Arkansas Commercial Late Fees

Understand the laws governing late rent fees for commercial properties in Arkansas, including enforceability and usury limits.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
arkansascommerciallate feesrent collectionusury laws

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.

Arkansas Commercial Late Fees

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Arkansas for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

Charging late fees is a standard mechanism for commercial landlords to incentivize timely rent payments and cover the administrative costs associated with collections. In Arkansas, the rules governing commercial late fees are grounded in contract law rather than specific landlord-tenant statutes.

Arkansas state law does not impose a specific statutory cap on the amount a landlord can charge for a commercial late fee, nor does it mandate a minimum grace period.

The enforceability of a late fee depends entirely on what is written in the lease and whether the fee is deemed an unreasonable penalty under general contract principles.

The Requirement for a Written Agreement

A commercial landlord cannot arbitrarily impose a late fee on a tenant. To be legally enforceable in Arkansas, the late fee provision—including the exact amount, how it is calculated, and when it triggers—must be explicitly drafted into the signed commercial lease agreement.

See our Commercial Lease Requirements guide.

Enforceability: Penalty vs. Liquidated Damages

While Arkansas courts strongly favor freedom of contract, they will generally not enforce a contract provision that acts purely as a punitive "penalty." Instead, for a late fee to be enforceable, it must be structured as liquidated damages—a reasonable pre-estimate of the actual financial harm the landlord suffers when the tenant pays late (e.g., lost interest, administrative follow-up, potential late fees on the landlord's own mortgage).

Common and generally acceptable late fee structures in Arkansas commercial leases include:

  • A flat fee (e.g., $250 if rent is not received by the 5th of the month).
  • A percentage of the base rent (e.g., 5% of the outstanding balance).
  • A per-diem charge (e.g., $50 per day until the balance is paid).

If a landlord attempts to charge an exorbitant late fee (e.g., a $5,000 late fee on a $2,000 monthly rent), an Arkansas court is highly likely to strike it down as an unenforceable penalty.

The Impact of Arkansas Usury Laws

When structuring late fees—particularly those that accrue daily or are calculated as an interest rate on the unpaid balance—landlords must be cautious of the Arkansas Constitution's strict usury limits.

Article 19, Section 13 of the Arkansas Constitution caps the maximum lawful rate of interest. While a flat late charge is typically viewed as a fee rather than interest, if a commercial lease states that unpaid rent accrues "interest at a rate of 25% per annum," this could run afoul of Arkansas usury laws, rendering the interest provision completely void. Arkansas courts take usury very seriously. Commercial landlords should usually cap default interest rates in their leases at the maximum rate permitted by Arkansas law (often tied to the Federal Reserve Discount Rate plus 5%).

Late Fee AspectArkansas Commercial Rule
Statutory CapNone.
Mandatory Grace PeriodNone (unless written in the lease).
Enforceability StandardMust be a reasonable estimate of damages, not a punitive penalty.
Interest on Unpaid BalancesSubject to strict Arkansas Constitutional usury limits.

Grace Periods

Unlike some residential laws that mandate a 5-day grace period, Arkansas commercial law has no such requirement. If a commercial lease states that rent is due on the 1st and a 5% late fee applies on the 2nd, the landlord is legally entitled to assess that fee on the 2nd.

However, standard commercial practice usually includes a 3 to 5-day grace period. If the lease offers a grace period, the landlord must honor it before assessing the fee or serving a notice to quit.

See our Commercial Eviction Process guide for what to do if the tenant refuses to pay the rent or the assessed fees.

How Landager Helps Commercial Landlords

Manually tracking which commercial tenant has a 3-day grace period versus a 5-day grace period, and calculating 5% versus a flat $100 fee, is incredibly tedious. Landager's automated rent collection system reads the specific late fee parameters from your digitized lease. If a tenant misses their unique deadline, the system automatically calculates the appropriate late fee, adds it to their ledger, and issues an updated invoice without the landlord having to lift a finger.

Back to Arkansas Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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