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Wisconsin Commercial Eviction Process: Notices, Timelines, and Acceleration

A guide to evicting a commercial tenant in Wisconsin. Learn about 5-day notices, acceleration clauses, small claims court procedures, and writs of restitution.

Melvin Prince
3 min de lectura
Verificado Apr 2026United States flag
DesahucioPropiedad-comercialWisconsinTribunal de demandas de menor cuantíaCláusula de aceleración

Descargo de Responsabilidad Legal

Este contenido tiene fines informativos y educativos generales únicamente. No constituye asesoramiento legal y no debe confiarse en él como tal. Las leyes cambian con frecuencia; verifique siempre las regulaciones actuales y consulte a un abogado con licencia en su jurisdicción para obtener asesoramiento específico para su situación. Landager es una plataforma de gestión de propiedades, no un bufete de abogados.Información verificada por última vez: April 2026.

While commercial evictions in Wisconsin use the same small claims court process (Chapter 799) as residential evictions, the statutory notice requirements for commercial tenancies differ significantly from residential tenancies under Wis. Stat. § 704.17(2) and (3). Furthermore, under Wis. Stat. § 704.17(5), commercial leases can override statutory notice requirements entirely, meaning the terms of the written lease generally control. Commercial leases also frequently contain provisions—such as acceleration clauses and expanded remedies—that make the financial consequences far more severe for the defaulting tenant.

Step 1: Notice to Quit

The statutory default notice requirements for commercial evictions differ based on the lease term, unless overridden by the lease:

Fixed-Term Leases

ReasonNotice PeriodRight to Cure?
Non-Payment of Rent (Lease > 1 Year)30-day notice to pay or vacateYes
Lease Violation (Lease > 1 Year)30-day notice to cure or vacateYes
Repeated DefaultGoverned by the terms of the contractNo

Month-to-Month Tenancies

ReasonNotice PeriodRight to Cure?
Non-Payment / Breach28-day notice to vacateNo
No-Cause Termination28-day noticeN/A

Lease-Specific Notice Provisions

Many commercial leases override these statutory defaults by defining their own notice periods and cure rights. A lease might grant the tenant a 30-day cure period for nonpayment or require the landlord to send notices via certified mail to both the tenant and a corporate guarantor. The lease controls.

Step 2: Filing in Small Claims Court

If the tenant does not cure the default or vacate, the landlord files an eviction action in small claims court (Chapter 799). The court schedules a hearing, typically within 5–25 days.

Step 3: Court Hearing and Judgment

Both parties present evidence. Landlords should bring:

  • The executed lease agreement.
  • Proof of service of the notice.
  • Rent ledger and accounts receivable statements.
  • Evidence of the specific default (photos, communications).

If the court rules for the landlord, a writ of restitution is issued, directing the county sheriff to physically remove the tenant if they refuse to leave voluntarily.

Acceleration Clauses

A hallmark of Wisconsin commercial leases is the acceleration clause. Upon a material default, this clause allows the landlord to demand not only past-due rent, but also all remaining rent due for the entire unexpired lease term, in one lump sum.

For example, if a tenant has 3 years left on a $5,000/month lease and defaults, the landlord can seek a judgment for $180,000 in accelerated rent, plus late fees, default interest, and attorney costs.

Courts will generally enforce acceleration clauses if they are:

  • Clearly written in the lease.
  • Signed and acknowledged by the tenant.
  • Not unconscionable in the specific circumstances.

Self-Help Evictions

Even in commercial settings, Wisconsin law generally prohibits self-help evictions. A landlord cannot change locks, shut off utilities, or physically bar the tenant from the premises without a court order. Doing so exposes the landlord to liability for business interruption damages.

Back to Wisconsin Commercial Property Laws Overview.

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