Montana Commercial Eviction Process (Unlawful Detainer)

A comprehensive guide to commercial evictions in Montana, detailing the 15-day notice to cure rent defaults, the 30-day notice for other breaches, and lease supremacy.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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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.

Montana Commercial Eviction Process

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

In Montana, commercial evictions are generally more straightforward and faster than residential evictions. Because the state views commercial leases as contracts between sophisticated business entities, courts overwhelmingly defer to the agreed-upon terms regarding default and eviction.

If the lease is silent on eviction notice periods, the statutory defaults in Montana law take effect.

1. Defining Default and the Notice to Cure

Before a landlord can initiate an eviction (file an Unlawful Detainer action) in a Montana court, they must serve the commercial tenant with a formal written notice detailing the breach and providing a legally required period to fix ("cure") the issue.

Default on Rent (15-Day Default Notice)

If a commercial tenant fails to pay base rent, CAM charges, or property taxes as required by the lease, the statutory default in Montana requires the landlord to provide a 15-Day Written Notice to Cure.

  • The tenant has 15 days from the receipt of the notice to pay all outstanding balances.
  • If the tenant pays, the default is cured, and the lease continues.
  • Lease Supremacy: Overwhelmingly, modern commercial leases explicitly overwrite this 15-day statutory default. It is standard practice in Montana for commercial leases to shorten this period to a strict 3-day or 5-day Notice to Pay or Quit, granting the landlord much faster relief.

Default on Other Covenants (30-Day Default Notice)

For non-monetary breaches (e.g., failing to maintain commercial insurance, conducting unauthorized alterations, or violating the "Permitted Use" clause), the statutory default in Montana is a 30-Day Written Notice to Cure.

  • The tenant must begin diligently attempting to correct the breach within those 30 days.
  • Again, commercial leases routinely alter this and may shorten the timeframe for specific, severe non-monetary breaches.

See our Commercial Lease Requirements guide.

2. Filing the Unlawful Detainer

If the notice period expires and the tenant has neither paid the rent nor vacated the property (becoming a "holdover tenant"), the landlord's next legal step is filing a formal complaint for Unlawful Detainer in the appropriate Montana District Court.

  • Self-Help Eviction is Highly Risky: Unlike some states that still recognize common-law "peaceable re-entry" (changing the locks in the middle of the night) for commercial properties, attempting a self-help eviction in Montana without a court order is exceptionally dangerous and frequently results in the landlord being successfully countersued by the commercial tenant for wrongful eviction and massive business disruption damages. Formal court action is the only safe route.

3. The Hearing and Writ

The court will schedule a hearing. If the judge rules in favor of the landlord (usually due to a clear, documented breach of the lease), the court will issue a judgment granting the landlord possession of the property.

If the tenant still refuses to leave, the landlord must take the court order to the local County Sheriff, who will execute the writ and physically remove the tenant and their business property from the premises.

4. Duty to Mitigate Damages

In Montana commercial real estate, if a tenant breaks the lease early or is evicted for non-payment, the landlord cannot simply sit back, leave the retail unit vacant for the remaining three years of the lease, and continuously sue the tenant for the lost rent.

Montana law imposes a strong duty to mitigate damages on the landlord. The landlord must make a reasonable, good-faith effort to find a replacement commercial tenant for the space. If the landlord successfully re-leases the space, the original, evicted tenant's liability is reduced by the amount of the new rent collected.

See our Commercial Rent Increases guide.

How Landager Helps Commercial Landlords in Montana

Hesitating on serving a default notice only mathematically increases your final bad debt write-off. Landager’s Accounts Receivable workflow automates your initial legal compliance. When a Montana commercial tenant's ledger triggers the delinquency threshold, Landager automatically generates a legally compliant Notice of Default containing exactly the right cure period (intelligently pulling either your explicit 5-day lease clause or the 15-day MCA default) and securely dispatches it, locking down the first crucial step in the Unlawful Detainer process so your legal team can act decisively.

Back to Montana Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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