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Louisiana Commercial Eviction Process

A detailed guide to the commercial eviction process in Louisiana, emphasizing the 5-day notice, the Rule for Eviction, and the critical Waiver of Notice cl...

Melvin Prince
4 min di lettura
Verificato Apr 2026United States flag
LouisianaCommercialeProcesso di sfratto commerciale della LouisianaCome sfrattare un inquilino commerciale in LouisianaAvviso commerciale di 5 giorni della Louisiana

Disclaimer Legale

Questo contenuto è solo a scopo informativo ed educativo generale. Non costituisce consulenza legale e non deve essere considerato tale. Le leggi cambiano frequentemente: verifica sempre le normative vigenti e consulta un avvocato abilitato nella tua giurisdizione per consulenza specifica sulla tua situazione. Landager è una piattaforma di gestione immobiliare, non uno studio legale.Informazioni verificate l'ultima volta: April 2026.

Notice Standard
5 Days
Self-Help
Prohibited

Louisiana Commercial Eviction Process

Louisiana’s commercial eviction process is exceptionally rapid and definitively favors the landlord when lease terms are clearly defined. Governed by the Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure, commercial evictions follow the same baseline framework as residential evictions, but courts grant commercial landlords far greater speed and leniency due to the sophistication of business contracts.

Self-help evictions are explicitly prohibited. A commercial landlord cannot unilaterally change the locks, seize inventory, or cut off utilities without a court-issued Writ of Possession, regardless of what the lease says.

Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are governed by the Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure Art. 4701.

Eviction Timeline in louisiana

1

1. 5-Day Notice

Serve a 5-day Notice to Vacate.

2

2. Rule for Possession

File court action if tenant holds over.

3

3. 24-Hour Warrant

Constable executes eviction if tenant ignores judgment.

1. Establishing Default

The commercial lease defines precisely what triggers a default. Common grounds for eviction include:

  • Monetary Default: Failure to pay base rent, CAM charges, or insurance pass-throughs.
  • Non-Monetary Default: Unauthorized subleasing, failure to maintain commercial liability insurance, violating zoning laws, or operating outside the permitted use clause.
  • Holdover: Refusing to vacate after the lease expires.

2. Notice to Vacate vs. Waiver of Notice

This is the most critical juncture in a Louisiana commercial eviction.

The 5-Day Notice to Vacate

By default under Louisiana law (La. C.C.P. Art. 4701), if a tenant defaults, the landlord must issue a 5-Day Notice to Vacate before filing an eviction suit. This period excludes weekends and state holidays. Crucially, this is a notice to leave, not a notice to cure. The landlord is not legally required to accept late rent once this notice is served.

The Waiver of Notice (The Commercial Standard)

The vast majority of Louisiana commercial leases contain a "Waiver of Notice to Vacate" clause. Because the law explicitly allows tenants to waive their right to this 5-day notice in the lease, a properly drafted commercial lease allows the landlord to bypass the notice phase entirely. The moment a commercial tenant breaches the lease (e.g., rent is 1 day late past the contractually defined due date), the landlord can proceed straight to the courthouse.

3. The Rule for Eviction

If the Notice to Vacate expires (or the lease waived the notice), the landlord files a Rule for Eviction (also known as a Petition for Eviction) in the appropriate City or District Court.

The landlord must present the executed lease agreement to the court. If relying on a waiver of notice, the landlord will highlight that specific clause for the judge.

4. The Hearing and Judgment

A constable or sheriff serves the tenant with an Order to Show Cause, ordering them to appear in court, usually within mere days.

At the hearing, commercial tenants have extremely limited defenses if the default is proven. If the judge rules for the landlord, a Judgment of Eviction is issued, ordering the tenant to vacate within 24 hours.

5. The Warrant for Possession

If the commercial tenant remains in the property 24 hours after the judgment, the landlord obtains a Warrant for Possession. The sheriff or constable will forcefully execute the warrant, physically removing the tenant's personnel, changing the locks, and allowing the landlord to secure the premises and any remaining inventory.

The "Acceptance of Rent" Trap

Commercial landlords must be exceptionally careful when dealing with partial payments during an eviction. In Louisiana, accepting partial rent after issuing a Notice to Vacate or filing a Rule for Eviction can legally invalidate the eviction proceeding. If a landlord intends to evict, they must refuse all partial payments unless a formal, written "reservation of rights" agreement is signed by the tenant.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, required compliance items, and accounting records - making it easy to stay compliant with Louisiana regulations.

Back to Louisiana Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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