Serbian Commercial Late Fees & Corporate Penalties

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Learn about the legal restrictions and corporate practices for applying late fees, default interest, and contractual penalties to unpaid commercial rent in Serbia.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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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.

Unlike residential leases, where landlords frequently struggle to enforce small financial penalties on individuals, the commercial sector in Serbia relies heavily on strict financial compliance.

However, even in B2B corporate leasing, the rules of the Serbian Law on Obligations (Zakon o obligacionim odnosima) still apply regarding what types of monetary penalties a landlord can legally enforce against a late-paying tenant.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial landlord-tenant law depends heavily on the specific terms of your corporate contract. Always consult a licensed Serbian attorney for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

Contractual Penalties vs. Default Interest

The most important distinction in Serbian legal practice regarding late B2B payments is the difference between a "Contractual Penalty" (Ugovorna kazna) and "Default Interest" (Zatezna kamata).

Contractual Penalties Are Prohibited for Rent Money

Many foreign corporate landlords attempt to use their standard international lease templates in Serbia, including clauses that state: "If the corporate tenant pays rent after the 5th of the month, they must pay a lump-sum penalty of €500 plus €50 per day."

Under Article 270 of the Serbian Law on Obligations, a contractual penalty cannot be legally stipulated for monetary obligations. Rent is a pure money obligation. Therefore, if a tenant refuses to pay the €50/day flat fee and the landlord attempts to execute a Promissory Note (Menica) for that specific penalty, a Serbian commercial court will likely strike down that specific penalty clause as null and void.

The Right to Default Interest

What the law does allow—and what every institutional commercial lease mandates—is for the landlord to charge Default Interest (Zatezna kamata) on the late payment.

Under Article 277 of the Law on Obligations, when a corporate debtor is late in fulfilling a monetary obligation, they automatically owe default interest on top of the principal amount owed.

  • Statutory Rate: The state publishes an official statutory default interest rate for corporate claims, which is generally higher than the rate for natural persons.
  • Contractual Rates: While the Law on Obligations caps the interest rate, commercial parties often specify exactly how interest is calculated (often referring to the National Bank of Serbia's reference rate plus a specific margin, e.g., NBS rate + 8%).
  • This rate applies automatically from the very first day the corporate tenant is late, applying to the outstanding invoice total (which includes VAT).

Practical Enforcements in B2B Leasing

Because calculating statutory default interest on a slightly delayed €10,000 rent payment yields an amount that may not deter chronic late payers, how do Serbian commercial landlords ensure timely payments?

  1. The Promissory Note (Menica) Threat: Most lease agreements explicitly state that if rent is late by a certain number of days (e.g., 10 or 15 days), the landlord has the contractual right to fill out and activate the corporate tenant's Promissory Note directly at the bank. The activation instantly freezes the tenant's corporate operating accounts, paralyzing their daily business until the debt is paid. This is the ultimate leverage in Serbian B2B commerce.
  2. Termination Rights: A well-drafted corporate lease will clearly state that a delay in payment of a specified duration (e.g., two consecutive months, or consistently late over a quarter) constitutes a "material breach" of the contract. This grants the landlord the immediate right to terminate the fixed-term lease entirely, forcing the corporation to undergo a massively disruptive relocation.
  3. Service Charge Halts: In Class A office buildings, landlords manage the centralized utilities and IT infrastructure. Sophisticated leases attempt to link chronic non-payment of rent to the landlord's right to suspend non-critical ancillary services (though this must be drafted incredibly carefully to avoid disrupting "possession").

Automate Commercial Invoicing with Landager

In the corporate rental market, keeping track of exact payment dates, issuing VAT-compliant invoices on time, and manually calculating statutory default interest on late corporate accounts is exhausting. Landager provides unified, automated commercial accounting. Our system tracks when corporate rent is due, alerts your finance team automatically prior to deadlines, and provides clear ledgers showing exact days in arrears, so you know exactly when to pull a Bank Guarantee or activate a Promissory Note.

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