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how to assign a commercial lease

How to Assign a Commercial Lease in Norway (2026): Step-by-step Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Understanding how to assign a commercial lease is essential for any business tenant in Norway that needs to exit premises before a lease expires, whether because of a restructuring, a sale of business, or a change in operational footprint. Norwegian commercial lease assignments are governed primarily by the terms of the lease contract itself, with the Tenancy Act (Husleieloven) providing a limited statutory backdrop and considerable contractual freedom for commercial parties. The process involves landlord consent, a deed of assignment, warranties to protect all sides, and careful attention to VAT registration obligations that catch many assignors and assignees off-guard. This guide sets out the full procedure, the documents required, and the most common pitfalls encountered in 2026 practice.

How to Assign a Commercial Lease in Norway, Step by Step

The typical assignment of a commercial lease in Norway follows a structured sequence of five core steps. Timelines vary depending on the complexity of the lease, the landlord’s requirements, and whether guarantors or VAT adjustments are involved. Industry observers report that straightforward assignments close within four to eight weeks, while contested or multi-condition assignments can extend to twelve weeks or more.

Step 1, Review the Lease (Assignment Clause, Consent Conditions)

Before approaching the landlord or any proposed assignee, the outgoing tenant must read the standard commercial lease in full and identify three critical provisions. First, check the assignment clause, most Norwegian commercial leases based on the standard forms published by industry bodies such as Norsk Eiendom and Forum for Næringsmeglere include a clause that either permits assignment with prior written landlord consent or prohibits assignment entirely unless the landlord agrees in its sole discretion.

Second, look for a change-of-control clause. Many leases treat a change in the majority ownership of the tenant company as a deemed assignment, triggering the same consent requirement. Third, identify any break clause or early termination right, exercising a break clause may be a faster and cheaper exit than pursuing a full assignment.

The key provisions to check before proceeding include:

  • Assignment restriction wording. Does it say “not without prior written consent” or “sole discretion”? The difference determines the landlord’s negotiating power.
  • Change-of-control trigger. Threshold (e.g., 50 % or more of share capital) and whether indirect changes in ownership count.
  • Guarantor provisions. Will the existing guarantee survive the assignment, or must the assignee provide a replacement?
  • Permitted-use clause. The assignee’s intended use must fall within the contractually permitted scope.
  • Remaining lease term and rent-review dates. Landlords are more likely to consent if substantial unexpired term remains.

Step 2, Prepare the Proposed Assignee Information Pack

Norwegian landlords expect a structured package from the outgoing tenant that demonstrates the proposed assignee is a creditworthy and suitable replacement. Market practice requires the following documents at a minimum:

  • Company registration extract. A current Brønnøysund Register Centre (Brønnøysundregistrene) printout confirming the assignee’s corporate details and directors.
  • Financial statements. Audited accounts for the two most recent financial years.
  • Business plan or summary. A brief outline of the assignee’s intended use of the premises and its operational track record.
  • Proposed guarantor details. If a parent-company or personal guarantee is required, provide guarantee documentation or a bank guarantee confirmation.
  • References. Existing landlord references or trade references where available.

Providing a complete pack upfront accelerates the landlord’s review. Incomplete submissions are the single most common cause of delay in Norwegian commercial lease assignment processes.

Step 3, Request Consent and Negotiate the Licence to Assign

Once the information pack is ready, the outgoing tenant sends a formal written request to the landlord seeking consent to assign the lease. In Norway, the licence to assign commercial lease, a separate document from the deed of assignment itself, records the landlord’s conditions for granting consent. These conditions typically include:

  • A replacement security deposit or bank guarantee.
  • An authorised-guarantee agreement (AGA) from the outgoing tenant for a defined period post-assignment.
  • Confirmation that the assignee will comply with the same permitted-use restrictions.
  • Payment of the landlord’s legal and administrative costs associated with the consent process.

The licence to assign is a binding agreement, once signed by the landlord, tenant and assignee, it records the terms on which the landlord agrees to release the outgoing tenant and accept the assignee. It should be drafted by legal counsel and executed ahead of or simultaneously with the deed of assignment.

Step 4, Draft the Deed of Assignment and Warranties

The deed of assignment is the core transfer document. It transfers all rights and obligations under the existing lease from the outgoing tenant (assignor) to the incoming tenant (assignee) with effect from a specified date. In Norwegian practice, the deed typically includes:

  • Identification of parties. Assignor, assignee, and landlord (as a consenting party or a separate signatory to the licence to assign).
  • Effective date. The date from which rent, service charges and all lease obligations transfer to the assignee.
  • Assumption of obligations. The assignee’s express assumption of all lease covenants from the effective date forward.
  • Warranties from the assignor. Common warranties include confirmation that rent is paid up to date, that there are no outstanding breaches, and that the premises are in the condition required by the lease.
  • Indemnities. Mutual indemnities covering pre-assignment liabilities (assignor) and post-assignment liabilities (assignee).

Industry observers note that warranty survival periods in Norway typically range from twelve to twenty-four months. The assignor should negotiate to cap any warranty exposure and include clear time limits for claims.

Step 5, Signing, Registration (If Applicable) and Handover

Norwegian commercial leases do not require registration in the Land Register (Grunnboken) unless the lease term exceeds a defined threshold or the parties have voluntarily registered the original lease. Where the original lease was registered, the assignment must also be registered to update the public record. This requires notarisation and submission to the relevant kartverket (mapping authority) office.

On the effective date, a physical or virtual handover takes place: keys are exchanged, meter readings recorded, and the landlord, assignor and assignee sign a handover protocol. From this point, the assignee assumes full responsibility for rent, service charges, and all ongoing lease obligations.

When Can a Landlord Refuse Consent to Assign a Commercial Lease?

Whether a landlord can refuse consent depends entirely on the wording of the lease. Norwegian commercial leases commonly use one of two formulations: an absolute prohibition on assignment without landlord consent (giving the landlord full discretion), or a qualified restriction stating that consent “shall not be unreasonably withheld.” The legal consequences are significantly different.

Financial Tests and Guarantors

Where the lease requires that consent not be unreasonably withheld, Norwegian market practice recognises several legitimate grounds on which a landlord may refuse. The most accepted ground is financial weakness: if the proposed assignee’s balance sheet or trading history suggests it cannot meet the rent and service-charge obligations throughout the remaining lease term, a refusal is likely defensible. Landlords commonly apply a minimum credit-rating threshold and may require a guarantee from a parent company or a bank guarantee equivalent to six to twelve months’ rent as a condition of consent rather than an outright refusal.

Other defensible grounds include a mismatch between the assignee’s intended use and the permitted-use clause, reputational concerns (where the tenant mix in a shopping centre or multi-let building would be adversely affected), and a history of lease defaults by the proposed assignee.

Sole Discretion vs “Not Unreasonably Withheld”

Where the lease grants the landlord sole discretion, refusal requires no justification. From the tenant’s perspective, securing the “not unreasonably withheld” standard during initial lease negotiations is strongly advisable, this standard provides the tenant with a practical remedy if the landlord blocks a commercially reasonable assignment without legitimate cause.

Industry observers note that disputes over consent are rarely litigated in Norway. The more common outcome is a negotiated conditional consent in which the landlord agrees to the assignment subject to additional security, a rent increase, or a time-limited guarantee from the outgoing tenant.

The Norwegian Tenancy Act (Husleieloven) and Commercial Lease Transfers

The Husleieloven (Act of 26 March 1999 No. 17 relating to Tenancy Agreements) is Norway’s principal tenancy statute. It applies by default to all leases of premises for residential or commercial use. However, a core principle of the Norwegian tenancy act commercial lease transfer framework is that many of its provisions are non-mandatory (fravikelige) for commercial leases. This means the parties to a commercial lease can, and routinely do, contract out of or modify the statutory default rules through express lease terms.

The Husleieloven’s chapter on assignment and subletting contains provisions that give the tenant a degree of statutory protection. However, in commercial lease practice, these default rules are almost universally overridden by bespoke assignment clauses agreed between commercially advised parties. The statute therefore serves primarily as a fallback, it fills gaps where the lease is silent on assignment but will rarely override an express contractual prohibition or condition.

One important distinction: the Husleietvistutvalget (HTU), Norway’s administrative body for tenancy disputes, handles residential tenancy matters. For commercial lease disputes, including disputes over assignment consent, the ordinary courts or agreed arbitration procedures are the applicable forums. This means commercial tenants cannot use the expedited HTU process to challenge a landlord’s refusal of consent; they must pursue contractual remedies directly.

Documents, Templates and Warranties for a Commercial Lease Assignment

Deed of Assignment, What to Include

The deed of assignment is the centrepiece of the transaction. At minimum, it should contain the names and organisation numbers of all parties, a precise description of the leased premises (matching the lease), the effective date of transfer, the assignee’s express assumption of all obligations, and any agreed adjustments to the deposit or guarantee arrangements. Norwegian practice also requires a schedule listing all outstanding obligations, unpaid rent, deferred maintenance, service-charge reconciliation items, so that responsibility for each is clearly allocated.

Licence to Assign vs Consent Letter

The licence to assign commercial lease document is a formal tripartite agreement, landlord, assignor, assignee, that sets out the conditions of consent. A simpler alternative is a standalone consent letter issued by the landlord, which merely confirms that the landlord consents but does not record detailed conditions. For complex assignments (multi-condition, guarantor changes, rent adjustments), a full licence to assign is the safer instrument because it binds all three parties to the agreed terms.

Warranties and Indemnities, What Is Reasonable

Assignees should expect to give warranties confirming their authority to enter the assignment, their solvency, and their ability to comply with the lease terms. Assignors commonly warrant that no breaches exist, that rent is current, and that the premises are in the condition required by the lease. Indemnities run in both directions: the assignor indemnifies the assignee for pre-assignment liabilities, while the assignee indemnifies the assignor for obligations arising after the effective date. Industry observers expect warranty survival periods of twelve to twenty-four months, with claims subject to a de minimis threshold and an aggregate cap.

VAT and Tax Pitfalls When Assigning a Commercial Lease in Norway

VAT registration for leasing in Norway is governed by the Value Added Tax Act (Merverdiavgiftsloven) and administered by Skatteetaten. The default position is that the rental of commercial premises is exempt from VAT. However, landlords may, and frequently do, opt for voluntary VAT registration on commercial letting. This means the landlord charges 25 % VAT on rent, and in return can deduct input VAT on construction, renovation and operating costs related to the leased premises.

For the purposes of how to assign a commercial lease, the critical VAT pitfalls are as follows:

  • Assignee’s VAT status. If the landlord is voluntarily registered for VAT on the lease, the assignee must itself be a VAT-registered business using the premises for VAT-qualifying activities. If the assignee is VAT-exempt (e.g., a financial services firm or a charity), the landlord’s right to deduct input VAT may be lost, creating a significant financial liability that the landlord will resist.
  • Adjustment obligations. Capital goods adjustments (justeringsregler) require that input VAT deducted on construction or renovation be repaid proportionally if the premises shift from VAT-qualifying to non-qualifying use. An assignment to a non-VAT-registered assignee can trigger this adjustment, exposing the landlord to a substantial repayment obligation.
  • Transfer of adjustment rights. If the assignee is VAT-registered, the parties can agree to transfer the adjustment obligation and corresponding rights to the assignee through a justeringsavtale (adjustment agreement). This must be documented correctly and reported to Skatteetaten.

Example Scenarios, Retail vs Offices

A retail tenant assigning to another retailer is the simplest scenario: both parties are ordinarily VAT-registered, and the landlord’s input-VAT position is unaffected. An office tenant assigning to a law firm is similarly straightforward. However, an assignment from a VAT-registered technology company to a VAT-exempt financial institution can result in a capital goods adjustment running into millions of NOK, making the landlord unwilling to consent unless the assignor or assignee compensates for the loss. Always confirm the assignee’s VAT registration status with Skatteetaten before committing to the assignment.

Alternatives to Assignment, Surrender, Sublease, Break Clause

Assignment is not the only route out of a commercial lease. Depending on the circumstances, a tenant may find one of the following alternatives more practical or cost-effective. For those asking “Can I walk away from a commercial lease?” the answer is almost always no, not without financial consequences, but these mechanisms provide structured options.

Sublease vs Assignment, Key Differences

A sublease creates a new lease between the existing tenant (as sub-landlord) and a sub-tenant. The original tenant remains liable to the landlord for all obligations under the head lease. An assignment, by contrast, transfers all rights and obligations to the new party, and, once complete, the original tenant’s liability typically ends (subject to any authorised-guarantee agreement). The choice depends on the tenant’s risk appetite: subletting retains ongoing exposure; assignment provides a clean break.

A surrender is a mutual termination agreed between landlord and tenant. This usually requires a surrender payment to compensate the landlord for lost future rent. A break clause, where one exists, allows the tenant to terminate on a specified date by giving the required notice. Break clauses are relatively common in standard commercial leases in Norway, particularly for lease terms exceeding five years, but they often carry preconditions, such as full rent payment, premises in good repair, and timely notice, that must be satisfied precisely to be effective.

Timeline and Cost Comparison, Assign vs Surrender vs Break

Action Typical Timeline Approx. Cost and Risk Notes
Assignment (with landlord consent) 4–8 weeks (can extend to 12 weeks if guarantees or VAT issues arise) Legal fees (assignor and assignee) NOK 15,000–80,000+; landlord’s legal and survey costs passed on; moderate risk that conditions delay or block the process
Surrender / mutual termination 2–6 weeks (negotiation dependent) Potential surrender payment (often several months’ rent); lower document costs; moderate-to-high negotiation risk
Break clause exercise Varies (as stated in the lease) No assignment or additional legal fees if break is exercised correctly; risk of invalidity if preconditions not strictly met; potential penalties for early notice defects

The comparison above is a practical guide for decision-makers. In every case, the starting point is a thorough review of the lease terms, the lease, not the statute, is the primary source of both risk and opportunity in Norwegian commercial tenancy.

Practical Negotiation Checklist for Landlords and Assignees

The following two-column checklist summarises the most common items raised in assignment negotiations. Both landlords and assignees should treat this as a starting point for due diligence and negotiation, adapting it to the specific lease and transaction.

What the Landlord Typically Asks For What the Assignee Should Provide
Brønnøysund register extract and audited accounts Current company registration, two years’ financial statements
Replacement bank guarantee or parent-company guarantee Bank confirmation or guarantee letter from parent entity
Confirmation of permitted use compliance Business plan or operational summary confirming intended use
Authorised-guarantee agreement from outgoing tenant Assignor’s commitment (time-limited, capped liability)
Payment of landlord’s legal and administrative costs Agreement to reimburse reasonable and documented costs
Confirmation of assignee’s VAT registration status Skatteetaten VAT registration certificate
Executed deed of assignment and licence to assign Legal counsel review and signature-ready documents

Conclusion

Knowing how to assign a commercial lease in Norway requires equal attention to contractual detail, landlord relationship management, and tax compliance. The lease itself, not the statute, is the primary document controlling whether assignment is possible, on what conditions, and at what cost. Tenants planning an assignment should begin with a thorough lease review, prepare a comprehensive assignee information pack, and engage legal counsel to draft the deed of assignment, negotiate the licence to assign, and verify the VAT position of all parties before commitments are made. With thorough preparation, most commercial lease assignments in Norway can be completed within four to eight weeks, delivering a clean exit for the outgoing tenant and a secure occupancy for the assignee.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Christian O. Hartmann at SANDS Advokatfirma, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Lovdata, Lov om husleieavtaler (Husleieloven)
  2. Skatteetaten, VAT Register and VAT Handbook (Leasing Sections)
  3. Husleietvistutvalget (HTU), Official Site
  4. Practical Law, Leases: Assignments (Thomson Reuters)
  5. Skatteetaten, Merverdiavgiftshandboken (VAT Leasing Subsections)
  6. Grette, Doing Business in Norway

FAQs

How do I assign a commercial lease in Norway?
Review the lease’s assignment clause, prepare an assignee information pack, obtain written landlord consent, execute a deed of assignment transferring all rights and obligations, and complete the handover. The process typically takes four to eight weeks. The Husleieloven provides default rules where the lease is silent.
Yes. If the lease grants the landlord sole discretion, no reason is required. Where the lease states consent shall not be “unreasonably withheld,” the landlord may refuse on legitimate grounds such as financial weakness of the proposed assignee or a mismatch with the permitted-use clause.
The core documents are a deed of assignment, a licence to assign (or landlord consent letter), the assignee’s financial statements and company registration extract, a replacement guarantee, and a signed handover protocol.
The assignment itself is generally not a VAT-taxable supply, but ongoing rent may be subject to 25 % VAT if the landlord is voluntarily registered for VAT on commercial letting under the Value Added Tax Act. Capital goods adjustment obligations may also arise if the assignee’s VAT status differs from the assignor’s.
A licence to assign is a tripartite agreement between the landlord, outgoing tenant and incoming tenant that records the landlord’s conditions for permitting the assignment. It is executed alongside or before the deed of assignment and binds all three parties.
Norwegian market practice typically requires the outgoing tenant (assignor) to reimburse the landlord’s reasonable legal and administrative costs incurred in reviewing the assignment application and granting consent. This is negotiable and should be agreed in writing before the process begins.
There is no statutory minimum term for commercial leases under the Husleieloven. Parties negotiate the term freely. This contrasts with certain residential tenancy protections under the same statute, where minimum duration rules can apply. Small commercial lease requirements in Norway are therefore governed by contract, not statute.
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How to Assign a Commercial Lease in Norway (2026): Step-by-step Guide

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