Saskatchewan Rent Late Fees: Limits, Grace Periods, and Enforceability
Guide to Saskatchewan late fee regulations including the $5 + $1/day formula, maximum $65 cap, grace period rules, and what landlords can legally charge for late rent.
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.
Saskatchewan is one of the few Canadian provinces that provides a specific statutory formula for calculating late rent fees. The Residential Tenancies Regulations set clear limits on what landlords can charge, providing certainty for both landlords and tenants.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Saskatchewan for guidance specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Late Fee Limits
The Formula
Saskatchewan's Residential Tenancies Regulations permit a late payment fee calculated as:
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Initial late fee | $5 on the day after rent is due |
| Per-day charge | $1 per day after the initial late fee |
| Maximum total | $65 per late payment |
Example Calculation
If rent is due on the 1st of the month and is paid on the 15th:
| Day | Running Total |
|---|---|
| Day 1 (2nd of month) | $5 |
| Day 2 (3rd) | $6 |
| Day 3 (4th) | $7 |
| ... | ... |
| Day 14 (15th) | $18 |
If rent remained unpaid for the maximum period, the late fee would cap at $65.
Grace Period
Saskatchewan does not have a formal statutory grace period for rent payments. Rent is legally due on the date specified in the tenancy agreement, and late fees can begin accruing the day after.
However, there is an important distinction between late fees and eviction:
| Action | Timeline |
|---|---|
| Late fees begin | Day after rent is due |
| Eviction proceedings can begin | After rent is 15 days overdue |
This means while a landlord can charge late fees starting on day 2, they cannot begin eviction proceedings until day 16. See our Eviction Process guide for details.
Requirements for Enforceability
To legally charge late fees, landlords must ensure:
- The fee is stated in the tenancy agreement — late fees must be clearly specified in the written lease
- The fee follows the statutory formula — it cannot exceed $5 + $1/day to a maximum of $65
- The fee is not a penalty — it must represent a predetermined estimate of the landlord's costs from late payment
Fees Above the Statutory Limit
Late fees that exceed the statutory maximum are unenforceable. If a landlord charges more than $65 for a single late payment, the excess amount can be challenged through the ORT.
Exceptions to Late Fees
Landlords cannot charge late fees in certain circumstances:
- Mail disruptions — if the payment was mailed on time but delivery was delayed by an unannounced disruption in mail service
- Government agency delays — if rent is paid by a government agency (such as the Saskatchewan Assistance Program) and the payment was delayed by the agency
- Circumstances beyond the tenant's control — other situations where the delay was genuinely not the tenant's fault
If any of these exceptions apply and the landlord charges a late fee, the tenant can dispute the charge through the ORT.
Collecting Late Fees
During the Tenancy
- Late fees should be invoiced separately from rent
- They should not be deducted from future rent payments without the tenant's agreement
- Landlords should document each late payment and the corresponding fee
After the Tenancy
- Outstanding late fees can be deducted from the security deposit
- If the deposit is insufficient, the landlord can file a claim with the ORT for the remaining balance
NSF (Non-Sufficient Funds) Charges
If a tenant's rent cheque or electronic payment bounces due to insufficient funds, the landlord may charge:
- The actual NSF fee imposed by the landlord's financial institution
- This is separate from and in addition to the late payment fee
- The NSF fee must reflect the actual cost incurred, not a punitive amount
Best Practices for Landlords
- Include late fee terms in every lease — clearly state the $5 + $1/day formula and $65 maximum
- Send a late payment reminder before the fee kicks in — a simple text or email on the due date can prevent issues
- Document all late payments — maintain a log with dates and amounts for each tenancy
- Be consistent — apply late fees uniformly to all tenants to avoid discrimination claims
- Consider electronic payment options — pre-authorized debits reduce late payments significantly
- Issue receipts — provide written confirmation of any late fees charged
- Know the exceptions — don't charge late fees when the delay was beyond the tenant's control
Comparison with Other Canadian Provinces
| Province | Late Fee Rule |
|---|---|
| Saskatchewan | $5 + $1/day, max $65 |
| Ontario | Late fees not permitted |
| Alberta | Reasonable late fees permitted if in lease |
| British Columbia | Late fees not permitted |
| Manitoba | Maximum 1% of rent per month for late payment |
Saskatchewan's approach is unique in Canada — it provides a clear, predictable formula that gives landlords a legitimate tool while protecting tenants from excessive charges.
How Landager Helps
Landager automatically tracks rent due dates for each tenancy, sends payment reminders to tenants, calculates late fees according to Saskatchewan's formula, and maintains a complete payment history — saving you time and ensuring compliance with provincial regulations.
Sources & Official References
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