Commercial Maintenance Obligations in Baden-Württemberg: Shell, Core, and Triple-Net

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Maintenance responsibilities in German commercial leases: what landlords can transfer to tenants, double/triple-net structures, and AGB limitations.

Melvin Prince
3 分钟阅读
已验证 Apr 2026德国 flag
Commercial-maintenance净净净dach-und-fachgewerbemietrechtbaden-württemberg

法律免责声明

本内容仅供一般信息和教育目的。它不构成法律建议,不应作为法律建议依赖。法律法规经常变化——请务必核实当前法规并咨询您所在司法管辖区的持证律师,以获取针对您具体情况的建议。Landager 是一个物业管理平台,而非律师事务所。信息最后验证时间: April 2026.

While German law assigns all maintenance and repair obligations to the landlord by default, commercial leases routinely shift a substantial portion of these costs to the tenant. However, even in the commercial arena, standard-form contracts are not immune from judicial review — and German courts have drawn firm lines on what can be transferred.

法律免责声明本指南提供一般法律信息。租赁法律可能会发生变化。请务必咨询该地区持证公证人或律师。
Security Deposit
3 Months’ Cold Rent
Notice Period
3 Months (Tenant)
Rent Control
Varies by City

The Default Position: Landlord Responsibility

Under § 535 Abs. 1 BGB, the landlord must provide and maintain the property in a condition suitable for its contractual use throughout the tenancy. This includes the building structure, roof, facade, central systems (heating, plumbing, electrical), and all landlord-provided fixtures. This default is almost always modified by contract in commercial settings.

Net Lease Structures

Borrowing from Anglo-American practice (and increasingly common in German logistics, single-tenant office, and retail leasing), net lease models allocate costs as follows:

  • Double-Net Lease: In addition to base rent, the tenant pays operating costs plus property taxes and building insurance.
  • Triple-Net Lease: The tenant assumes virtually all costs — including structural maintenance and repair of roof, facade, and core building systems ("Dach und Fach").

AGB Limitations!

A full Triple-Net allocation is legally problematic in standard-form contracts (AGB). Under consistent BGH case law:

  • "Shell and core" (Dach und Fach) maintenance — exterior facade, foundation, load-bearing walls, the main roof, and central shared systems — must remain with the landlord in pre-formulated contracts. Transferring these costs via AGB constitutes unreasonable disadvantage to the tenant (§ 307 BGB) and is void.
  • A genuine Triple-Net allocation is only enforceable through a true individually negotiated agreement (Individualvereinbarung) — requiring demonstrable negotiation of risk allocation and price concession between the parties.

What Can Be Validly Transferred to the Tenant (in AGB)

Commercial landlords may validly require the tenant to bear:

  • Cosmetic repairs within the leased premises (often without rigid schedules)
  • Minor repairs to items within the tenant's exclusive use, subject to per-repair caps (€150–200) and annual limits (8–10% of annual rent)
  • Maintenance of tenant-installed equipment and systems exclusively serving the leased unit
  • Interior maintenance of walls, floors, and fittings within the premises

Fit-Out and Reinstatement

Commercial tenants often make significant alterations (medical practice layout, commercial kitchen, retail fit-out). A critical lease clause is the reinstatement obligation (Rückbauverpflichtung) at lease end.

  • BGB default: The tenant must remove alterations and restore the original condition (§ 546 BGB).
  • Common variations: Contracts may allow the tenant to leave improvements in place (without compensation) or give the landlord the right to demand reinstatement at the tenant's cost.
  • ESG consideration: In newer Baden-Württemberg lease templates, sustainability and circular economy principles increasingly influence reinstatement clauses — favoring reuse of materials over full strip-out.
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