Commercial Evictions in Queensland: Forfeiture and Re-entry

Commercial Eviction Process compliance guide for Queensland, Australia. Covers landlord-tenant regulations, requirements, and legal obligations.

Melvin Prince
6 min read
Verified Apr 2026Australia flag
QueenslandAustraliacommercial eviction processComplianceLandlord-tenant-law

Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.Information last verified: April 2026.

Evicting a commercial tenant in Queensland—legally known as "forfeiture of the lease" or "re-entry"—is a drastic and highly rigid legal procedure. Despite what the commercial lease agreement might claim, a landlord's right to lock a tenant out of their business is strictly regulated by statute.

Section 124 of the Property Law Act 1974

Many sophisticated commercial leases contain clauses stating that if rent is one day late, the landlord has an "immediate right of re-entry" to change the locks without notice. In Queensland, these clauses are legally unenforceable on their own.

Section 124 of the Property Law Act 1974 (Qld) overrides these harsh lease clauses. It dictates that a landlord cannot execute forfeiture or re-enter the premises without formally serving the tenant a statutory notice and affording them a reasonable opportunity to fix the issue.

The Notice to Remedy Breach of Covenant (Form 7)

Before attempting an eviction, the landlord must personally serve the tenant (or serve at their registered corporate address) a Form 7: Notice to Remedy Breach of Covenant.

This critical legal document must explicitly state:

  1. The exact breach that has occurred (e.g., failure to pay $12,500 in base rent for March).
  2. The specific action the tenant must take to remedy the breach (e.g., pay the outstanding amount).
  3. The specific amount of compensation the landlord requires for the breach (if any).

The "Reasonable Time" Requirement

Most importantly, the Form 7 must give the tenant a "reasonable time" to remedy the breach. What constitutes a "reasonable time" depends entirely on the nature of the breach:

  • For Non-Payment of Rent: 7 to 14 days is generally considered reasonable by Queensland courts.
  • For Non-Monetary Breaches: (e.g., failing to repair a specialized HVAC unit, or illegally subletting the space). A reasonable time might be anywhere from 14 to 30 days, giving them adequate time to hire specialized contractors or terminate the illegal sublease.

Executing the Eviction (Forfeiture)

If the tenant fails to remedy the breach before the deadline stated on the properly served Form 7 expires, the landlord has the legal right to execute forfeiture of the lease. In Queensland, this is typically done via Peaceful Re-entry.

Peaceful Re-entry

If the lease explicitly grants the landlord the right of re-entry upon default, the landlord (usually accompanied by a locksmith and a security guard or lawyer) can attend the commercial premises typically outside of business hours (e.g., 2:00 AM on a Sunday).

Provided there is no physical confrontation or breach of the peace, they can sever the locks, install new padlocks, and post a formal "Notice of Re-entry" on the front door.

From that moment on, the lease is forfeited, and the tenant is evicted. The tenant cannot return to the premises without the landlord's permission, nor can they operate their business.

Relief Against Forfeiture

Commercial tenants operate businesses with massive sunk costs. If a landlord successfully changes the locks, the tenant has the right to immediately apply to the Supreme Court of Queensland for "Relief Against Forfeiture."

If the tenant arrives at court, pays the outstanding rent, covers the landlord's legal costs, and promises to adhere to the lease, the court will almost always grant the relief, ordering the landlord to hand the keys back to the tenant and reinstate the lease. The courts view forfeiture as a mechanism to secure rent, not as a weapon to destroy a tenant's livelihood.

Automating Default Procedures

Executing a commercial eviction requires an impeccable paper trail. If a landlord draws down on a bank guarantee instead of serving a Form 7, they risk inadvertently waiving their right to forfeit. Landager provides institutional-grade ledger tracking, ensuring that when commercial rent hits arrears, property managers are automatically reminded of the precise statutory Form 7 workflow, preventing costly procedural missteps that could invalidate a peaceful re-entry action.

Additional Commercial Context for Queensland

The Retail Shop Leases Act 1994 (Qld) ensures fairness in commercial leasing by prohibiting unreasonable conditions like ratchet clauses. Security deposits, while not strictly capped by law like residential bonds, must be dealt with according to the agreed lease terms.

Mediation vs Litigation

The emphasis in Queensland is overwhelmingly directed towards alternative dispute resolution via the Queensland Small Business Commissioner (QSBC) prior to any formal litigation or tribunal pathways. This requirement reinforces a collaborative approach rather than punitive action in commercial property management. Landlords cannot bypass the QSBC to take a tenant straight to court over a retail lease dispute without a mediation certificate, unless seeking specific types of urgent injunctive relief.

The Reality of Retail Act Obligations

Landlords of retail premises in Queensland must also be acutely aware of outgoings caps and disclosure obligations. If a disclosure statement is not served at least 7 days before entering the lease (or within the agreed reduced timeframes), the tenant may have the right to terminate within the first six months. This strict adherence to pre-lease procedures ensures full transparency of future financial distresses (like major structural renovations affecting foot traffic) to the tenant upfront.

Furthermore, outgoings must be strictly audited. A lessor can only recover outgoings if they provide the lessee with an annual estimate of outgoings at least one month before the start of each accounting period, and an audited annual statement within three months after the period ends. Failure to do so gives the tenant the legal right to withhold outgoing payments entirely until the documents are provided.

How Landager Helps

Navigating Queensland’s strict regulatory environment—particularly the 2024 RTRA Act amendments linking rent increases to the property—requires precision. Landager's platform automates compliance for QLD landlords by tracking 12-month rent lock periods, generating perfectly timed Form 11 and Form 12 notices, and ensuring bond lodgments adhere to the new 4-week unified cap. Keep your portfolio legally pristine with integrated RTA guidance.

Sources & Official References

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Major cities governed by Queensland jurisdiction

BrisbaneGold CoastIpswichTownsvilleCairnsToowoombaMackayBundabergMaroochydoreRockhamptonBuderimHervey BayCaloundraGladstoneSouthportCabooltureCoomeraNarangbaNerangOrmeauMaryboroughRochedaleEmeraldWarwickDalbyGracemereNambourCorindaGympieKingaroyBrisbaneGold CoastIpswichTownsvilleCairnsToowoombaMackayBundabergMaroochydoreRockhamptonBuderimHervey BayCaloundraGladstoneSouthportCabooltureCoomeraNarangbaNerangOrmeauMaryboroughRochedaleEmeraldWarwickDalbyGracemereNambourCorindaGympieKingaroyBrisbaneGold CoastIpswichTownsvilleCairnsToowoombaMackayBundabergMaroochydoreRockhamptonBuderimHervey BayCaloundraGladstoneSouthportCabooltureCoomeraNarangbaNerangOrmeauMaryboroughRochedaleEmeraldWarwickDalbyGracemereNambourCorindaGympieKingaroyBrisbaneGold CoastIpswichTownsvilleCairnsToowoombaMackayBundabergMaroochydoreRockhamptonBuderimHervey BayCaloundraGladstoneSouthportCabooltureCoomeraNarangbaNerangOrmeauMaryboroughRochedaleEmeraldWarwickDalbyGracemereNambourCorindaGympieKingaroy

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