Mississippi Late Rent Fees: Rules, Limits, and Enforceability
Understand Mississippi's rules on residential late rent fees, including the prohibition on daily late fees, the 'reasonable' fee standard, and lease requirem...
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Charging a late fee is a standard practice for landlords seeking to encourage timely rent payments. In Mississippi, landlords are legally permitted to charge late fees, but they must cover rules regarding "reasonableness" and ensure the fees are properly documented in the lease agreement.
1. No Statutory Cap, but Must Be "Reasonable"
Unlike some states that strictly limit late fees to $50 or 5% of the rent by statute, Mississippi has no specific statutory cap.
However, under common law contract principles, a late fee must be deemed "reasonable." A late fee cannot be designed purely to punish the tenant; it must act as a reasonable estimate of the administrative costs and inconveniences the landlord faces when rent is late.
- What is reasonable? Generally, courts accept late fees between 4% and 10% of the monthly rent. For example, a $50 late fee on a $1,000 monthly rent is universally considered reasonable.
- What is unreasonable? Courts routinely strike down exorbitant late fees. If a landlord charges a fee exceeding 15% of the rent, a judge may find it to be an unenforceable penalty.
2. Daily Late Fees Are Prohibited
While landlords have flexibility on the total amount. Mississippi law prohibits the charging of daily late fees.
A landlord can only charge a one-time, flat late fee per payment cycle. You cannot structure your lease to say, "The tenant is charged $50 if late, plus $10 per day for every day the rent remains unpaid." If a lease contains a compounding daily fee, that clause is legally void.
3. The Requirement of a Written Lease
For a late fee to be legally enforceable in Mississippi, it must be explicitly stated in writing within the lease agreement.
You cannot simply demand a late fee because a tenant paid late; the tenant must have agreed to the penalty beforehand. A verbal agreement to charge a late fee is not legally binding. Your lease must clearly stipulate:
- The exact dollar amount or percentage of the late fee.
- The date the rent is considered late.
- The date the fee will be applied.
4. No Mandatory Grace Period
Mississippi state law does not require landlords to provide a grace period.
If the lease states rent is due on the 1st of the month, the landlord can legally charge a late fee on the 2nd (assuming the lease stipulates this).
However, as a best practice, the vast majority of landlords offer a grace period of 3 to 5 days. For example, rent is due on the 1st, but the late fee is not assessed until the 6th. This accommodates weekends, holidays, and minor bank delays without destroying tenant goodwill.
Late Fees vs. Eviction
It is important to understand how late fees interact with the eviction process:
- A landlord can issue a 3-Day Notice to Pay or Quit immediately the day after rent is due, regardless of whether a late fee has been assessed yet.
- While you can demand the unpaid rent and the late fee to stop an eviction, courts generally will not allow you to evict a tenant solely for an unpaid late fee if they have paid their base rent in full.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, important compliance dates, and documentation - making it easy to stay compliant with Mississippi regulations.
Back to [Mississippi Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview] (/property-compliance/usa/mississippi/overview).
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