Housing: Owners’ association wants to sue against rent control

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Owners’ association wants to sue against rent control

Kai Warnecke criticizes that the rent cap has massively increased the housing shortage. photo

© Uli Deck/dpa

The traffic light has agreed to extend the rent control in tense housing markets beyond 2025 until 2029. The owners’ association Haus und Grund wants to prevent this.

The owners’ association Haus und Grund wants to oppose the planned extension Take rent control to the Federal Constitutional Court. Association President Kai Warnecke announced this in the “Bild” newspaper.

“The Federal Constitutional Court only accepted the first rent brake because it was limited to five years. With the second extension, the traffic light government is clearly violating the constitution,” said Warnecke. “That’s why Haus und Grund Germany will bring the renewed extension of the rent cap to the Federal Constitutional Court.”

Federal Construction Minister Klara Geywitz (SPD) reacted calmly to the announcement of Haus und Grund. She assumes that the Ministry of Justice has examined the extension “sufficiently thoroughly,” she said on rbb24 Inforadio.

The traffic light coalition had agreed to extend the rent control in tense housing markets beyond 2025 until 2029. Where it applies, the rent cap ensures that when a new rental agreement is concluded, the rent may in principle not be more than ten percent above the local comparative rent. The respective state government decides whether the rent control applies in certain areas.

The Karlsruhe judges ruled in 2019 that the rent cap for particularly desirable residential areas was not constitutionally objectionable. The rules introduced in 2015 did not violate the guarantee of ownership, freedom of contract or the general principle of equality, the court found at the time.

Warnecke criticized in “Bild” that the rent cap had massively exacerbated the housing shortage. “Since the introduction of the rent cap, the number of missing apartments has been increasing. There are now said to be almost 900,000. It is clear that the rent cap is primarily to the detriment of tenants who are looking for an affordable apartment,” said the head of the association.

dpa

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