REALWorld Law

Commercial leases

Use by the tenant

Can restrictions be imposed by the landlord on how a tenant uses the real estate and are there any regulations and/or laws which impose further restrictions?

Japan

Japan

Restrictions can be imposed by the lessor on how the lessee makes use of the leased property.  The underlying purpose for use of the premises is usually agreed between the lessor and the lessee and evidenced in the lease agreement.  The lessee may not use the premises for any non-agreed purpose (eg if the agreed use purpose is as a ‘residence’, the lessee is prohibited from using the premises as an office or for other commercial purposes).  In a commercial lease, it is often agreed that the lessee may only use the premises during the specified hours and that the lessee shall not cause nuisance to other tenants or the neighborhood, etc.

Under the Act on the Review and Regulation of the Use of Real Estate Surrounding Important Facilities and on Remote Territorial Islands, the authority may designate certain areas surrounding important facilities or on remote islands that need to be monitored for national security purposes as ‘Monitored Areas’ (chushi-kuiki) or ‘Special Monitored Areas’ (tokubetsu-chushi-kuiki).  If leased premises are in such areas, the authority may impose restrictions on use of the premises to prevent them from being used in a way that interferes with the functions of important facilities or remote islands.