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The Brussels-Capital Region published new minimum housing standards Brussels property owners must meet, with the decree dated November 26, 2025, and key provisions entering into force from 2026. These strengthened rules raise the bar for safety, sanitation, minimum living surface and mandatory facilities across rental dwellings, condominiums and new developments throughout the region. Every dwelling must now provide a net surface area of at least 18 m² for one occupant, with 10 m² added for each additional person, and landlords who fall short face fines reported at up to €25,000. This guide sets out precisely what property owners, syndicate managers and developers need to do right now to comply, avoid enforcement action and plan renovation budgets accordingly.
Three things you must do now:
The updated Brussels housing standards strengthen existing habitability norms codified in the Regional Planning Regulation (RRU), Title II. The decree published on November 26, 2025, revises and supplements these norms in three core areas: minimum living area, mandatory facilities and equipment, and safety and sanitation benchmarks. All dwellings located within the Brussels-Capital Region must satisfy every threshold simultaneously.
According to the official Brussels-Capital Region guidance, the rule is straightforward: a dwelling must have a net surface area of at least 18 m² for one person, increasing by 10 m² for each additional occupant. In practice, this produces the following thresholds:
| Number of occupants | Minimum net surface area required |
|---|---|
| 1 person | 18 m² |
| 2 persons | 28 m² |
| 3 persons | 38 m² |
| 4 persons | 48 m² |
| Each additional occupant | +10 m² |
These figures apply to the net habitable surface, not the gross floor area advertised in sales particulars. Industry observers expect this distinction alone to render a significant number of smaller Brussels rentals non-compliant.
Net surface area counts only those rooms whose ceiling height meets the minimum threshold, measured at floor level and excluding walls, staircases, storage cupboards and areas below sloped ceilings where the height drops below the regulatory minimum. Common hallways and shared utility spaces in apartment buildings are not included in individual-unit calculations. Where a dwelling incorporates a mezzanine or attic conversion, only the area with compliant ceiling height counts toward the net total. Property owners should engage a qualified surveyor or architect to carry out the measurement using the methodology prescribed in the RRU Title II habitability norms.
Beyond surface area, the Brussels minimum quality standards mandate a baseline of essential facilities in every dwelling:
Properties that fail to meet these requirements risk being classified as insalubrious and banned from the rental market until the defects are remediated.
The scope of the new Brussels housing standards is deliberately broad. Compliance obligations apply to the following categories of buildings and actors:
Early indications suggest that transitional tolerance may be limited: properties already on the rental market at the time the new standards enter force must be brought into compliance within any remediation period set by an inspector’s order. There is no blanket grace period for existing leases. Owners and syndicate managers should therefore treat compliance as an immediate obligation rather than a future target.
Different actors face different operational requirements. The comparison table below maps the core obligations for landlords, syndicate managers and developers under the minimum housing standards Brussels framework.
| Entity | Core obligations under Brussels standards | Typical trigger / deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Private landlord / property owner | Ensure dwelling meets minimum net surface area, ceiling heights, mandatory facilities (bathroom, kitchen, ventilation) and safety standards; remediate any insalubrity; maintain compliant installations throughout tenancy | Prior to letting any unit; within the remediation period set by an inspector’s order (varies by severity) |
| Syndicate manager (condominium) | Coordinate inspections for common parts and facilitate unit-level compliance; convene owners’ meeting to approve and apportion common works; ensure access for regional inspectors; maintain records of compliance status | Immediate duty on notice of non-conformity; schedule works per owners’ decision and within statutory timelines |
| Developer / project owner | Design and construct to meet minimum net areas, facilities and habitability rules; evidence compliance in permit applications; obtain conformity certification before occupation | At planning/permit application stage and before final acceptance or occupation permit |
The following is a model text that syndicate managers can adapt and send to co-owners. Obtain legal advice to tailor the notice to your building’s specific circumstances.
Subject: New minimum housing quality standards, action requiredDear Co-owners,As you may be aware, the Brussels-Capital Region has introduced updated minimum quality standards for all dwellings, effective from 2026. These standards set new requirements for minimum living surface, mandatory facilities (bathroom, kitchen, ventilation) and safety. Following a preliminary assessment of our building, [describe findings]. An extraordinary general meeting will be convened on [date] to discuss the necessary common-area works, their estimated cost (€[amount]) and the proposed apportionment among co-owners. Individual unit owners are also responsible for ensuring their own units meet the standards. I strongly recommend commissioning an independent inspection of your unit at your earliest convenience. Please do not hesitate to contact the management office with any questions.
The role of the syndicate manager under the new condominium quality standards Brussels framework is both operational and legal. Failure to act on known non-conformities can expose the syndicate, and potentially the individual manager, to liability. The following step-by-step process reflects recommended practice.
Belgian condominium law requires that common works of a certain value or scope be approved by the general meeting of co-owners. The syndicate manager must:
Remedial works to common parts are apportioned among co-owners according to their share (quotité) in the common parts, as stated in the building’s statutes. Where the works are extensive, the syndicate manager should explore financing options such as phased invoicing, a dedicated reserve fund call, or, for larger buildings, a renovation loan arranged at building level. Insurance policies covering common parts may also contribute if the deficiency relates to a covered peril (for example, structural damage).
If co-owners refuse to approve works that are legally required, the syndicate manager should formally minute the refusal and seek legal advice. Courts have consistently held that co-owners cannot block works mandated by public-order habitability regulations. In extreme cases, a justice of the peace may authorise the works over co-owner objections.
For developers and project owners, the minimum housing standards Brussels framework has direct implications at the design and permitting stages. Under the RRU Title II habitability norms, every new dwelling must be designed to meet, or exceed, the prescribed net surface areas, ceiling heights and facility requirements from the outset.
Industry observers expect municipal authorities in the Brussels-Capital Region to cross-reference permit applications against the minimum quality standards at the review stage. Developers should integrate the following checks into their design workflow:
The Brussels-Capital Region enforces its minimum housing standards through a structured inspection and sanctioning regime. Properties that fail to meet the requirements risk serious consequences, including financial penalties, rental bans and mandatory remediation orders.
Inspections can be initiated in several ways: a tenant complaint filed with the Brussels-Capital Region housing conformity service, a referral from a municipal authority, or a targeted inspection campaign by regional inspectors. Every dwelling in the region must meet minimum standards for safety, sanitation and facilities, and properties that fail these requirements risk being banned from rental until defects are remediated.
According to press reporting by The Brussels Times, landlords face fines of up to €25,000 for non-compliance or unsafe rental conditions under the 2026 rules. Beyond financial penalties, enforcement actions may include:
Tenants, neighbours or municipal officials can file a housing non-conformity complaint with the Brussels-Capital Region’s conformity service. The process typically involves:
Proactive compliance with the minimum housing standards Brussels rules is invariably cheaper than reactive remediation under an enforcement order. The following checklist helps owners and syndicate managers prioritise and budget effectively.
Landlords planning remedial works in occupied units should obtain legal advice on tenant notification obligations under the Brussels residential-lease rules. The new legislation addresses three key areas, habitability, legal security of occupancy and payment capacity, and getting the notice procedure wrong can expose the landlord to additional liability. Where works require temporary relocation of tenants, budget for rehousing costs and negotiate arrangements in writing before commencing works.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ruben Volckaert at Bricks Advocaten, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
To support compliance, the following practical resources are recommended:
For bespoke compliance advice, including permit strategy, enforcement defence and dispute resolution, property owners and managers should consult a specialist environmental or real estate lawyer experienced in Brussels-Capital Region housing regulation.
The 2026 minimum housing standards Brussels framework represents a significant strengthening of habitability requirements across the region. For private landlords, the immediate priority is to audit every unit against the 18 m² net-surface-area threshold and mandatory-facilities checklist, and to commission remedial works before an inspector does it for them. For syndicate managers, the obligation is to coordinate building-wide compliance, inspecting common parts, notifying co-owners and securing votes for necessary works within a realistic but urgent timeline. For developers, the standards must be embedded in design and permitting workflows from the earliest project stage.
Non-compliance carries meaningful financial and operational risk: fines, rental bans and mandatory remediation orders that will cost far more than a planned, proactive approach. The time to act is now. Consult a qualified Belgium-based lawyer to develop a tailored compliance plan, defend against enforcement proceedings or structure renovation and permit applications that satisfy the new Brussels housing standards.
This article was last reviewed on May 29, 2026. Given the evolving regulatory landscape, readers are encouraged to verify the latest official guidance on the be.brussels portal and consult legal counsel for advice specific to their circumstances.
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