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Kentucky Late Fee Laws: Rules, Limits, and Best Practices for Landlords

Understand Kentucky's late fee rules for residential rentals, including reasonableness standards, grace periods, and eviction notice interactions.

Melvin Prince
3 min. læsning
Verificeret Apr 2026United States flag
Gebyrer for forsinket husleje i KentuckyMaksimalt gebyr for forsinket husleje i KentuckyHenstandsperiode for husleje i KentuckyMå udlejer opkræve dagligt gebyr for forsinket betaling i KentuckyLovgivning om gebyrer for forsinket husleje i Kentucky

Juridisk ansvarsfraskrivelse

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Max Late Fee
No statutory cap
Grace Period required?
No requirement
Requirement
Must be in lease

Official Law Citation: KRS Chapter 383

Kentucky does not impose a statutory cap on residential late fees, but they must be reasonable and clearly stated in the lease agreement. Understanding how late fees interact with the 7-day eviction notice is important for Kentucky landlords.

No Statutory Cap

Kentucky law does not set a maximum dollar amount or percentage for late fees. Courts evaluate reasonableness based on:

  • Whether the fee approximates the landlord's actual administrative costs from late payment.
  • Whether the fee is proportionate to the rent amount.
  • Generally, fees of 4-5% of monthly rent are considered reasonable.
  • Fees exceeding 10% may be challenged as excessive.

No Mandatory Grace Period

Kentucky does not require a grace period before a late fee can be assessed. Rent is due on the date specified in the lease.

Most Kentucky leases include a 3 to 5 day grace period as a practical matter, but this is contractual - not statutory.

Lease Requirements

Late fees must be specified in the lease to be enforceable. The lease should state:

  • The exact amount or percentage of the late fee.
  • When the fee is triggered.
  • Whether the fee is a one-time charge or accrues over time.

Late Fees and the 7-Day Notice

The 7-Day Notice to Pay or Quit should demand the amount of unpaid rent. Whether late fees can be included depends on how the lease defines them:

  • If the lease classifies late fees as "additional rent" - they may be includable.
  • If they are separate charges - they should be collected separately.

Including improper amounts in the 7-day notice could make it defective, jeopardizing the eviction action.

Best Practices

  1. Keep fees at 4-5% of monthly rent for defensibility.
  2. Include a grace period - 3 to 5 days demonstrates good faith.
  3. Define late fees clearly in the lease - amount, trigger date, and collection method.
  4. Separate from eviction notices - collect late fees through lease enforcement, not the 7-day notice.
  5. Document everything - maintain records of due dates, payment receipts, and fee assessments.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms and maintenance requests - making it easy to stay compliant with Kentucky regulations.

Back to Kentucky Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

Kilder & officielle referencer

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