Late Fees and Interest for Rent Arrears in Sweden
Rules regarding late rent payments in Sweden. Learn what landlords can charge for late fees, statutory reminder costs, and the Swedish Interest Act.
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.
In Sweden, landlords must adhere to strict consumer protection legislation regarding additional fees applied when a tenant is late paying rent. Creating arbitrary, expensive "late penalties" or liquidated damages (e.g., a flat 500 SEK penalty simply for missing the deadline) is generally unenforceable for residential consumers.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Debt collection rules are strictly enforced by the Swedish authorities. Consult an invoicing expert before applying fees. Information last verified: March 2026.
Statutory Reminder Fees - Max 60 SEK
The most common fee applied to late residential rent is the written reminder fee (påminnelseavgift). Because residential leasing heavily involves consumer rights, this is strictly regulated by debt collection compensation laws:
- To legally charge a reminder fee, the right to do so must be explicitly written into a clause in the original signed lease agreement. If the lease does not mention reminder fees in advance, the landlord cannot legally append them to a late invoice.
- Swedish law institutes a hard cap on this charge. A landlord may not charge more than 60 SEK for sending a written payment reminder.
If the tenant ignores the initial 60 SEK reminder and the debt is escalated to a formal debt collection agency (inkasso), the law allows the agency to apply a statutory collection demand fee of up to 180 SEK.
Penalty Interest - The Interest Act (SFS 1975:635)
When rent falls into arrears past the due date, a landlord is entitled to apply penalty interest (dröjsmålsränta). Unlike the reminder fee, the right to charge statutory interest applies automatically by law, even if it is not specifically mentioned in the lease (though stating it is highly recommended).
- Standard Penalty Interest Rate: The law stipulates that the penalty interest is calculated based on the Swedish Central Bank's (Riksbanken) Reference Rate, plus an industry-standard surcharge of eight (8) percentage points (Reference Rate + 8%). Because the Central Bank adjusts the reference rate biannually, this gives landlords a dynamic, legally compliant benchmark.
(Exception: If a specific, higher interest rate was agreed upon in the lease, it may be applied. However, if a court deems the agreed-upon rate extortionate against a private consumer under unconscionability laws, the rate will be struck down).
When Does Eviction Become an Option?
A unique feature of Swedish tenancy law is how little leeway it grants tenants for repeated, uncontrolled late payments. Missing a rent payment severely breaches the foundational trust of the Tenancy Act.
According to the general rule and Supreme Court precedent, a Swedish landlord can initiate the eviction process (forfeiture of the lease) if the rent remains unpaid for more than one full week (7 days) past the due date.
If a tenant "forgets" but pays within those first seven days, they retain their housing rights and are primarily subject only to the 60 SEK reminder fee and a few days of penalty interest. However, systematic lateness beyond that timeframe results in immediate forfeiture, granting the landlord the right to issue a formal termination notice and notify the local Social Welfare Board.
Automate Debt Collection Safely with Landager
Calculating specific dynamic interest rates based on the bouncing Riksbank reference rate makes manual invoicing tedious. Landager's automated billing system seamlessly calculates the compliant default interest algorithms and issues payment reminders capped exactly at the legal 60 SEK limit when deadlines pass. Eradicate mathematical errors and keep your accounting organized safely for escalation to the Enforcement Authority with a single click.
Back to Sweden Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
Sources & Official References
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