Late Fees and Penalties (Penalități) in Romania
Discover the severe financial penalties Romanian landlords use to combat late rent. Learn about contractual daily percentages, the statutory BNR default interest, and taxation traps.
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.
When a tenant in Romania "forgets" or delays their rent/utility payment past the contractual due date (e.g., the 5th of the month), professional landlords do not rely on polite emails. Instead, they rely on a dual-pronged system of Statutory Default Interest and aggressively formulated Contractual Daily Penalties (Penalități de Întârziere) to force immediate compliance and punish financial tardiness.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant laws change, and contracts dictate most rules. Always consult a licensed local attorney for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Contractual Daily Penalties (Penalități de Întârziere)
The most dangerous, easiest to collect, and most motivating method for extracting late payments in the Romanian rental market involves integrating an explicit Contractual Late Penalty Clause into the written lease agreement before it is signed.
Because Romania relies heavily on the "freedom of contract" (libertatea contractuală) within its Civil Code (Articles 1538+ on Clauza Penală), landlords have broad latitude to set punishing rates for tardy tenants.
A well-crafted lease template (such as those used by Bucharest institutional investors) will dictate:
- Daily Compounding Sanction: If the rent transfer is not booked into the landlord's account by 11:59 PM on the due date, the tenant instantly incurs a fixed penalty.
- The Standard Rate: The lease will state that for EVERY SINGLE DAY of delay, the tenant must pay a penalty equal to 0.1% to 0.5% of the total outstanding debt.
Consider the math: A 0.5% daily penalty equates to an annualized interest rate of over 180%. The Romanian Civil Courts will generally uphold these massive, aggressive daily penalties as a valid motivational tool designed to compel payment, provided the total accumulated penalty does not vastly exceed the value of the principal debt being penalized. If a landlord attempts to charge a 5% daily penalty against a residential consumer, a judge will almost certainly strike it down as an abusive clause (clauză abuzivă).
Statutory Default Interest (Dobânda Legală Penalizatoare)
What happens if an amateur landlord entirely forgets to include a "Late Penalty" clause in their downloaded lease template? They are rescued by the overriding provisions of the Romanian Civil Code regarding statutory default interest (Dobânda Legală Penalizatoare).
Under Government Ordinance (OG) 13/2011 (which regulates statutory interest), if a debtor is late, the creditor is automatically entitled to penalty interest without needing a prior contractual agreement.
For residential (non-business, consumer) relationships, the statutory penalty interest rate is tied directly to the macroeconomic actions of the state:
- The Calculation: The landlord is legally entitled to charge the Reference Interest Rate (Rata Dobânzii de Referință) set by the National Bank of Romania (BNR).
- If the BNR Reference Rate is 7%, the landlord can charge a 7% annualized penalty on the outstanding debt.
Because this statutory BNR rate (calculated annually and broken down to pennies per day) results in a trivially small financial punishment for a €500 rent default, it fails as a deterrent. This is precisely why professional landlords aggressively insert the 0.5% Daily Contractual Penalty into their leases—it actually hurts the tenant to pay late.
The Tax Exemption Trap (TVA / ANAF)
A critical accounting trap exists for any landlord operating a corporate entity (SRL) that charges VAT (TVA).
While commercial rents (and some highly specific residential hotel-like short-term rents) might involve VAT, penalties and late interest are completely exempt from VAT under Romanian Fiscal Code regulations.
If a tenant pays their rent 15 days late and accrues a penalty of €75, the landlord must issue an invoice (or debit note) for the €75. Charging a 19% VAT on top of a penalty/sanction is a severe accounting error because the penalty is legally considered "compensation for damages," not a "service rendered." Doing so invites swift auditing penalties from ANAF.
Leveraging Penalties into Eviction and ANAF Execution
Romanian landlords do not patiently watch 0.5% daily penalties accrue indefinitely; they use them as a tactical lever to trigger the termination and eviction process.
- The Official Demand (Notificarea): The moment the tenant is late, the landlord calculates the base rent PLUS the exact daily penalties accrued thus far. They send a formal, registered demand letter (sometimes via a Bailiff) demanding the total amount, offering a short, strict grace period to cure the default (e.g., 15 days).
- The "Top-Up" Strike: If the tenant refuses to pay the rent and penalties, a proactive landlord simply dips into the Security Deposit (Garanție). They unilaterally deduct the missing rent and the punishing daily penalties from the deposit. They then immediately issue a legal notice commanding the tenant to "Top-Up" or replenish the security deposit back to its contractual maximum within 10 days.
- Triggering the Enforceable Title: If the tenant fails to replenish the violently depleted security deposit or pay the demands, the landlord declares a material breach, terminates the contract, and hands the ANAF-registered lease (the Enforceable Title) to the Judicial Bailiff. The Bailiff initiates the physical, forced eviction within weeks, utilizing state power without ever asking a judge for permission.
Automating the Penalty Machinery
Calculating microscopic 0.5% daily fractions of unpaid rent, ensuring BNR statutory rates are correctly applied, and tracking exact deposit deductions in Excel is a guaranteed path to accounting errors and lost revenue. Landager automates the entire punitive cycle. The second an invoice passes its due date, Landager’s system auto-calculates the exact legal daily penalty fractions, generates pristine, VAT-exempt penalty invoices (Debit Notes), and automatically dispatches intimidating, legally binding formal demand letters to the tenant, ensuring your Romanian assets are fiercely protected against sluggish payers.
Back to Romania Residential Laws Overview.
Sources & Official References
Ready to simplify your rental business?
Join thousands of independent landlords who have streamlined their business with Landager.
