Manitoba Late Fees: Statutory Limits, Habitual Lateness, and Enforcement

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Complete guide to Manitoba's maximum late rent fees including the $10 plus $2/day rule, the $100 cap, exemptions, and the eviction process for habitually lat...

Melvin Prince
7 min citire
Verificat Apr 2026Canada flag
Taxe de întârziereManitobaÎncasare chirieConformitatea chiriașuluiAdministrare proprietăți

Disclaimer Legal

Acest conținut este doar în scop informativ și educațional general. Nu constituie consultanță juridică și nu ar trebui să vă bazați pe el ca atare. Legile se schimbă frecvent — verificați întotdeauna reglementările actuale și consultați un avocat licențiat din jurisdicția dvs. pentru sfaturi specifice situației dvs. Landager este o platformă de management imobiliar, nu un cabinet de avocatură.Informații verificate ultima dată: April 2026.

Unlike some jurisdictions where late fees are purely negotiated in the lease, Manitoba regulates maximum allowable late fees under the Residential Tenancies Act to prevent excessive punitive charges against tenants. Understanding these rules is critical for both compliance and effective rent collection.

Late Fees
Per Lease/Law
Eviction for Non-Payment
After Required Notice

The Maximum Late Payment Fee

If a tenant fails to pay rent on the agreed-upon date, a landlord in Manitoba is legally permitted to charge a late fee, provided two conditions are met:

  1. The landlord's late fee policy is formally detailed in writing (typically within the lease agreement or building rules)
  2. The fees do not exceed the provincial statutory limits

Fee Calculation

ComponentAmount
First day late$10.00 flat fee
Each additional day$2.00 per day
Maximum per late period$100.00 hard cap

How the Calculation Works

The strict formula for late fees in Manitoba is:

  • $10.00 on the first day the rent is late (the day immediately after rent is due)
  • $2.00 for each additional consecutive day the payment remains outstanding
  • The maximum accumulates as: $10 + ($2 × additional days) until reaching $100

Example calculation:

  • Rent due on the 1st, unpaid
  • Day 1 (the 2nd): $10.00
  • Day 2 (the 3rd): $10.00 + $2.00 = $12.00
  • Day 3 (the 4th): $12.00 + $2.00 = $14.00
  • Day 46 (reached $100 cap): $10.00 + ($2.00 × 45) = $100.00
  • Day 47 and beyond: Still $100.00 — you cannot continue charging past the cap

Prerequisites for Charging Late Fees

Before a landlord can legally charge late fees in Manitoba, several conditions must be satisfied:

Written Policy Requirement

The late fee policy must be:

  • Documented in writing — ideally within the tenancy agreement itself
  • Clear and specific — stating the exact amounts ($10 + $2/day, max $100)
  • Acknowledged by the tenant — the tenant should be aware of the policy before signing the lease

Proper Rent Due Date

Late fees can only be charged if:

  • The lease clearly specifies when rent is due (e.g., the 1st of each month)
  • The landlord has provided a clear and convenient method of payment
  • Rent has not been received by the end of the due date

Restrictions and Exemptions

A landlord cannot indiscriminately apply late fees. The RTB may rule that a late fee is unenforceable in certain circumstances:

Common Exemptions

SituationFee Status
Mail delays (rent mailed and normally arrives on time)Fee may be waived
Government payment delays (EIA or social assistance processing)Fee likely unenforceable
Bank processing errorsFee may be disputed
First-time lateness with immediate paymentFee technically valid but often waived by RTB
Landlord's payment system failureFee unenforceable

The "Not the Tenant's Fault" Defence

If a tenant can demonstrate that the late payment was genuinely beyond their control — a systemic processing delay rather than negligence or financial difficulty — the RTB may rule that the late fee is unenforceable for that specific occurrence.

Dealing with Habitually Late Tenants

Occasional late payments trigger modest fees, but habitual late payments give the landlord significant eviction-level recourse, even if the tenant always eventually pays.

Definition of Habitual Lateness

The Residential Tenancies Branch generally considers a tenant to be "habitually late" if they are late paying rent three or more times within:

  • A one-year period, OR
  • The duration of a fixed-term tenancy

Consequences of Habitual Lateness

ActionWhen Available
Refuse to renew a fixed-term leaseAt lease expiry
Serve notice terminating a periodic tenancyAt any time after habitual pattern established
Apply to RTB for Order of PossessionIf tenant does not vacate after notice

Even if the tenant pays all arrears and late fees in full every month, a landlord can still proceed with eviction on the grounds of habitual lateness. The late fees are separate from — and do not protect against — the eviction consequence.

NSF (Returned Payment) Fees

If a tenant's rent payment is returned due to insufficient funds (NSF):

  • The landlord may charge any NSF fee imposed by their own financial institution
  • The NSF fee is in addition to the late payment fees
  • The rent is treated as unpaid from the original due date for late fee calculation purposes

Multiple Late Periods

Each rental payment period generates its own separate late fee calculation:

  • A tenant late in January and February incurs two separate fee accumulations
  • Each month's fees are calculated independently, with each capped at $100
  • A landlord cannot combine late periods or accelerate the fee beyond the per-period cap

RTB Dispute Process

If a tenant disputes a late fee charge:

  1. Tenant files a claim with the RTB
  2. Landlord must provide evidence of:
  • The written late fee policy in the lease
  • The exact dates rent was due and received
  • The calculation of fees charged
  1. RTB adjudicates — may uphold, reduce, or eliminate the fee
  2. If the fee exceeds statutory limits, the excess must be returned to the tenant

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Document the policy in every lease — Include the exact $10 + $2/day formula and $100 cap in the tenancy agreement
  2. Track payment dates meticulously — Maintain a detailed rent ledger with exact received dates for every tenant
  3. Issue written late payment notices — Send a written notification to the tenant each time a late fee is applied
  4. Never exceed the $100 cap — Charging more than the statutory maximum exposes you to RTB claims and potential penalties
  5. Monitor habitual patterns — Track the number of late payments per tenant per year to identify when eviction grounds are established
  6. Provide convenient payment methods — Offering electronic transfer options reduces the frequency of legitimate late payments
  7. Be consistent — Apply the late fee policy uniformly to all tenants to avoid discrimination claims

Back to Manitoba Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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