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

Singapore Commercial Late Fees: Rules and Statutes

Learn about the limitations on commercial late fees and penalty interest rates under the Retail Code of Conduct in Singapore.

Melvin Prince
3 min lesing
Verifisert Mar 2026Singapore flag
SingaporeForsinkelsesgebyr for næringseiendomForsinkelsesrenteDetaljhandelslokalerEtiske-retningslinjer

Juridisk ansvarsfraskrivelse

Dette innholdet er kun for generell informasjon og opplæring. Det utgjør ikke juridisk rådgivning og bør ikke stoles på som sådan. Lover endres ofte – verifiser alltid gjeldende forskrifter og konsulter en lisensiert advokat i din jurisdiksjon for råd spesifikt for din situasjon. Landager er en eiendomsforvaltningsplattform, ikke et advokatfirma.Informasjon sist verifisert: March 2026.

Just as with the residential market, Singapore’s common law prohibits arbitrary punitive "fines" for late payment in the commercial sector. Late fees must be classified legally as compensatory "liquidated damages."

Late Interest
Per Lease Terms

However, for retail landlords, the Code of Conduct now dictates exactly what constitutes an acceptable interest rate.

Non-Retail / General Commercial Penalty Interest

For standard offices, warehouses, and industrial parks not covered by the retail Code of Conduct, there is no strict statutory cap on late payment interest.

Instead, the terms are fiercely negotiated.

  • It is standard market practice for a commercial Tenancy Agreement to stipulate a late payment interest rate of between 8% and 12% per annum, calculated on a daily basis from the day the rent became overdue until the day it is fully settled.
  • If a landlord attempts to draft a clause enforcing a 30% per annum interest rate, or an immediate flat $10,000 penalty for being a week late, the Singapore courts will almost certainly strike it down as an unenforceable, unconscionable "penalty clause." Only genuine pre-estimates of financial loss (like standard corporate lending or overdraft rates from major banks) are upheld.

Late Fees Under the CoC (Qualifying Retail Premises)

For landlords managing shopping malls, F&B outlets, and high-street retail stores holding Qualifying Retail Premises (QRP) leases longer than one year, the Code of Conduct (CoC) strictly regulates the imposition of late fees.

The Capped Interest Rate

Under the CoC, a retail landlord cannot arbitrarily determine the late payment interest rate in the lease.

The CoC mandates that the late payment interest rate stipulated in a retail lease must not exceed:

  • The prevailing prime lending rate of the landlord's primary bank (or an average prime rate among local major banks), plus a small compensatory margin (often +2% or +4%).
  • While the exact percentage floats with the volatile global interest rate market, landlords must clearly refer to a standardized banking base rate in the TA rather than inventing a fixed, arbitrarily high percentage (e.g. 15% unconditionally).

Compounding vs Simple Interest

Furthermore, commercial practice is heavily regulated. The interest is typically charged on the principal arrears sum only (Simple Interest). Charging "interest on the interest" (compound interest) on late rent is heavily frowned upon and routinely struck down unless there are exceptionally drafted, airtight clauses acknowledging massive commercial lending costs on the landlord's side.

By adopting property management software, commercial landlords ensure they automatically apply compliant, localized interest rate caps to overdue retail invoices, removing the risk of accidentally drifting into penalizing, legally voidable territory.

Back to Singapore Commercial Leasing Overview.

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