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Whether you are a landlord protecting your income against inflation or a tenant trying to keep occupancy costs predictable, understanding how rent increases and indexation clauses work under Czech law is essential before you sign any lease. The Czech Republic’s legal framework treats residential and commercial leases very differently, residential tenants enjoy statutory caps that many landlords overlook, while commercial parties have wide contractual freedom that, paradoxically, creates its own risks when clauses are poorly drafted. At Caring Legal, I regularly advise both sides of the table on how to draft safer lease agreements, and the single most common problem I encounter is an indexation clause that looks clear on the surface but crumbles under scrutiny.
This guide walks through the statutory rules, explains how inflation clauses operate in practice, flags the red-flag language I see most often, and provides annotated model clauses you can adapt for your next negotiation.
The starting point for any rent increase in the Czech Republic is the Civil Code (Act No. 89/2012 Coll.), which replaced the older Commercial Code and consolidated the rules governing lease relationships. The code distinguishes sharply between residential and commercial tenancies, and the limits that apply to each are not interchangeable.
For residential leases, the Civil Code imposes two headline constraints that every landlord must observe:
These protections apply where the parties have not validly agreed on a different mechanism, for example, a properly drafted indexation clause (discussed below). They also apply only up to the level of “usual rent” in the locality; a landlord cannot use the 20 % allowance to push rent above what comparable properties command. If the tenant does not agree to the proposed increase, the landlord may apply to a court to determine the appropriate rent, but the court is likewise bound by the 20 % ceiling.
Historically, a separate regime existed under Act No. 107/2006 Coll., which governed unilateral increases for controlled (regulated) rents. That Act’s transitional provisions have largely run their course, but older lease contracts concluded under its framework may still contain references to it. In my experience, these legacy provisions occasionally surface when properties change hands and the new landlord is unaware of the regulatory history.
Commercial tenancies are governed primarily by the general provisions on lease in the Civil Code, but without the residential-specific caps. Parties enjoy broad contractual freedom to agree on the rent amount, the frequency of adjustments, and the mechanism for calculating increases. In practice, this means the indexation clause is the single most important rent-control tool in a commercial lease, and getting it wrong can be costly for either side.
From what I am seeing in practice, the Czech commercial market has largely standardised around annual CPI-linked indexation, but the detail of those clauses varies enormously. That variation is where disputes arise.
An indexation clause (sometimes called an inflation clause) is a contractual provision that adjusts rent automatically according to a pre-agreed formula, typically tied to a published price index. Unlike a unilateral rent increase, where the landlord proposes a new figure and the tenant must accept or challenge it, an indexation clause operates mechanically: if the index moves, the rent follows.
Under Czech law, indexation clauses are enforceable provided the clause is sufficiently definite. A court will look for three things: an identifiable index, a clear formula, and an unambiguous trigger date. If any of those elements is missing or ambiguous, the clause risks being struck down as too vague to enforce.
| Year | Base Rent (CZK/month) | CPI Base | CPI New | Calculation | Adjusted Rent (CZK) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 (base year) | 20,000 | 100.0 | , | , | 20,000 |
| 2026 | 20,000 | 100.0 | 104.5 | 20,000 × (104.5 ÷ 100.0) | 20,900 |
| 2027 | 20,000 | 100.0 | 107.8 | 20,000 × (107.8 ÷ 100.0) | 21,560 |
Notice that the formula always refers back to the original base rent and base CPI, not the previous year’s adjusted rent. This “base-year” method avoids compounding errors. Some leases use a “rolling-base” method (each year’s new rent becomes the base for the next calculation); both are valid, but the parties must be explicit about which applies.
Below is the due-diligence checklist I share with clients before they execute any lease containing an indexation or rent-increase mechanism. Each item addresses a specific drafting weakness that I have seen generate disputes in Czech courts or arbitration proceedings.
Three patterns cause the most trouble in my practice:
For tenants: insist on a cap, a two-way adjustment (or at minimum a 0 % floor), and an audit right requiring the landlord to provide the raw CPI data with each notice. For landlords: resist the temptation to draft an aggressive upward-only clause, a moderate, well-defined mechanism is far more likely to survive challenge and gives you predictable income without litigation risk.
The following annotated model clauses are provided as starting points. They should be adapted to the specific lease and reviewed by local counsel before execution.
“With effect from each anniversary of the Commencement Date, the Base Rent shall be adjusted in accordance with the following formula: Adjusted Rent = Base Rent × (CPInew ÷ CPIbase), where ‘CPI’ means the all-items Consumer Price Index for the Czech Republic published by the Czech Statistical Office (CZSO); ‘CPIbase‘ means the CPI for the calendar month falling three months before the Commencement Date; and ‘CPInew‘ means the CPI for the calendar month falling three months before the relevant anniversary. The annual adjustment shall not exceed 5 % of the then-current Base Rent. If the CPInew is lower than CPIbase, the Base Rent shall remain unchanged.”
“With effect from 1 January of each calendar year (the ‘Adjustment Date’), the Base Rent shall be recalculated as follows: Adjusted Rent = Base Rent × (CPInew ÷ CPIbase), where ‘CPI’ means the all-items Consumer Price Index for the Czech Republic published by the Czech Statistical Office (CZSO); ‘CPIbase’ means the CPI for December of the calendar year preceding the Commencement Date; and ‘CPInew’ means the CPI for December of the calendar year preceding the Adjustment Date. In no event shall the annual adjustment exceed 3 %. If CPInew is lower than CPIbase, the Base Rent shall be reduced accordingly, provided it shall not fall below 95 % of the original Base Rent as at the Commencement Date.
The Landlord shall deliver to the Tenant, no later than 30 days before each Adjustment Date, a written notice setting out the calculation in reasonable detail, together with evidence of the applicable CPI figures.
“Dear [Tenant], pursuant to Clause [X] of the Lease Agreement dated [date], I hereby notify you that the Base Rent will be adjusted with effect from [Adjustment Date]. The applicable CPI figures are: CPIbase = [value] ([month/year]); CPInew = [value] ([month/year]). Applying the formula, the Adjusted Rent for the period commencing [date] is CZK [amount] per month. A copy of the CZSO data is enclosed. If you wish to dispute this calculation, please notify the Landlord in writing within [X] days.”
Even where the lease contains a valid indexation clause, the procedure for implementing the increase matters. A flawed process can give the tenant grounds to challenge an otherwise lawful adjustment.
For residential leases governed by the statutory regime (i.e., without a valid indexation clause), the landlord must propose the increase in writing. The proposal must state the new rent amount and demonstrate compliance with the 20 % / three-year ceiling. The tenant then has two months to accept. If the tenant neither accepts nor rejects the proposal within this window, the landlord may file a petition with the court to determine the rent.
For commercial leases or residential leases with a contractual indexation clause, the notice period is whatever the contract specifies. In my experience, 30 to 60 days’ advance written notice is market standard. If the contract is silent on notice, I advise landlords to provide at least 30 days to reduce the risk of challenge.
If a tenant believes the increase is unlawful or the indexation calculation is incorrect, several options are available:
The table below summarises the key differences that landlords and tenants should understand when negotiating or reviewing an inflation clause in a Czech lease.
| Lease Type | Key Legal Limits | Practical Drafting Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Residential (regulated or older contracts) | Max 20 % increase over any 3-year period; minimum 12 months between increases; rent must not exceed usual rent in the locality | Add two-way indexation, per-annum and cumulative caps, clear CZSO CPI reference |
| Standard residential (market rate) | Parties may agree terms, but statutory protections apply where no valid indexation clause exists; 20 % / 3-year cap remains the default | Spell out formula, notice period, evidence requirement, and dispute route |
| Commercial | Wide contractual freedom, market terms govern; no statutory cap on increases; parties may agree indexation freely | Use precise index reference (CZSO CPI by name), include cap and floor, specify dispute resolution (expert determination or arbitrator) |
Three takeaways should guide your approach to rent increases, indexation clauses, and how to draft safer lease agreements in the Czech Republic. First, know which statutory limits apply to your lease type: residential tenants benefit from the 20 % / three-year ceiling and the 12-month minimum interval; commercial parties must build their own protections into the contract. Second, an indexation clause is only as strong as its drafting, name the index, write out the formula, set a cap, and specify the notice procedure. Third, both landlords and tenants benefit from clarity: a well-drafted clause reduces disputes, speeds enforcement, and protects relationships over the life of the lease.
If you are negotiating a new lease or reviewing an existing indexation mechanism, I would encourage you to find Real Estate lawyers in the Czech Republic through the Global Law Experts directory for tailored advice.
For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martina Kačerová at Caring Legal.
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