Louisiana Commercial Late Fees and Grace Periods
Understand the laws governing late rent fees for commercial properties in Louisiana, including the lack of statutory caps and mandatory grace periods.
법적 고지
이 콘텐츠는 일반 정보 및 교육 목적으로만 제공됩니다. 법률 자문에 해당하지 않으며 그러한 것으로 의존해서는 안 됩니다. 법률은 자주 변경되므로 항상 현재 규정을 확인하고 귀하의 상황에 맞는 조언을 받으려면 해당 지역의 면허가 있는 변호사와 상담하십시오. Landager는 부동산 관리 플랫폼이며 법률 회사가 아닙니다.정보 최종 확인: April 2026.
Louisiana Commercial Late Fees and Grace Periods
In commercial real estate, timely cash flow is paramount for landowners to cover mortgage payments, taxes, and CAM expenses. The Louisiana Civil Code heavily favors a landlord’s ability to aggressively enforce timely rent collection.
Louisiana statutorily mandates absolutely zero grace periods and imposes no caps on late fees for commercial tenancies. The terms surrounding late rent are negotiated entirely and documented exclusively within the commercial lease.
Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are strictly configured under general commercial contract law under the Louisiana Civil Code.
The Absolute Requirement for a Written Clause
Because state law provides no default "late fee formula," a commercial landlord cannot arbitrarily assess a financial penalty simply because a tenant pays late.
To be legally entitled to a late fee, it must be explicitly defined in the signed lease contract, detailing exactly when it triggers and exactly how it is calculated.
See our Commercial Lease Requirements guide.
No Statutory Grace Period Exists
Louisiana does not recognize any mandatory statutory grace period for commercial or residential rent payments.
If a commercial lease states base rent and CAM estimations are due "on or before the 1st of the calendar month," then the tenant is legally in default as of 12:01 AM on the 2nd.
Many sophisticated commercial leases do include a negotiated 3-day to 10-day textual grace period as a business concession, allowing time for mail transit or weekend banking delays. However, this buffer is purely a contractual creation, not a legal mandate.
Enforcing "Reasonable" Commercial Late Fees
Louisiana possesses no statutory ceiling or percentage maximum limiting commercial late fees.
However, Louisiana courts distinguish between enforceable stipulated damages and unenforceable punitive penalties. A commercial late fee drafted in a lease must constitute a reasonable, good-faith estimate of the administrative burden, lost use of capital, and hassle the landlord endures when a payment is tardy.
Because commercial tenants are viewed as sophisticated entities, Louisiana judges are far more permissible with high commercial late fees than residential ones. Standard, heavily enforced fee structures include:
- Flat Rate: A substantial one-time penalty (e.g., $500 if payment isn't received by the end of the 5-day grace period).
- Percentage Model: Charging a percentage of the outstanding balance (e.g., a one-time charge of 5% or 10% of the overdue base rent and CAM combined).
- Per Diem Penalty: A daily accruing fine (e.g., $100 per day) that runs strictly from the due date until the ledger is brought to a literal $0.00 balance.
Default Interest Rates
In conjunction with standard late fees, commercial leases in Louisiana frequently contain a "Default Interest" provision.
This clause assesses an ongoing, annualized interest penalty against any long-term unpaid balances (e.g., "Any sum unpaid by Tenant when due shall bear interest at eighteen percent (18%) per annum"). These clauses are highly enforceable in Louisiana against commercial entities and accrue indefinitely until the tenant ultimately vacates through a Rule for Eviction or settles the debt.
See our Commercial Eviction Process guide.
Residential Late Fees
Commercial Late Fees
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, required compliance items, and accounting records - making it easy to stay compliant with Louisiana regulations.
출처 및 공식 참고 자료
📬 해당 법규 변경 시 알림 받기
임대인-임차인 법규가 업데이트될 때 이메일을 보내드립니다. 스팸 없이 법규 변경 사항만 알려드립니다.




