New York Late Rent Fee Laws: HSTPA Caps, Grace Period & Enforcement
Understand New York's strict late fee rules under the HSTPA including the $50/5% cap, mandatory 5-day grace period, and why late fees can't trigger eviction.
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The HSTPA of 2019 imposed one of the strictest late fee regimes in the country. New York landlords have a hard statutory cap on the amount they can charge, a mandatory grace period, and significant limitations on how late fees can be collected.
The Hard Cap: $50 or 5%
Under NY Real Property Law § 238-a, the maximum late fee a landlord can charge for late residential rent payment is the lesser of:
- $50, or
- 5% of the monthly rent
For the vast majority of New York apartments-especially in NYC where rents regularly exceed $1,000-the effective cap is $50. This is one of the lowest maximum late fees in the United States.
Timing for Late Fees
New York law states that a landlord may only demand a late fee if the payment of rent has not been made within five days of the date it was due. If rent is due on the 1st, the earliest a late fee can be charged is the 6th of the month.
Late Fees Cannot Trigger Eviction
This is a critical distinction in New York law. Late fees are not "rent" in Housing Court. This means:
- A landlord cannot include unpaid late fees in a 14-day rent demand (the required precursor to a non-payment eviction).
- A landlord cannot evict a tenant solely for failing to pay late fees.
- To collect unpaid late fees, a landlord must bring a separate civil action in small claims or civil court.
This effectively makes late fees a secondary, collection-only tool-not a lever for threatening eviction.
Bounced Check Fees (2025 Update)
As of 2025, a new rule prohibits landlords from charging a fee for a dishonored check (bounced check) that exceeds the actual fee the landlord's bank charged them. Previously, some landlords charged $50+ for returned checks; this is now capped at the bank's actual cost.
Rent-Stabilized Units
For rent-stabilized apartments, late fees can only be charged if a provision for them was included in the tenant's original lease. A landlord cannot retroactively add a late fee clause during a renewal.
Best Practices for New York Landlords
- Include the fee in the lease: Even though the cap is statutory, the lease should explicitly state the late fee amount (no more than $50 or 5%) and when the fee applies.
- Maintain clear records: Keep documented proof of when rent payments are received before assessing any late fees.
- Track late fees separately: Since late fees cannot be combined with rent demands, maintain a separate ledger for late fee balances.
- Don't rely on late fees as income: With a $50 maximum, late fees in New York are a compliance exercise, not a revenue stream.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, HSTPA deadline compliance, and security deposit interest - making it easy to handle your property portfolio while staying compliant with New York regulations.
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