Frequently asked questions

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Termination dates and notification periods for terminating a tenancy are defined separately for every tenancy. The dates and periods that apply to your tenancy are set out in your tenancy agreement.

Under tenancy law, you are required to grant access to your property for the purpose of viewings by prospective new tenants. We will contact you to arrange a single or multiple dates for viewings. When doing so, we will also ask for your permission to pass on your phone number and, where relevant, email address to prospective new tenants to request a viewing.

Please send us a written, signed notice of termination of tenancy within the relevant termination notice period for your rental agreement. The date that will be decisive for compliance with the notice period will be the date on which we receive the notice of termination, not the date it was posted.

All lettings are generally publicly advertised. If one of your friends or acquaintances is interested in the tenancy, you can recommend them to us as a new tenant. We will then review their application as usual.

Yes, it is possible to terminate your tenancy outside the agreed notice periods if you are able to find an acceptable and solvent new tenant and the new rental agreement has been signed by both parties (Livit and new tenant).

The contractually agreed rent includes ancillary payments paid on account. Our property managers strive to calculate this amount as accurately as possible based on previous ancillary cost statements and experience. However, your actual consumption and actual cost will only become apparent once the annual ancillary cost statement is drawn up. If your consumption is higher than that covered by the payments on account that you have already made, you will be billed for the difference. If, on the other hand, it is lower, you will be given a credit note. 

The prorated service charges are the general costs for services such as maintaining the property, seasonal expenses such as snow removal, garden maintenance, fees for rubbish, water and waste water, as well as shared electricity costs for the lighting in the stairwell and laundry room. These costs are distributed proportionally among all tenants according to a key. Please note that this list is not exhaustive. For more information, please refer to your tenancy agreement. 

They include heating and hot water as well as other service charges. For more information, please refer to your tenancy agreement. The ancillary costs do not include extra costs such as privately used electricity, Internet, SERAFE etc. These have to be paid directly to the relevant provider.

We are expecting that the rise in energy prices will lead to a significant increase in ancillary costs. However, we are not able to reliably estimate the amount by which ancillary costs will increase because the price trends for gas and oil are still very volatile. Added to that, rising raw material prices could also have a negative effect on a range of other services, which could also lead to an increase in the service charges for your property and cause your ancillary bills to be increased. In this regard, please bear in mind that your monthly payments on account are not based on current costs. Higher energy prices will therefore not immediately affect your payments on account and will only be evaluated when the annual bill for your actual ancillary costs is drawn up. 

Voluntarily choosing not to use communal infrastructure provided on site, such as lifts, playgrounds, etc. does not exempt tenants from the obligation to pay. In these cases, the principle of solidarity applies.