Late fees are one of the most common sources of landlord-tenant disputes — and one of the most legally regulated. Charge too much, skip the grace period, or fail to specify fees in the lease, and you may not be able to collect at all. Worse, in some states an improperly charged late fee can be used against you in court.
This guide covers late fee laws by state, how grace periods work, what landlords can and can't charge, and how to set up late fees correctly so you're never exposed.
Why Late Fee Laws Matter More Than You Think
Most landlords assume a late fee is just a late fee — you put it in the lease, you charge it when rent is late. But many states have specific requirements that, if not followed, can make your late fee uncollectable or open you to legal liability:
- Caps on fee amounts — Many states limit late fees to a percentage of monthly rent or a flat dollar maximum
- Mandatory grace periods — Some states require landlords to wait 3–5 days before a late fee can be charged
- Lease disclosure requirements — If the late fee amount isn't specified in the lease, it may not be enforceable
- Compounding restrictions — Several states prohibit daily or compounding late fees
- Security deposit rules — In some states, late fees cannot be deducted from the security deposit
Ignorance of these rules doesn't excuse a violation. The tenant's attorney will know them — and will use them.
Late Fee Laws by State: Key Rules at a Glance
The table below covers the most significant state-level late fee regulations. Always verify with your local laws before setting up fee structures — state laws change, and some cities have additional local ordinances.
| State | Grace Period | Fee Cap | Must Be in Lease? |
|---|---|---|---|
| California | None required (but reasonable) | Must be "reasonable" (courts interpret ~5–10%) | Yes |
| Texas | 2 days | 12% of rent (1 unit), 10% (4+ units) | Yes |
| Florida | None required | No statutory cap (must be reasonable) | Yes |
| New York | 5 days | $50 or 5% of rent (whichever is less) | Yes |
| Illinois | None required | No statutory cap (must be reasonable) | Yes |
| Georgia | None required | No statutory cap | Yes |
| North Carolina | 5 days | $15 or 5% of rent (whichever is greater) | Yes |
| Arizona | None required | No statutory cap (must be reasonable) | Yes |
| Colorado | 7 days | $50 or 5% of rent (whichever is greater) | Yes |
| Washington | None required | No statutory cap (must be reasonable) | Yes |
| Oregon | 4 days | Capped at reasonable flat fee; no daily fees | Yes |
| Michigan | None required | No statutory cap | Yes |
| Ohio | None required | No statutory cap (must be reasonable) | Yes |
| Nevada | None required | No statutory cap | Yes |
| Virginia | 5 days | 10% of rent or 10% of amount overdue | Yes |
Note: This table reflects general state law as of 2026. Local ordinances (especially in cities like San Francisco, Seattle, and New York City) may impose additional restrictions. Always verify current rules in your jurisdiction.
Understanding the Three Types of Late Fee Structures
Most leases use one of three fee structures. Each has different legal considerations:
1. Flat Fee
A fixed dollar amount charged once after the grace period expires. Example: "$75 late fee if rent is not received by the 5th."
Pros: Simple to apply, easy for tenants to understand, avoids compounding disputes.
Cons: May feel disproportionate on high or low rents.
Legal note: Most states that cap late fees prefer flat fee structures. Even in states without a statutory cap, courts apply a "reasonableness" standard — a $500 flat fee on $1,200 rent will not survive scrutiny.
2. Percentage of Rent
A percentage of monthly rent applied after the grace period. Example: "5% of monthly rent due after the 5th."
Pros: Scales proportionally to rent amount, inherently "reasonable" in most jurisdictions.
Cons: Requires calculation; tenants may dispute the math.
Legal note: Texas, New York, Colorado, Virginia, and North Carolina have statutory percentage caps. Use the calculator to verify compliance.
3. Per-Day Fee
A daily charge that accrues for each day rent remains unpaid past the grace period. Example: "$10 per day after the 5th."
Pros: Creates strong incentive for quick payment.
Cons: Legally risky — several states explicitly prohibit daily or compounding late fees. Oregon bans them outright.
Legal note: Per-day fees accumulate quickly and are the most frequently challenged in court. Use with caution and only where explicitly permitted.
Grace Periods: What They Mean and What They Don't
A grace period is the number of days after the rent due date before a late fee can be charged. It is not an extension of the due date — rent is still legally due on the 1st (or whatever date your lease specifies). The grace period only limits when you can charge a fee.
States with mandatory grace periods (New York: 5 days, Texas: 2 days, Colorado: 7 days, Virginia: 5 days, North Carolina: 5 days, Oregon: 4 days) require you to wait that number of days before charging any late fee. Charging a fee on day 1 in a state with a 5-day grace period may void the fee entirely.
States without a mandatory grace period still often have a "reasonable" standard. Including a 3–5 day grace period in your lease — even where not required — is standard practice and reduces disputes.
What Must Be in Your Lease
In virtually every state, a late fee is only enforceable if it's clearly specified in the written lease. This means your lease must state:
- The exact amount of the late fee (or the percentage formula)
- When the fee applies (what day after due date)
- The grace period, if applicable
- Whether the fee compounds daily or is a one-time charge
Verbal agreements about late fees are rarely enforceable. If you've been charging a fee that isn't in the lease, stop — and add it to the lease before the next renewal.
How to Apply Late Fees Without Creating Disputes
The mechanics of late fee application matter as much as the legal structure. Even a legally valid fee can create a dispute if it's applied inconsistently or without proper notice. Here's how to do it right:
- Apply automatically, not selectively — Inconsistent enforcement ("I only charge some tenants the fee") creates discrimination risk and undermines the policy. Late fees should apply automatically based on objective criteria, every time.
- Notify the tenant in writing — Send an itemized notice showing the fee amount, the calculation method, the date applied, and the relevant lease clause. This creates the paper trail you need if it's ever disputed.
- Keep it separate from rent — Some states require late fees to be listed separately from rent in ledgers and notices. Don't blend them into a single line item.
- Don't waive inconsistently — If you waive the fee for one tenant, document the reason. Patterns of selective waiver can be used to argue you effectively abandoned the fee policy.
The Free Late Fee Calculator
Before setting up your late fee structure, verify that your intended fee is within your state's legal limits. Our free calculator lets you enter your monthly rent, fee type, and state — and immediately shows whether you're compliant.
It covers all 50 states, handles flat fee and percentage calculations, and flags any amount that exceeds statutory limits.
Late Fees and the Eviction Process
In most states, unpaid late fees can be included in an eviction notice for nonpayment. However, you must follow the correct procedure:
- The fee must be properly documented in the lease and on tenant ledgers
- The notice must specify the total amount due (rent + fees) itemized separately
- Some states require you to serve a separate notice for fees vs. base rent
- Local courts vary on how they treat disputed late fee amounts in eviction proceedings
When in doubt, consult a local landlord-tenant attorney before including late fees in an eviction notice. The documentation PropOps generates — itemized fee notices, payment ledgers, automatic calculation logs — is exactly what you need for this proceeding if it ever comes to it.
Common Late Fee Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them)
- Charging more than the legal cap — The most common mistake. Use the calculator before finalizing your lease terms.
- Not specifying the fee in the lease — An unwritten fee is an unenforceable fee. Always put it in writing.
- Charging before the grace period ends — In states with mandatory grace periods, an early fee can be challenged or voided entirely.
- Using daily fees in states that prohibit them — Oregon explicitly bans them. Other states may void them under "reasonableness" tests if they accumulate to excessive amounts.
- Applying fees inconsistently — Creates fair housing exposure. Automation eliminates inconsistency by design.
- Deducting late fees from the security deposit — Some states prohibit this. Know the rules in your state before applying deposit deductions.
Summary: What Every Landlord Should Do
- Check your state's law — Grace period requirement, fee cap, and whether daily fees are permitted
- Use the calculator — Verify your fee amount is within legal limits before putting it in the lease
- Specify everything in writing — Amount, timing, calculation method, and grace period — all in the lease
- Apply automatically and consistently — Every tenant, every month, on the same schedule
- Send itemized notices — Every fee applied should have a documented record with calculation details
- Review annually — State laws change. What was compliant two years ago may not be compliant today.
Know your late fee before charging it.
The free PropOps late fee calculator covers all 50 states — flat fee, percentage, and per-day structures.
Open the Calculator →Free. No account required. Takes 30 seconds.