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

Massachusetts Commercial Late Fees: Default Interest and Enforcement

Understand the rules for late fees in Massachusetts commercial leases, including default interest clauses, the lack of a statutory grace period, and remedies.

Melvin Prince
2 min lezen
Geverifieerd Apr 2026United States flag
Commerciële boete te late huur MassachusettsBetalingstermijn huur commercieel MassachusettsCommerciële boetes te late betaling MassachusettsCommerciële betalingstermijn huurcontract MassachusettsMaximale boete te late betaling commercieel Massachusetts

Juridische Disclaimer

Deze inhoud is uitsluitend bedoeld voor algemene informatieve en educatieve doeleinden. Het vormt geen juridisch advies en mag daar niet op worden vertrouwd. Wetten veranderen voortdurend — verifieer altijd de huidige regelgeving en raadpleeg een bevoegde advocaat in uw rechtsgebied voor advies specifiek voor uw situatie. Landager is een vastgoedbeheerplatform, geen advocatenkantoor.Informatie laatst geverifieerd: April 2026.

Maximum Late Fee
No statutory limit
Grace Period
None required

The famous Massachusetts 30-day late fee grace period that applies to residential tenancies under MGL Ch. 186, §15B does NOT apply to commercial leases. Commercial late fees are governed entirely by the terms of the lease agreement.

Official Law Citation: Late fees in commercial leases are governed by general contract law and strictly by the negotiated terms of the commercial lease document.

No Statutory Grace Period for Commercial

Because §15B's 30-day grace period is exclusive to residential tenancies, a commercial landlord can legally charge a late fee on the very first day rent is overdue, provided the lease authorizes it. If the lease says rent is due on the 1st and a $500 late fee accrues on the 2nd, that is generally enforceable.

Default Interest vs. Flat Fees

Massachusetts commercial leases typically employ one of two mechanisms for penalizing late payments:

1. Default Interest

The lease imposes daily interest on any unpaid rent from the due date until payment is received.

  • Typical Rate: 10-18% per annum, or a percentage above the Prime Rate (e.g., "Prime + 5%").
  • Enforceability: While Massachusetts courts give more deference to commercial contracts than residential ones, an excessively high interest rate (e.g., 36% per annum) could be challenged as an unenforceable "penalty" under general contract law principles.

2. Flat Late Fee

A fixed dollar amount (e.g., $500) or a percentage of the monthly rent (e.g., 5%) charged if rent is not received after a short grace period (e.g., 5 or 10 days).

  • The fee must bear a reasonable relationship to the landlord's actual damages from the delayed payment (administrative costs, financing costs).

Combining Both Mechanisms

It is common to see both mechanisms in the same lease: a flat late fee triggered after a short grace period, plus default interest running from the due date on any amounts remaining unpaid after, e.g., 30 days.

Interaction with Eviction

A landlord can simultaneously charge late fees/interest and begin eviction proceedings. The two remedies are not mutually exclusive.

  • If the lease is clear, lost rent, late fees, and default interest can all be pursued in the Summary Process action or a subsequent breach of contract suit.

Back to Massachusetts Commercial Lease Laws Overview.

Bronden & officiële referenties

Vond je deze gids leuk? Deel het:

📬 Ontvang meldingen wanneer deze wetten veranderen

We e-mailen je wanneer huurrechtwetten updaten in Geen spam - alleen wetswijzigingen.

Wij brengen actief wetten in kaart voor United StatesSluit je aan bij de wachtlijst, en je bent als eerste op de hoogte wanneer het beschikbaar is!

Discussie