B2B Commercial Penalties and Fines in Russian Leasing

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Restrictions on excessive profits in commercial leasing: Article 333 CC RF, the 'exit fee' fine, and harsh security measures of shopping centers.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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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.

In corporate leasing (Shopping Malls, Warehouses), landlords possess a powerful tool for pressure—gigantic commercial fines. While a small entrepreneur in a residential apartment can walk away losing only their deposit, a large retail chain facing a single day's delay in a warehouse complex might receive lawsuits for hundreds of thousands of rubles.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes. Arbitration courts periodically slash corporate penalties if they exceed the cost of the building itself. Information verified: March 2026.

1. Late Payment Penalties and the 0.1% Rate (B2B Standard)

Just as in residential leasing, the law in the corporate sector allows parties to establish contractual penalties for every day of rent delay. Landlords (owners of business centers) actively use this.

  • The standard, "decent" market practice (approved by Arbitration Courts) is setting a penalty of 0.1% or 0.5% of the delayed amount for each day of delay.
  • Slashing the Penalty via Arbitration: Often, "greedy" landlords insert a clause proposing a "5% per day fine." The commercial debt of a pizzeria chain racks up so fast that after six months, the penalty fines multiply the original rent debt many times over (e.g., debt is 2 million, but penalties are 10 million). In this case, a Russian Arbitration Judge, upon motion by the debtor, will always apply the fundamental Article 333 of the CC RF, slashing these "contractual penalties" tenfold down to economically justified sizes (comparable to the Bank of Russia rate). The logic is that a landlord has no right to "enrich" themselves on a restaurant's financial troubles (they are only allowed to cover losses incurred by the delay).

2. Fines (Penalties) for Violating Operating Rules (Shopping Malls)

A unique feature of Shopping Center (Mall) and Class-A Business Center contracts is the rigid lists of "One-time fixed fines" for businesses (operational penalties), which are harder to challenge in court than simply late payments:

  • Fine for Late Opening / Early Closing: If the mall operates from 10:00 to 22:00, and a store rolls up its shutters at 10:30, the landlord levies a fine (up to 5-10 thousand rubles for each incident).
  • Fine for Storing Goods: Leaving boxes (packaging) in the common hallway of the mall is punished by hefty fines from the Management Company.
  • Commercial Van Parking: Violating unloading zone schedules.
  • Dark Windows: Most premium malls include fines for unlit, empty, or dirty brand storefront windows that "ruin the mall's design concept."

3. The "Exit Fee" (Indemnity for Early Unilateral Move-Out)

In a 5 (or 10) year lease, a commercial chain might want to exit early, realizing their business in this "point" is suffering losses due to poor foot traffic (e.g., the promised metro station was never built). Simply getting up and leaving, saying "we are giving you a month's notice and leaving our one-month deposit as a gift"—will not work in a serious Russian B2B contract.

Russian Arbitration Specifics: "You have to pay for the right to retreat from a contract." Corporations sign agreements wherein the right to break a 10-year warehouse contract in the first 5 years obligates the Tenant to:

  1. Notify the Building Owner significantly in advance (often 6 or 9 months).
  2. Pay the owner a "Fee for unilateral exit (Indemnity)", which is usually a massive sum (amounting to 3, 4, or even 6 months of Base Rent) as compensation for the landlord's future "downtime" losses on the property. Only after paying this multi-million ruble fine is the retail chain recognized as free from the lease.

If the chain (restaurant) simply dismantles its equipment at night and runs away without paying the exit " severance," the landlord unleashes security to arrest the property and sues for millions in debt (fine + rent + moral damages) in an Arbitration/Commercial Court.

Return to the Commercial Lease Overview in Russia.

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