Yukon Commercial Late Fees and Rent Default Rules
Guide to commercial late fees, rent default procedures, and landlord remedies for non-payment in Yukon — interest charges, default clauses, cure periods, and...
Aviso Legal
Este conteúdo é apenas para fins informativos e educacionais gerais. Não constitui aconselhamento jurídico e não deve ser considerado como tal. As leis mudam frequentemente — sempre verifique os regulamentos atuais e consulte um advogado licenciado em sua jurisdição para obter aconselhamento específico para sua situação. Landager é uma plataforma de gestão de propriedades, não um escritório de advocacia.Informações verificadas pela última vez: March 2026.
Late fees and interest on overdue commercial rent in Yukon are entirely governed by the commercial lease agreement — there is no statutory cap or formula that applies. Landlords and tenants are free to negotiate reasonable late payment consequences. What matters is that the lease is clear, specific, and enforceable.
Commercial vs. Residential Late Fee Rules
Late Fee Provisions: What to Include in the Lease
A robust Yukon commercial lease should specifically address:
1. Rent Due Date
State clearly when rent is due — typically the first of each month. Commercial leases rarely include grace periods by default; rent is late the day after the stated due date unless the lease says otherwise.
2. Late Payment Fee
A flat fee or percentage charged when rent is not received by the due date. Common structures:
For enforceability, late fees must be a genuine pre-estimate of the landlord's damages — not a penalty designed to punish. Courts may refuse to enforce fees that are disproportionate.
3. Interest on Overdue Rent
Commercial leases commonly include an interest clause that charges interest on overdue amounts from the due date until payment:
- Prime rate + 2–5% — References the Bank of Canada prime lending rate
- Fixed annual rate — e.g., 18% per annum (1.5% per month)
The interest rate should be clearly defined to avoid disputes.
4. Default Interest Rate vs. Regular Rate
Some leases include a distinction between:
- Regular interest rate — Charged during a cure period
- Default interest rate — Higher rate charged after the tenant fails to cure a default within the specified period
5. Administrative Costs
The lease may also require the tenant to reimburse the landlord's reasonable administrative costs for pursuing unpaid rent, including legal fees, if the lease contains a cost recovery clause.
Cure Periods in Commercial Leases
Most commercial leases include a cure period — a window (typically 5–30 days after written notice) during which the tenant can pay overdue rent and avoid further default remedies. Key elements:
Landlord Remedies for Non-Payment
When a commercial tenant fails to pay rent and does not cure the default, Yukon landlords have several options under the Commercial Landlord and Tenant Act and the lease:
Distress
The landlord may seize and sell the tenant's personal property on the premises to satisfy rent arrears. This is a statutory remedy under the Commercial Landlord and Tenant Act and does not require court involvement — though it must be exercised carefully and lawfully.
Re-Entry and Forfeiture
If the lease contains a forfeiture clause, the landlord may re-enter the premises and terminate the lease after the tenant's failure to pay. The landlord may:
- Change the locks and take back possession
- Re-lease the premises to a new tenant
- Sue the defaulting tenant for lost rent during the original lease term
Lawsuit for Arrears
The landlord may sue the tenant in Yukon courts for all unpaid rent and associated costs, without terminating the lease. This is appropriate when the landlord wishes to maintain the tenancy (e.g., the tenant is temporarily in difficulty but otherwise a good tenant).
Best Practices for Landlords
- Specify late fees and interest in the lease — Never rely on implied or common law rights; state the exact amounts and rates.
- Set a clear cure period — Give tenants a defined window to pay before escalating to formal remedies.
- Document all payment history — Maintain detailed records of when rent is received to support default claims.
- Issue written default notices promptly — Don't wait months before taking action; delay can limit your remedies.
- Consult a lawyer before exercising distress — Distress is a powerful but procedurally strict remedy; errors can expose landlords to liability.
- Include a cost-recovery clause — Specify that the tenant pays the landlord's reasonable legal costs if default remedies must be pursued.
Elevate Your Yukon Property Management
Adhering to Yukon's Residential Landlord and Tenant Act or complex commercial lease frameworks requires a precise and highly resilient operational strategy. Overlooking the 15-day security deposit return deadline, the 12-month minimum rent increase interval, or proper RTO eviction notices can result in significant financial penalties, delayed proceedings, and loss of revenue. Landager delivers a streamlined, comprehensive property management solution that automates key compliance workflows. From tracking the exact delivery times for standard lease obligations to executing sophisticated operational analytics, Landager seamlessly manages your entire Yukon portfolio, empowering landlords in Whitehorse and beyond to maximize efficiency and fundamentally eliminate compliance vulnerabilities.
Back to Yukon Commercial Tenancy Overview.
Landager helps commercial landlords track payment due dates, flag late payments automatically, and generate default notices and arrears documentation. Learn more about Landager.
Fontes e Referências Oficiais
📬 Receba notificações quando estas leis mudarem
Enviaremos um e-mail quando as leis de inquilinato forem atualizadas em Sem spam — apenas mudanças na lei.




