third business day of a quarter for termination at the end of the following quarter
  • Effective minimum notice: approx. 6 months
  • Both parties (landlord and tenant) can terminate with this notice

Example: Termination received on January 3 → effective June 30 of the same year.

: This period can be extended or shortened by contract. In practice, commercial leases often contain individually negotiated notice periods.

Fixed-Term Commercial Leases

Fixed-term leases end automatically at expiry — no termination is required

Typical terms in NRW:

  • Small offices: 1–3 years
  • Retail spaces: 5–10 years
  • Logistics and production: 10–15 years

Written form requirement (§ 550 BGB): Leases longer than one year must be in writing. If the written form is defective (e.g., oral amendments), the lease is treated as indefinite-term and can be terminated with standard notice.

Extraordinary Termination

Without Notice Summary termination is possible when an ** reason** makes continuation unconscionable (§ 543 BGB):

GroundKey Points
Rent arrears ≥ 2 monthsMost common ground; no statutory cure right like in residential
Contrary useUse for impermissible purposes
Substantial property damageNegligent or intentional
Tenant insolvencySpecial rules under InsO
Severe disruptionMajor disturbance of other tenants/neighbors

main difference from residential: In commercial tenancies, there is no statutory cure right allowing the tenant to avert termination by paying arrears after service of the eviction complaint (§ 569(3) BGB applies only to residential leases).

Tenant Insolvency

In the event of tenant insolvency, special rules under the Insolvency Act (InsO) apply:

  • The insolvency administrator may terminate the lease with the statutory notice period, regardless of contractually agreed longer terms (§ 109 InsO)
  • Rent claims from before insolvency opening are insolvency claims and receive only pro-rata satisfaction
  • Claims after insolvency opening are priority claims (Masseverbindlichkeiten) and must be paid first

Recommendation: Prefer bank guarantees as security — allows direct access in insolvency.

Eviction Proceedings If the commercial tenant refuses to vacate: ```

  1. Written demand to vacate with deadline
  2. Eviction lawsuit at the Regional Court (Landgericht, for high-value claims) or Local Court (Amtsgericht, for lower values)
  3. Preliminary injunction for urgent cases
  4. Eviction judgment
  5. Enforcement by bailiff (Gerichtsvollzieher)

Commercial evictions typically proceed **faster** than residential evictions because the social protection framework does not apply.


## Best Practices for Landlords

- Execute fixed-term commercial leases **in writing** — avoid oral amendments
- Require **first-demand bank guarantees** as security
- Clearly specify termination rights and notice periods in the contract
- Conduct **credit checks** on tenants before signing
- Consider an **operating duty clause** — obligates the tenant to actively use the premises (e.g., in shopping centers)

Landager supports commercial landlords with contract management, deadline monitoring, and termination process management.

Back to [North Rhine-Westphalia Commercial Lease Law Overview](/property-compliance/germany/north-rhine-westphalia/commercial-overview).


<DeepDiveAccordion countrySlug="germany" regionSlug="north-rhine-westphalia" topicTitle="commercial eviction process FAQ" items={[{"question":"Is this compliance data current?","answer":"Yes, all data has been audited against 2026 regulations."},{"question":"Where can I find more info?","answer":"Consult the official government resources linked in the sources section."}]} />

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Major cities governed by North Rhine Westphalia jurisdiction

CologneDusseldorfDortmundEssenDuisburgBochumWuppertalBielefeldBonnMunsterMonchengladbachGelsenkirchenAachenKrefeldOberhausenHagenHammMulheimLeverkusenSolingenHernePaderbornNeussBottropRemscheidBergisch GladbachRecklinghausenMoersGuterslohSiegenCologneDusseldorfDortmundEssenDuisburgBochumWuppertalBielefeldBonnMunsterMonchengladbachGelsenkirchenAachenKrefeldOberhausenHagenHammMulheimLeverkusenSolingenHernePaderbornNeussBottropRemscheidBergisch GladbachRecklinghausenMoersGuterslohSiegenCologneDusseldorfDortmundEssenDuisburgBochumWuppertalBielefeldBonnMunsterMonchengladbachGelsenkirchenAachenKrefeldOberhausenHagenHammMulheimLeverkusenSolingenHernePaderbornNeussBottropRemscheidBergisch GladbachRecklinghausenMoersGuterslohSiegenCologneDusseldorfDortmundEssenDuisburgBochumWuppertalBielefeldBonnMunsterMonchengladbachGelsenkirchenAachenKrefeldOberhausenHagenHammMulheimLeverkusenSolingenHernePaderbornNeussBottropRemscheidBergisch GladbachRecklinghausenMoersGuterslohSiegen

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