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

Louisiana Commercial Rent Increase Rules

Learn how commercial rent increases are handled in Louisiana, including the total absence of rent control and the importance of lease escalation provisions.

Melvin Prince
4分で読めます
認証済み Apr 2026United States flag
ルイジアナ州商業ルイジアナ州 事業用家賃統制法事業用賃貸契約 家賃値上げ通知

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Notice Required
Per lease terms
Rent Caps
None

Louisiana Commercial Rent Increase Rules

Louisiana is a definitively laissez-faire state regarding commercial rent control. Consistent with its overall pro-business, freedom-of-contract approach, there is absolutely no commercial rent control in Louisiana, and state law prohibits individual parishes or municipalities from imposing rent stabilization ordinances.

Commercial landlords and tenants have the freedom to negotiate virtually any rent escalation structure within their lease agreement.

Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are legally rooted in contractual agreements, and Louisiana R.S. 9:3258 outlaws rent control.

Rent Increase Steps in louisiana

1

1. Review Lease

Check for rent escalation clauses.

2

2. Written Notice

Provide notice as required by the lease.

3

3. Effective Date

Implement the new rent amount.

The Absolute Ban on Rent Control

In Louisiana, you will never encounter a scenario where a state or local governmemt dictates how much you can legally charge a commercial tenant or caps the percentage by which you can increase rent annually.

The only restrictions on commercial rent increases are those explicitly agreed to and drafted into the commercial lease contract.

Structuring Increases in the Commercial Lease

Because there is no statutory framework governing the timing or amount of commercial rent increases, the Rent Escalation Clause must be explicitly defined in the lease.

If a multi-year commercial lease is silent on the issue of rent increases, the landlord generally cannot increase the base rent until the fixed term expires.

Common Commercial Escalation Types in Louisiana

TypeDescriptionPredictability
Fixed Step-UpA predetermined flat dollar or percentage increase kicking in on specific anniversary dates.Highly Predictable
CPI AdjustedRent directly tied to changes in the Consumer Price Index (usually capped to prevent volatility).Medium
Percentage RentA base rent threshold plus a percentage of the tenant's gross retail sales above a "breakpoint".Low to Medium
Pass-Through (NNN)While base rent may remain flat, the total effective rent rises with actual increases in property taxes, insurance, and CAM expenses.Variable

Month-to-Month Commercial Tenancies

If a commercial lease term expires and converts to a month-to-month tenancy (referred to as a "reconduction" under the Civil Code if the landlord permits the tenant to stay), the landlord maintains the right to increase the rent.

Under Louisiana law, changing the terms of a month-to-month tenancy, including the rent price, requires providing reasonable notice. Per La. Civ. Code art. 2728, the statutory minimum for month-to-month tenancies is 10 days before the end of the month, but 30 days is the standard best practice before implementing an increase.

Notification Best Practices

For step-up or CPI escalations written into multi-year commercial leases, the increase is a contractual obligation of the tenant. Technically, no formal legal notice is required for internal lease escalations-the tenant agreed to them on day one.

However, as a best business practice and to avoid late payments and 5-Day Notices, commercial landlords should:

  1. Send a courtesy notification letter 30-45 days prior to an escalation date.
  2. Explain the calculation cleanly (especially if it involves a dynamic variable like CPI).
  3. Issue an updated recurring invoice reflecting the new base rent.

See our Commercial Eviction Process guide.

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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