Created by potrace 1.10, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2011

Greece Rent Increase Laws: Legal Limits & Notice

Also available in:

Learn about rent increase regulations in Greece, including the 3-year minimum lease, 75% CPI fallback, and mutual agreement rules.

Melvin Prince
5 min read
Verified May 2026Greece flag
Rent-increaseGreeceNationalRent increase laws greeceMaximum rent increase greece

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: May 2026.

Mutual Agreement
Required after 3 years
Annual Increase
75% of CPI if silent
Jurisdiction
First Instance Court
Last Verified
2026-05-05

In Greece, the increase (adjustment) of the rent for a residence is primarily governed by the freedom of contract between the landlord and the tenant, subject to the Greek Civil Code (Astikos Kodikas), effective since 23 February 1946, and the specialized Law 1703/1987, which originally came into force on 27 May 1987. While parties are free to determine the initial rent, the law provides a mandatory 3-year minimum duration and intervenes with a default adjustment mechanism if the contract is silent.

1. Free Agreement (The Basic Rule)

The initial rent is freely determined between the two parties when the contract is signed. Similarly, the annual (or biennial) increase is mainly determined by what is written in the Lease Agreement (which is declared in TAXISnet).

Common clauses (Adjustment Clauses):

  • Percentage Increase: "The rent will increase by 3% annually". (Perfectly legal and binding).
  • Adjustment based on Inflation (CPI): "Annual increase equal to the increase of the Consumer Price Index of the previous 12 months, increased by 1-2 points".
  • Fixed Rent: The agreement that the rent will not change throughout the locked mandatory 3-year period is also perfectly legal and often the most "safe" bait for good tenants.

2. When the Contract is Silent (Legal Adjustment)

But what happens if only the amount was filled in the electronic lease and there is no mention/condition (clause) on how it will be increased in the second or third year of the lease?

Under Article 1 paragraph 5 of Law 1703/1987 (as amended), the law intervenes:

  • If no increase clause has been agreed upon, the rent CANNOT be freely increased at the landlord's discretion!
  • The rent can be increased ONLY according to 75% of the change in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) of ELSTAT for the previous 12 months.

Example: If the rent is €1,000 and last year's inflation according to ELSTAT closed at 4%. 75% of 4% is 3%. Therefore, the landlord can legally (without prior agreement) demand from the 2nd year an increase of ONLY €30, shaping the new rent at €1,030. If they demand €1,200, the tenant is entitled to ignore them and pay €1,030!

3. Notice and Activation of the Increase

Even when the increase is foreseen in the contract (e.g., "Every January 1st adjustment based on CPI"), a written notice from the landlord is often required. If the landlord forgets to inform the tenant (e.g., because they forgot to check the ELSTAT numbers), they may lose the right to the increase for that month until they notify them (without retroactive effect, depending on jurisprudence).

4. After the End of the Three-Year Term

Once the mandatory 3-year period stipulated by Article 2 of Law 1703/1987 passes, the lease in Greece is considered indefinite or "tacitly renewed", unless a new contract is signed (e.g., another 3-year term). At this point, if there is no new agreement, the limit of 75% of the CPI still applies, however, the landlord at this stage acquires their heaviest weapon: The power to terminate the contract with timely notice, essentially forcing the tenant into negotiating a new, higher (current) market rent.

Substantive Legal Guidance in Greece

Explain the importance of the 3-year statutory minimum in Greece (Article 2 Law 1703/1987) and how it protects tenants even if the written lease is for a shorter duration. This is critical because the Greek courts (specifically the Single-Member Court of First Instance or Monomeles Protodikeio under the judicial consolidation of Law 5108/2024) prioritize the 'protection of the tenant's primary residence' while providing accelerated tools for landlords in cases of definite non-payment. Failures to accurately register leases on the TAXISnet portal can lead to your legal actions being dismissed and may result in heavy fines from the AADE tax authority.

Compliance Strategy for Greece Property Owners

Managing a rental portfolio in Greece requires a blend of digital compliance (TAXISnet) and traditional legal procedures (Exodiko). Owners must ensure that every lease is registered within 30 days of signing to maintain standing in the Single-Member Court of First Instance. Also, tracking the 3-year statutory minimum is essential for financial planning, as it limits when rent can be negotiated to market rates. Landager's specialized Greek compliance engine automates these reminders and provides a secure vault for certificates like the EPC (PEA) and Electrical Safety checks (YDE), ensuring you're always ready for an inspection or a new tenant onboarding process.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, CPI-linked rent tracking, and lease renewal automation - making it easy to stay compliant with Greece regulations.

Back to Greece Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

Sources & Official References

Enjoyed this guide? Share it:

📬 Get notified when these laws change

We'll email you when landlord-tenant laws update in No spam — only law changes.

We are actively mapping laws for Greece. Join the waitlist, and you'll be the first to know when it drops!

Major Cities in Greece

AthensThessalonikiPiraeusTyrnavosIrakleioPatraPeristeriLarisaAcharnesKallitheaKalamariaGlyfadaNikaiaVolosIlionEvosmosChalandriIlioupoliKeratsiniNea SmyrniMarousiAgios DimitriosZografosKavalaAigaleoIoanninaPalaio FaliroNea IoniaAgia ParaskeviTrikalaAthensThessalonikiPiraeusTyrnavosIrakleioPatraPeristeriLarisaAcharnesKallitheaKalamariaGlyfadaNikaiaVolosIlionEvosmosChalandriIlioupoliKeratsiniNea SmyrniMarousiAgios DimitriosZografosKavalaAigaleoIoanninaPalaio FaliroNea IoniaAgia ParaskeviTrikalaAthensThessalonikiPiraeusTyrnavosIrakleioPatraPeristeriLarisaAcharnesKallitheaKalamariaGlyfadaNikaiaVolosIlionEvosmosChalandriIlioupoliKeratsiniNea SmyrniMarousiAgios DimitriosZografosKavalaAigaleoIoanninaPalaio FaliroNea IoniaAgia ParaskeviTrikalaAthensThessalonikiPiraeusTyrnavosIrakleioPatraPeristeriLarisaAcharnesKallitheaKalamariaGlyfadaNikaiaVolosIlionEvosmosChalandriIlioupoliKeratsiniNea SmyrniMarousiAgios DimitriosZografosKavalaAigaleoIoanninaPalaio FaliroNea IoniaAgia ParaskeviTrikala

Discussion