Washington D.C. Rent Late Fees Laws & Cap
Review Washington D.C.'s strict limitations on rent late fees, including the mandatory 5-day grace period, the 5% maximum cap, and the 30-day invoice rule.
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.
Washington D.C. Late Fee Laws
Washington D.C. strictly caps the financial penalties landlords can impose on residential tenants for missing a rent payment.
Governed primarily by the Rental Housing Late Fee Fairness Amendment Act of 2016, a D.C. landlord cannot arbitrarily punish a tenant with aggressive compounding fees; the maximum amounts and the timelines for application are deeply entrenched in D.C. Municipal law.
[!CAUTION] No Evictions for Late Fees: In Washington D.C., a landlord cannot file a lawsuit or execute an eviction solely because a tenant failed to pay an assessed late fee. An eviction must be grounded entirely in unpaid base rent extending past the $600 threshold.
The Financial Cap: 5% Maximum
Washington D.C. sets an absolute statutory ceiling on the severity of a late fee. A residential late fee cannot exceed 5% of the full monthly rent amount.
Furthermore, a landlord is strictly prohibited from enforcing more than one late fee for a single late payment. You cannot "stack" late fees on a singular missed invoice across multiple months.
Mandatory 5-Day Grace Period
In D.C., a landlord cannot legally assess or charge a late fee until a rent payment is late by at least five (5) full calendar days.
If the lease states rent is due exactly on the 1st of the month, a tenant possesses a guaranteed right to submit that payment through the 6th of the month. If the payment clears on the 7th, the landlord may then legally apply the maximum 5% fee.
Crucially, the exact percentage of the maximum late fee actively defined into your lease agreement must be explicitly stated to remain enforceable.
Prohibited Late Fee Practices
To protect low-income and subsidized tenants, D.C. law specifically outlaws the following aggressive late fee maneuvers:
- No Interest on Fees: A landlord is prohibited from charging accrued, compounding interest on an unpaid late fee balance.
- Subsidy Protections: Landlords cannot charge late fees on the portion of rent owed by a government or non-profit housing subsidy provider (like the local Housing Choice Voucher Program). If the government's check is late, the tenant cannot be penalized.
- Improper Deduction Sequences: A landlord cannot intercept a tenant's subsequent standard rent payment and apply it toward an outstanding late fee balance first. Rent payments must always inherently be credited entirely to base rent. (Unpaid late fees can, however, be deducted from the security deposit at the end of the tenancy).
The 30-Day Invoice Rule
If a landlord desires to collect a late fee, they possess a strict window to do so. A legal invoice specifically detailing any newly applied late fees must be issued and successfully delivered to the tenant within 30 days of the original late payment. Failure to issue the invoice within 30 days legally forfeits the landlord's right to collect the fee.
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