Created by potrace 1.10, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2011

Louisiana Commercial Security Deposit Laws

Understand the laws governing commercial security deposits in Louisiana, including the lack of statutory limits and the rules for returning funds.

Melvin Prince
4 min čitanja
Verifikovano Apr 2026United States flag
LouisianaKomercijalnoPovratak depozita za komercijalne nekretnine u LuizijaniZakon Luizijane o depozitu za iznajmljivanje

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Max Amount
No Limit
Return Deadline
Not strictly 1 month

Louisiana Commercial Security Deposit Laws

Louisiana's approach to commercial security deposits is overwhelmingly governed by the freedom of contract. State law imposes incredibly few restrictions on how commercial deposits are collected or held, leaving the lease agreement to dictate the terms.

Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are legally rooted in contractual agreements, distinguishing commercial rules from the residential Louisiana R.S. 9:3251.

Deposit Return Process in louisiana

1

1. Lease Execution

Deposit collected as per agreement.

2

2. Tenancy Ends

Property inspected for damages.

3

3. Refund

Balance returned according to lease timeline.

Statutory Limits and Holding Requirements

There is no statutory limit on the amount a landlord can charge for a commercial security deposit in Louisiana.

A commercial landlord is free to require whatever deposit amount the market will bear or what is deemed necessary to mitigate the risk of the specific tenant (e.g., higher deposits for newer businesses or properties requiring extensive tenant build-outs).

, Louisiana does not require commercial landlords to:

  • Hold security deposits in a separate, interest-bearing escrow account.
  • Pay the commercial tenant any accumulated interest on the deposit.
  • Provide a surety bond.

Landlords may legally commingle commercial security deposits with general operating funds, unless the lease expressly forbids it.

RequirementLouisiana Commercial Law
Maximum LimitNone; determined by the lease.
Escrow Account RequiredNo.
Interest RequiredNo.

Returning the Commercial Security Deposit

Louisiana's security deposit return statute (La. R.S. 9:3251) technically applies broadly, meaning landlords generally have one month (30 days) after the termination of the lease to return the deposit or provide an itemized statement detailing any deductions.

However, in the commercial context, courts routinely uphold lease provisions that extend this timeline.

The Impact of the Lease Agreement

It is a standard practice in Louisiana commercial leases (especially retail and industrial NNN leases) to explicitly extend the return deadline beyond 30 days. This extension-often 60 to 90 days-is necessary to allow the landlord time to finalize year-end Common Area Maintenance (CAM), tax, and insurance reconciliations before returning the final balance to the tenant. If the lease specifies a 60-day return window, the court will enforce the lease over the default 30-day statutory timeline.

Permitted Deductions

Commercial landlords may aggressively deduct from the security deposit for any defaults established in the lease agreement, including:

  • Unpaid base rent and percentage rent.
  • Unpaid NNN pass-throughs (taxes, insurance, CAM).
  • Costs to repair tenant-caused property damage.
  • Costs to restore the premises to "vanilla shell" condition, if required by the lease upon move-out.
  • Outstanding late fees or default interest.
  • Attorney's fees incurred enforcing the lease.

The Abandonment Exception

Just as in residential law, if a commercial tenant abandons the property without providing the legally required notice to terminate the lease, the landlord is generally exempt from the requirement to send an itemized deduction statement within the standard timeline, allowing the landlord to retain the funds to cover obvious damages and unpaid rent.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, required compliance items, and accounting records - making it easy to stay compliant with Louisiana regulations.

Back to Louisiana Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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