Landlord Maintenance Obligations in Bremen: Rights, Duties, and Habitability

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Learn about your maintenance obligations as a landlord in Bremen. Understand 'Dach und Fach', minor repair clauses, and the rules surrounding rent reduction.

Melvin Prince
6 phút đọc
Đã xác minh Apr 2026Đức flag
Bảo trìSửa chữabremenĐứcrent-reduction

Tuyên bố Miễn trừ Trách nhiệm Pháp lý

Nội dung này chỉ dành cho mục đích thông tin và giáo dục chung. Nó không cấu thành tư vấn pháp lý và không nên dựa vào đó. Luật pháp thường xuyên thay đổi — luôn xác minh các quy định hiện hành và tham khảo ý kiến luật sư có giấy phép hành nghề tại khu vực của bạn để được tư vấn cụ thể cho tình huống của bạn. Landager là một nền tảng quản lý bất động sản, không phải là một công ty luật.Thông tin được xác minh lần cuối: April 2026.

Maintaining the condition and habitability of a rented property is one of the most substantial ongoing responsibilities a landlord holds under German law. In Bremen, as throughout Germany, the foundation for maintenance obligations lies firmly in the German Civil Code (BGB), specifically the rule maintaining the property in "contractual condition." Failing these duties can result in rent reduction (Mietminderung) or direct civil liability.

Tuyên bố Miễn trừ Trách nhiệm Pháp lýHướng dẫn này cung cấp thông tin pháp lý chung. Luật cho thuê có thể thay đổi. Luôn tham khảo ý kiến công chứng viên hoặc luật sư có giấy phép hành nghề tại khu vực này.
Security Deposit
3 Months’ Cold Rent
Notice Period
3 Months (Tenant)
Rent Control
Varies by City

Fundamental Landlord Duties

Under § 535 BGB, the landlord is legally mandated to:

  1. Hand the property over to the tenant in a condition that is suitable for the agreed contractual use.
  2. Maintain and preserve the property in this suitable condition for the entire lease duration.
  3. Bear the structural and public burdens placed upon the rented property.

This core principle means that any defect affecting habitability or safety—unless purposely caused by the tenant—must be remedied by the landlord at their own expense.

What is the Landlord Responsible For

In German legal parlance, landlords are responsible for "Dach und Fach" (Roof and Shell) as well as primary technical facilities.

AreaExamples of Landlord Responsibility
Structural IntegrityRoof leaks, cracked facades, load-bearing walls, foundation issues
PlumbingBroken main pipes, blocked drains behind walls, hot water supply failure
Fixtures (Major)Replacing severely rotten window frames or external doors

The Minor Repair Clause (Kleinreparaturklausel)

To alleviate the burden of fixing minor, everyday wear-and-tear, it is common and legal practice for landlords to include a Minor Repair Clause in the lease agreement. This legally shifts the financial cost of very small repairs to the tenant.

Validity Requirements A Minor Repair Clause is only legally valid under strict constraints formulated by the Federal Court of Justice:

ConstraintLimit / Requirement
Single Repair CapAround €100–€120 per individual incident
Scope of ApplicabilityOnly items the tenant directly accesses constantly

Common examples of valid minor repairs:

  • Dripping faucets and broken shower heads
  • Loose door handles or window latches
  • Defective light switches or electrical sockets
  • Broken roller blind pulleys

Common examples of invalid minor repairs (always landlord duty):

  • Pipes buried within the wall
  • The central heating system
  • Exterior window frames
  • Silicone sealing strips around a bathtub

** Detail:** The Minor Repair Clause only transfers the financial burden, not the logistical one. If a light switch breaks, the landlord remains responsible for organizing the electrician. If the invoice amounts to €80, the landlord may pass the bill to the tenant. If the invoice comes to €150, it surpasses the limit, and the landlord bears the entire €150 cost.

Defects and Rent Reduction (Mietminderung)

The Tenant's Duty to Report Under § 536c BGB, the tenant has a legal obligation to inform the landlord of a defect immediately once they discover it

Failure to report the defect promptly deprives the landlord of the chance to repair it and can make the tenant liable for any subsequent compounding damage.

The Right to Rent Reduction If a defect significantly impairs the habitability of the apartment, the tenant is legally entitled to reduce their rent under § 536 BGB

Unlike in some countries, this is an automatic right in Germany—it applies from the moment the landlord is notified of the defect until the repair is fully complete. Typical rent reduction benchmarks established by German courts include:

DefectPossible Reduction Percentage
Complete heating failure in winterUp to 100%
Severe mold infestation10–20%
Broken elevator (if on a high floor)5–15%

Note: These percentages are guidelines based on case law. Every situation is judged individually based on severity.

The Right to Self-Remedy If a tenant properly reports a severe defect, sets a reasonable deadline, and the landlord fails to act, the tenant holds the right under § 536a BGB to hire a professional to fix the issue and subsequently deduct the invoice cost from the upcoming rent payment (Self-Remedy).

Cosmetic Repairs (Schönheitsreparaturen) Cosmetic repairs include painting and wallpapering walls, ceilings, inside window frames, radiators, and the interior side of the apartment door

By default, the BGB states that all maintenance—including cosmetic painting—is the landlord's responsibility. Landlords can successfully transfer this duty to the tenant via the lease agreement, but only if the clauses are flawlessly drafted. * No Rigid Schedules: Clauses dictating a tenant must paint every exactly 3 or 5 years are universally voided. * Unrenovated Handover Rules: Based on a landmark BGH ruling, if a tenant moves into an apartment that is demonstrably "unrenovated," the landlord cannot force the tenant to perform cosmetic repairs when moving out, regardless of what the lease says.

Smoke Detector Laws in Bremen The state of Bremen enforces strict fire safety regulations regarding smoke detectors: * Installation: The property owner/landlord is legally required to install smoke detectors. * Locations: Minimum of one in every bedroom, every children’s room, and any hallway serving as an escape route. * Maintenance: Crucially, in Bremen, the default responsibility for annual maintenance and testing falls on the owner/landlord (unless explicitly transferred to the tenant via the lease).

Best Practices for Landlords * Respond Immediately: Always acknowledge defect reports from tenants swiftly

Quick action prevents compounding damage and limits rent reduction claims. * Document Thoroughly: Maintain detailed service records for all heating, plumbing, and elevator repairs. * Check the Lease Clauses: Have a lawyer ensure your Minor Repair and Cosmetic Repair clauses comply with the latest BGH rulings to prevent holding the financial bag. * Scheduled Maintenance: Conduct preventative maintenance on critical building systems annually before the winter heating period begins.

How Landager Can Help Coordinating tradespeople while adhering to strict repair deadlines is a major challenge for landlords

Landager streamlines property management in Bremen by providing a ticket system to log tenant defect reports instantly. The platform allows you to track repair statuses centrally and quickly verify whether an issue qualifies under a legally compliant minor repair limit. Back to the Bremen Landlord-Tenant laws Overview.

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