ACT Late Fees: Rules on Rent Arrears and Penalties

Late Fees compliance guide for Australian Capital Territory, Australia. Covers landlord-tenant regulations, requirements, and legal obligations.

Melvin Prince
4 min de lecture
Hitelesített Apr 2026Australie flag
australian capital territoryAustralieTaxe-întârziereConformitéLegea-proprietar-chiriaș

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The Australian Capital Territory (ACT) strictly regulates how landlords can respond to late rent payments under the Residential Tenancies Act 1997. Australian courts generally view daily penalty fees as unfair, focusing instead on proactive communication and formal eviction notices if rent remains unpaid.

Penalty Late Fees are Unenforceable

In the ACT, a landlord cannot charge a tenant a punitive flat "late fee" (e.g., $50 per day) for missing a rent payment.

The Standard Residential Tenancy Terms do not include provisions for late rent fees. If a landlord attempts to add a "Special Condition" to the lease allowing for arbitrary late fees, ACAT (the ACT Civil and Administrative Tribunal) will likely strike it down as an unenforceable penalty clause under Australian contract law.

While minor, reasonable administrative costs (such as a bounced bank cheque fee charged to the landlord) may theoretically be recoverable, standard operational costs cannot be arbitrarily passed on as late fees.

The Legal Response: Rent Arrears Process

Because landlords cannot rely on late fees to penalize tenants, the ACT law focuses entirely on the process of recovering the rent or recovering the property through eviction.

When a tenant falls into arrears, the landlord should follow a strict timeline:

1. Wait the Statutory Period

The tenant must be continuously in arrears for at least 7 days before formal legal action can commence. During this first week, landlords should send polite reminders to determine if the missed payment was an oversight.

2. Issue a Notice to Remedy

On the 8th day of arrears, the landlord can serve a formal Notice to Remedy.

  • This notice must be in writing.
  • It provides the tenant with an additional 7 days to pay the outstanding rent.

3. Issue a Notice to Vacate

If the tenant has still not paid the full arrears after the 7 days specified in the Notice to Remedy have expired, the landlord can serve a Notice to Vacate.

  • This notice must give the tenant at least 14 days to vacate the premises.

The "Pay and Stay" Rule

Crucially, in the ACT, if the tenant pays the full rent arrears before the 14-day Notice to Vacate period expires, the Notice to Vacate becomes void, and the tenancy continues. The eviction is cancelled.

Note: If a tenant repeatedly falls into arrears—specifically, if a landlord has had to issue a Notice to Vacate on two previous occasions under the same tenancy—ACAT may allow an eviction to proceed even if the tenant pays up on the third occasion.

Deducting from Bond

If a tenant vacates a property and still owes rent, the landlord can claim those arrears from the rental bond held by the ACT Rental Bonds Office. Landlords cannot demand that rent arrears be paid out of the bond while the tenancy is still ongoing.

Additional Territory Context for ACT

The Australian Capital Territory (ACT) operates under a specialized legal structure due to its status as the nation's capital. The relationship between landlords and tenants is primarily governed by the Residential Tenancies Act 1997, which has undergone significant amendments in recent years to strengthen tenant protections. This includes the effective abolition of "no-cause" evictions for most lease types, ensuring that housing stability is prioritized for Canberra residents.

All rental bonds must be managed through the ACT Revenue Office, providing a central, secure system for both parties. For investors, understanding the specific maintenance standards required by the territory—including energy efficiency and safety requirements—is paramount. Landager's platform is designed to track these recurring obligations, ensuring that your property remains compliant with the latest territory-wide mandates while providing clear communication channels with your tenants. Regardless of whether you manage a single unit in Belconnen or a large portfolio in Gungahlin, the legal baseline remains consistent across the ACT.

How Landager Helps

Managing properties in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) requires strict adherence to the Residential Tenancies Act 1997, especially regarding the mandatory 4-week bond cap and the annual limit on rent increases. Landager simplifies ACT compliance by automating bond lodgment tracking with the ACT Revenue Office, managing the 8-week notice required for rent increases, and ensuring your eviction processes follow the ACAT-mandated Notice to Remedy sequence. From tracking urgent repair requests to maintaining digital checklists that satisfy ACT habitability standards, Landager provides the tools to manage your Canberra portfolio with confidence.

Back to ACT Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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