Tenants should observe the prohibition on profit in subletting

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Subletting and the economic limits of tenancy law

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Subletting can be a permissible means for tenants to temporarily let unused living space. However, it operates within clear legal guardrails: the lease relationship is generally designed for the tenant’s own use; making the premises available to third parties requires—depending on the arrangement—the landlord’s consent. In addition, the question arises whether, and to what extent, a tenant may derive a financial benefit from subletting.
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Decision of the Federal Court of Justice (Bundesgerichtshof) of 28/01/2026 (Case No. VIII ZR 228/23)

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Facts of the case in outline

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The Federal Court of Justice (BGH) had to decide a case in which, according to the decision’s description, an apartment was sublet in part and/or for certain periods with the landlord’s consent. The key issue was that the tenant demanded payments from the subtenants that exceeded the tenant’s own obligations under the lease. The landlord derived claims from this and objected to subletting which, in the landlord’s view, economically resulted in the tenant making a profit.
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Core legal assessment

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According to the published reporting on the decision, the BGH makes clear that granting permission to sublet is not intended to open up an additional source of income for the tenant. Rather, subletting is typically meant to help reduce or offset the tenant’s own rent burden when the tenant cannot fully use the apartment themselves.

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At its core, this delineates an economic framework: granting the right to sublet does not automatically mean that the tenant may collect from the subtenant a payment that results in a surplus over the tenant’s own costs. Permission to sublet and its conditions must therefore be assessed in light of the respective lease agreement and the landlord’s specific consent.
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Significance for the contractual relationships between landlord, tenant and subtenant

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Distinguishing between cost coverage and surplus

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According to the source, the decision emphasizes that subletting is, as a starting point, not aimed at profit. Decisive here is what payments the tenant themselves owes and how these relate to the amounts demanded from subtenants. To the extent that the economic structure of the subletting goes beyond offsetting the tenant’s own burden, this can become legally relevant.
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Consent to subletting as a point of interpretation and dispute

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At the same time, it becomes clear that permission granted to sublet does not necessarily cover every specific arrangement. What matters is whether the content and scope of the consent also include the agreed terms and conditions, or whether the subletting—such as due to an economically excessive subrent—falls outside the permitted framework.
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Classification and source

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The above presentation is based on the report “Mieter darf mit Untervermietung keinen Gewinn machen (28.01.2026)” on urteile.news regarding the judgment of the Federal Court of Justice of 28/01/2026, Case No. VIII ZR 228/23: https://urteile.news/BGH_VIII-ZR-22823_Mieter-darf-mit-Untervermietung-keinen-Gewinn-machen~N35727. A final assessment always depends on the specific contractual documents and the circumstances of the individual case.
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Reason for consultation in real estate law

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Questions regarding the permissible structuring of subletting, the scope of permissions granted, or possible claims between the parties often concern interfaces between contract drafting and risk management in the real estate sector. If clarification is needed in this respect, a more in-depth review as part of legal advice in real estate law by MTR Legal attorneys may be considered.