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Montana Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview - montana c

A manage guide to commercial property laws in Montana, emphasizing the supremacy of the lease agreement, NNN leases, and commercial evictions.

Melvin Prince
4 min läsning
Verifierad Apr 2026United States flag
USAMontanaKommersiellHyresgäst- och hyresvärdslagarKommersiella fastigheter

Juridisk friskrivning

Detta innehåll är endast för allmän information och utbildningsändamål. Det utgör inte juridisk rådgivning och bör inte förlitas på som sådan. Lagar ändras ofta – verifiera alltid aktuella regleringar och konsultera en licensierad jurist i din jurisdiktion för rådgivning specifik för din situation. Landager är en fastighetsförvaltningsplattform, inte en advokatbyrå.Information senast verifierad: April 2026.

Montana Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws: An Overview

Official Law Citation: Commercial tenancies are addressed under MCA Title 70, Chapter 26, emphasizing the enforceability of written lease agreements.

Montana's approach to commercial real estate law is defined by extreme deference to the written contract. Unlike the highly regulated residential sector, Montana lawmakers operate under the assumption that commercial landlords and business tenants are sophisticated entities capable of negotiating their own terms.

As a result, apart from a few default statutory mechanisms, the commercial lease agreement dictates almost every aspect of the landlord-tenant relationship in Montana.

The Supremacy of the Commercial Lease

statutory protections shielding residential tenants (like mandatory repairs, tight security deposit return deadlines, and late fee caps) do not unilaterally apply to commercial tenants unless explicitly written into their lease.

  • Freedom of Contract: Montana courts will ruthlessly enforce the precise terms written in a commercial lease, even if those terms heavily favor the landlord.
  • Good Faith and Fair Dealing: There is, however, an overarching implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing embedded in Montana contract law. Both parties must act honestly and observe reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing in the performance and enforcement of the lease.

See our Commercial Lease Requirements guide.

Maintenance and the NNN Lease

While MCA Title 70 outlines default maintenance rules (suggesting landlords handle significant repairs and tenants handle minor ones), the reality of Montana commercial real estate is vastly different.

The overwhelming standard for commercial properties in Montana is the Triple Net (NNN) Lease. Under a NNN lease, the financial burden of maintenance, repairs, building insurance, and property taxes is legally shifted completely onto the tenant.

See our Commercial Maintenance Obligations guide.

Security Deposits

Montana law imposes absolutely zero restrictions on commercial security deposits.

  • There is no statutory maximum limit.
  • Landlords are not required to hold the funds in a separate trust account.
  • The landlord does not owe the tenant interest on the deposit.
  • The strict 10-day/30-day return deadlines that govern residential deposits do not strictly apply; the timeline for the deposit's return is dictated entirely by the terms of the commercial lease.

See our Commercial Security Deposits guide.

The Commercial Eviction Process

Commercial evictions in Montana are faster and offer fewer protections than residential evictions.

  • 15-Day Notice for Rent: If a commercial tenant defaults on rent, the landlord must provide a 15-Day Written Notice to cure the default, unless the lease specifies a different, shorter timeframe.
  • 30-Day Notice for Other Breaches: For non-rent defaults (e.g., unauthorized alterations), a 30-day written notice to cure is the standard statutory default.
  • If the tenant fails to cure within the notice period, the landlord can formally terminate the lease and pursue eviction (Unlawful Detainer).

See our Commercial Eviction Process guide.

Rent Increases and Late Fees

  • Rent Increases: There is no commercial rent control in Montana. Rent escalations (such as annual percentage increases, CPI adjustments, or step-ups) are governed exclusively by the terms negotiated in the lease agreement.
  • Late Fees: The residential cap on late fees (10% or $25) does not apply. Commercial landlords can enforce whatever late fee structure (flat fee plus high daily compounding interest) is codified in the lease, provided it does not cross the line into an unenforceable, punitive penalty under general contract law.

See our Commercial Rent Increases and Commercial Late Fees guides.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, payment deadlines, and important communications - making it easy to stay compliant with Montana regulations.

Back to Montana Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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