Created by potrace 1.10, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2011

Kentucky Commercial Late Fees: Rules, Enforceability, and Best Practices

Understand Kentucky commercial late fee rules, including reasonableness standards, grace periods, and how fees interact with eviction notices.

Melvin Prince
3 min čitanja
Provjereno Apr 2026United States flag
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Statutory Limit
None
Grace Period
Determined by Lease
Enforceability
Must be a reasonable estimate of damages

Official Law Citation: Kentucky Contract Law

Commercial late fees in Kentucky are governed entirely by the lease agreement. There is no statutory cap, no mandatory grace period, and no specific commercial late fee statute. However, fees must be reasonable under general contract law.

No Statutory Cap

Kentucky imposes no specific maximum on commercial late fees. The only constraint is general contract law:

  • Fees must be reasonable and proportionate.
  • Excessive fees may be deemed unenforceable penalties.
  • 4-5% of monthly rent is generally considered a safe threshold.
  • Fees exceeding 10% may face scrutiny.

No Mandatory Grace Period

Kentucky law does not require a grace period for commercial rent. Rent is due on the date specified in the lease. Most leases include a 3 to 5 day grace period as a practical matter.

Common Fee Structures

StructureExampleRisk Level
Flat fee$100-$500 per late paymentLow
Percentage5% of monthly rentLow
Daily accrual$50/day after grace periodModerate
Tiered3% first week, 5% thereafterModerate

Default Interest Many

Kentucky commercial leases include default interest on past-due amounts, separate from the late fee. Kentucky's usury statute caps general interest at 8% per annum unless the parties agree otherwise in writing - and commercial parties frequently agree to higher rates (10-12% is common).

Lease Drafting Best Practices

  1. Define late fees clearly - amount, trigger date, and collection method.
  2. Include a grace period - 3-5 days demonstrates reasonableness.
  3. Define late fees as "additional rent" - enables collection through the eviction process.
  4. Separate late fees from default interest - clearly distinguish the one-time fee from ongoing interest.
  5. Keep fees proportionate - 4-5% of monthly rent is the defensible standard.

How Landager Helps

Landager automates commercial rent tracking, late fee assessment, and default interest calculations - ensuring accurate billing across your Kentucky commercial portfolio.

Back to Kentucky Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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