Property law in the commercial sector usually consists of several steps with many players.

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From property acquisition and dealing with encumbrances in the land register, to financing by banks and investors, to leasing to traders and selling to private third parties or the public sector.

Property law is also a legal cross-section of land law, tenancy law, banking law, company law and tax law. We offer legal experts for all areas, flanked by commercial and business management advice where necessary. 

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From a legal point of view, the location is all about location: building planning regulations, building code restrictions or tax advantages and subsidies or concessions on loans.   

The "doers" and the "financiers" have both common and different expectations: This requires customised agreements that do justice to both interests and also think about the cooperation from the end. And the "silent partner", the tax office, is always at the table.

The acquisition of building land is usually the centrepiece of an investment and requires appropriate care in terms of advice and legal structuring. We know the perspectives and interests of the seller and the purchaser - whether it is a property purchase agreement or more complex arrangements such as the establishment or sale of heritable building rights (total heritable building right, sub-heritable building right).

"The most pious cannot live in peace" - and the best legal dispute is the one that is not fought in the first place. The most important thing is to know your own legal position. We determine this, provide support during negotiations in neighbourhood disputes and take over legal representation if litigation is unavoidable. 

Above all, you need to know the differences to letting and implement them contractually. Profit-making by the tenant, leased inventory or the term of the agreement - there are no "off-the-shelf" contractual arrangements for this.

The supreme discipline: tax implications and corporate law options, the property law framework and the redemption of third-party rights from the financing must be taken into account and are often part of a "Gordian knot". Forward-looking and careful planning as well as the timely involvement of all parties involved lead to success here.