North Carolina Late Fee Laws: Limits & Grace Periods
Complete guide to North Carolina late fee regulations. Maximum caps, grace periods, and the rules for charging fees to residential tenants.
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: April 2026.
North Carolina is one of the few states with a specific statutory cap on residential late fees, combined with a mandatory grace period. These rules protect tenants from excessive charges while still providing landlords with a tool to encourage timely payment.
Official Law Citation: N.C.G.S. § 42-46 (Authorized late fees and administrative fees).
Mandatory 5-Day Grace Period
Under N.C.G.S. § 42-46, rent must be at least 5 days late before a late fee can be charged. If rent is due on the 1st, the earliest a late fee can be assessed is the 6th.
This grace period cannot be waived by the lease - it is a statutory minimum.
Late Fee Caps
The maximum late fee depends on the payment frequency:
Examples
- Monthly rent of $1,000: Late fee = 5% × $1,000 = $50 (5% exceeds $15).
- Monthly rent of $200: Late fee = $15 ($15 exceeds 5% of $200 = $10).
- Weekly rent of $250: Late fee = 5% × $250 = $12.50 (5% exceeds $4).
One Fee Per Late Payment
A landlord may only charge one late fee per late rental payment. Stacking daily or weekly fees on a single late payment is prohibited.
Cannot Create a Default
A landlord cannot deduct a late fee from a subsequent rent payment and then treat that payment as being in default (short). In other words, if a tenant pays next month's full rent on time but has an outstanding late fee from the previous month, the landlord cannot claim the future rent is "short" and charge another late fee.
Must Be in the Lease
To be enforceable, the late fee must be:
- Clearly stated in the lease agreement.
- Within the statutory cap.
- Applied only after the 5-day grace period.
A late fee charged without a lease provision is not enforceable.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, late fees limits, and legal notice deadlines - making it easy to stay compliant with North Carolina regulations.
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