Legal essentials for tenants
German tenancy law is clear, but not always intuitive. These guides explain what is enforceable, what is negotiable, and what is not.
How to Evict a Tenant in France: The Legal Process Step by Step
A step-by-step legal guide for landlords navigating tenant eviction in France, covering valid grounds, the commandement de payer, court proceedings, the trêve hivernale, and enforcement timelines.
How to Prepare a French Tenancy Agreement: A Landlord's Complete Guide
A French tenancy agreement is not a freeform document. Mandatory clauses are set by law, forbidden clauses can be struck out by a judge, and the DDT must be attached at signing. This guide walks landlords through every step of preparing a compliant lease from scratch.
How to Write a Lease Termination Letter in France: Templates and Legal Rules
In France, ending a lease requires a formal written notice called a congé — sent by registered post or bailiff. Get the format, wording, or delivery method wrong and the notice is invalid. This guide covers every legal requirement and includes a template you can use immediately.
Resolving Tenant-Landlord Disputes in France: Your Options Explained
A step-by-step guide to dispute resolution routes in France, from free ADIL advice and CDC conciliation through to the tribunal judiciaire, with practical guidance on documentation and legal aid.
French Landlord-Tenant Law: The Essential Guide
French tenancy law is built around the Loi du 6 juillet 1989, which defines three contract types, caps rent increases to the IRL index, and sets strict rules on deposits and notice. This guide covers everything landlords and tenants need to know.
How to Give Notice to Vacate a Rental Property in France: A Legal Guide for Tenants
Giving notice in France requires the right method, the right period, and the right wording — or the landlord can hold you to extra rent. This guide covers every step from drafting the letter to getting your deposit back.
How to Legally Increase Rent in France: A Landlord's Step-by-Step Guide
Rent increases in France are strictly regulated. The IRL index caps annual rises, and additional rules apply in zones tendues. This guide walks landlords through the legal process step by step, from checking eligibility to sending notice.
Ending Your Rental Agreement in Germany: A Legal Guide for Tenants
German tenancy law gives tenants strong protections when ending a lease, but only if the correct steps are followed. This guide covers notice periods, written form requirements, fixed-term lease rules, and how to recover your deposit.
Landlord Maintenance Duties in France: What the Law Requires
French law places a comprehensive maintenance duty on landlords throughout the tenancy. This guide explains the decent housing standard, which repairs fall to the landlord, which fall to the tenant, and what tenants can do when a landlord refuses to act.
Repairs and Maintenance in Germany: What Tenants Are Legally Responsible For
German law puts most repair obligations on the landlord — but tenants do carry responsibility for damage they cause, for reporting defects promptly, and in some cases for minor repairs under a valid contract clause. This guide explains where the line is.
Rental Agreements in Germany: Legal Essentials for Landlords
For private landlords renting furnished apartments in Germany, a legally sound rental contract is your most important safeguard. This guide covers every mandatory clause under German tenancy law, from fixed-term justification to deposit handling and utility cost models.
Tenant Privacy Rights in Germany: When Can a Landlord Enter Your Flat?
Under German law, your home is constitutionally protected. A landlord cannot enter without your consent, and unauthorised entry is a criminal offence. This guide covers the rules on notice, emergencies, viewings, inspections, and surveillance cameras.
Tenant Rights in France: A Complete Legal Guide
The Loi du 6 juillet 1989 gives French tenants some of the strongest protections in Europe: rent caps, a winter eviction ban, a two-month deposit ceiling, and criminal penalties for landlords who violate your right to peaceful enjoyment. This guide explains it all.
The Apartment Deposit in Germany: All You Need to Know
The German security deposit (Kaution) is capped at three months' cold rent by law, must be held in a separate account, and cannot be withheld for normal wear and tear. This guide covers every stage from payment to return.
Key Handover Protocol in Germany: A Complete Guide for Landlords and Tenants
The key handover protocol is a simple document with significant legal weight. Done correctly, it protects both parties when keys are issued and returned. Here is exactly what to include and what the law requires.
Mietvertrag Explained: Your German Rental Contract Guide
This guide explains the German rental contract (Mietvertrag) in plain language: covering what it is, the difference between open-ended and fixed-term agreements, how the rent structure works, and which clauses landlords commonly include that are legally unenforceable.
What to Do If Your Landlord Withholds Your Deposit in Germany
This article explains German tenants' legal rights when a landlord withholds the security deposit, and walks through the escalation steps from a formal written demand to Mieterverein support and court proceedings: with a clear breakdown of what landlords can and cannot legally deduct.
Übergabeprotokoll: The Handover Protocol and Why It Protects You
The Übergabeprotokoll is Germany's apartment handover protocol — a signed record of a flat's condition at the start and end of a tenancy. Getting it right protects your Kaution and prevents disputes.