Commercial Tenant Eviction Process in Lithuania
Legally compliant guide to the commercial eviction process in Lithuania, including notice requirements and court procedures.
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.
Evicting a commercial tenant in Lithuania requires executing the precise termination procedures outlined in the lease agreement while successfully navigating the boundaries of the Civil Code. While commercial landlords have stronger use compared to residential owners, forced removal still requires judicial intervention.
Contract-Driven Termination
In commercial real estate, the lease contract reigns supreme. The steps required to terminate a lease and initiate an eviction depend entirely on the conditions explicitly defined in the agreement.
1. Fixed-Term Expiration A commercial lease ends automatically on the terminal date. If the business fails to vacate the premises, they are unlawfully occupying the property.
2. Early Termination for Breach A landlord can prematurely terminate the lease and demand the tenant vacate if a material breach occurs. Standard commercial breaches include: - Non-payment of rent, service charges, or taxes. - Unauthorized subletting or assignment of the lease. - Engaging in unapproved commercial activities on the premises. - Bankruptcy or insolvency of the tenant entity.
The Notice to Cure To legally evict a commercial tenant for a breach, the Lithuanian Civil Code typically requires the landlord to first issue a formal Notice to Cure. - This written warning must explicitly state the violation (e.g., two months of unpaid rent) and provide the tenant a "reasonable" deadline to rectify the situation. - Failing to issue an opportunity to cure before terminating the lease can render the eviction invalid in court.
The Formal Eviction Procedure Even if a commercial tenant is blatantly violating the lease and ignoring termination notices, extrajudicial "self-help" evictions (like physically locking the business out or removing their inventory) are heavily scrutinized and often illegal, exposing the landlord to severe damages for business interruption.
Step 1: Formal Demand After the cure period lapses, issue a formal demand for the premises to be vacated and the keys returned by a specific date, alongside a demand for outstanding debts.
Step 2: Filing a Lawsuit The landlord must file a claim in the competent Lithuanian court requesting a formal order of eviction. They will present the lease agreement, the notices served, and the evidence of the uncured breach.
Step 3: Execution by a Bailiff If the court rules in favor of the landlord and issues an eviction order, the tenant must comply. If they do not, the landlord cannot physically execute the order themselves. They must hire a licensed bailiff (antstolis). The bailiff has the authority to orchestrate the physical removal of the business and its assets.
Accelerated Procedures The Lithuanian legal system does provide forms of accelerated procedures for debt recovery (documentary procedures) if the debt is undisputed. However, physically evicting an entrenched commercial tenant can still require several months. Because time is money, sophisticated landlords mitigate this risk by demanding initial Bank Guarantees capable of covering rent during a protracted eviction process.
Getting Started with Compliance Document every communication extensively to prepare for potential litigation. use Landager to securely manage lease agreements, automate default notices, and record all interactions perfectly to protect your commercial real estate investments.
How Landager Helps
Landager automates your Centre of Registers filing deadlines, tracks CPI-based rent escalations, and ensures your commercial property meets all Lithuanian Civil Code requirements.
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