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Bundesstaatsprinzip

German constitutional federal principle reserving housing law to the 16 Länder, complicating federal STR regulation.

Last refreshed: 20 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

How does Germany's constitutional federal principle limit what Berlin can do on Airbnb rules?

Timeline for Bundesstaatsprinzip

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Common Questions
What is the Bundesstaatsprinzip in German law?
The Bundesstaatsprinzip is Germany's constitutional federal principle, embedded in Article 70 of the Grundgesetz, which reserves legislative competence such as housing regulation to the 16 Länder rather than the federal government.Source: Grundgesetz, Article 70
Why does Germany's federal structure complicate Airbnb regulation?
Under the Bundesstaatsprinzip, housing law is a Länder competence, so Germany has no unified national short-term rental licensing framework. The federal KVDG was carefully drafted as a data-relay law to avoid unconstitutional federal housing regulation.Source: Bundestag KVDG debate

Background

The Bundesstaatsprinzip (federal principle) is the constitutional doctrine embedded in the Grundgesetz that distributes legislative competence between Germany's federal government and its 16 Länder. Article 70 of the Grundgesetz reserves housing regulation to the Länder unless the federal legislature can claim a specific head of competence. This constraint shaped the design of the KVDG, which the Bundestag crafted as a data-relay law rather than a housing-regulation instrument to avoid constitutional challenge .

The Bundesstaatsprinzip has historically meant that German STR policy is fragmented: Berlin, Munich, Hamburg, and Frankfurt have enacted city- or state-level controls, while no unified national STR licensing framework exists. The EU STR Regulation's SDEP requirement created pressure to harmonise data reporting at federal level, testing whether a data portal could be distinguished from substantive housing regulation.

The AfD invoked the Bundesstaatsprinzip as its primary objection to the KVDG, arguing even a data relay usurps Länder constitutional authority. The governing Coalition rejected that reading, relying on federal competence over digital infrastructure rather than housing law.