Texas Rent Late Fees: Limits, Grace Periods, and Enforceability

Guide to Texas late fee regulations including the 2-day grace period, reasonable fee limits (10-12% of rent), and penalties for landlord violations.

5 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.

Texas is one of a few states that provides specific statutory guidance on late fees, including a mandatory grace period and defined reasonableness limits. Understanding these rules is essential for landlords who want to enforce late fees without facing legal liability.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Texas for guidance specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

Late Fee Rules at a Glance

RuleDetails
Grace period2 full days after rent due date
Must be in leaseYes — written lease required
Small properties (≤4 units)Up to 12% of monthly rent
Larger properties (>4 units)Up to 10% of monthly rent
Daily fees allowedYes — initial + daily fee treated as single late fee
Penalty for violation$100 + 3× wrongful fee + attorney's fees

Mandatory Grace Period

Under Property Code §92.019, a landlord cannot collect a late fee unless rent has remained unpaid for 2 full days after the date it was originally due.

How the Grace Period Works

  • If rent is due on the 1st of the month, the earliest a late fee can be assessed is the 4th (after 2 full days — the 2nd and 3rd have passed)
  • The grace period cannot be shortened or waived in the lease
  • Weekends and holidays are counted as part of the grace period

Late Fee Must Be in Writing

A landlord may only charge a late fee if:

  1. The fee is stated in a written lease agreement
  2. The lease specifies the amount or method of calculation
  3. The fee is reasonable under the statutory guidelines

If there is no written lease, or the lease does not mention late fees, the landlord cannot collect one.

Reasonableness Limits

Texas law provides specific benchmarks for what constitutes a "reasonable" late fee:

Properties with 4 or Fewer Units

A late fee is presumed reasonable if it is not more than 12% of the amount of rent due.

Properties with More Than 4 Units

A late fee is presumed reasonable if it is not more than 10% of the amount of rent due.

Exceeding the Percentage

A late fee that exceeds these percentages may still be enforceable if:

  • It does not exceed the landlord's actual uncertain damages related to the late payment
  • These damages can include direct or indirect expenses, costs, or overhead associated with collection
  • The landlord can demonstrate the reasonableness of the higher amount

However, proving this in court is more difficult, so staying within the percentage guidelines is strongly recommended.

Fee Structure Options

Texas law allows late fees to be structured in different ways:

Flat Fee

A single, one-time fee assessed after the grace period. Example: $100 charged on the 4th if rent is due on the 1st.

Initial Fee Plus Daily Fee

An initial fee plus a daily charge for each day rent remains unpaid. For example:

  • $50 initial late fee on day 3
  • $10 per day for each additional day rent is unpaid

Under the law, the combined total of the initial fee and all daily fees is treated as a single late fee for purposes of the reasonableness limit.

Tenant's Right to a Statement

Under the Property Code, a tenant may request a written statement from the landlord indicating:

  • Whether the tenant owes a late fee
  • If so, the amount of the late fee

The landlord must provide this statement by any regularly used means of communication.

Penalties for Landlord Violations

A landlord who violates the late fee provisions of §92.019 is liable to the tenant for:

PenaltyAmount
Statutory minimum$100
Wrongful fee recovery3× the amount of the late fee collected in violation
Attorney's feesTenant's reasonable attorney's fees

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Charging fees before the grace period ends — the 2-day grace period is mandatory and cannot be waived
  2. No written lease provision — late fees are only enforceable if stated in a written lease
  3. Exceeding the percentage limit — stay within 10–12% unless you can document higher actual damages
  4. Charging late fees on late fees — compounding fees is legally risky
  5. Applying payments to fees before rent — this can create a cycle where rent appears perpetually late
  6. Inconsistent enforcement — charging late fees selectively can lead to discrimination claims

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Clearly state late fee terms in the lease — include the amount, grace period, and when fees begin
  2. Use the statutory percentages — 10% for larger properties, 12% for smaller ones
  3. Apply the grace period consistently — never charge fees before the 2 full days have passed
  4. Document everything — keep records of rent due dates, payment dates, and any fees assessed
  5. Provide statements promptly — when a tenant requests a late fee statement, respond quickly
  6. Consider automatic payment options — make it easy for tenants to pay on time to reduce late payments

How Landager Helps

Landager automates late fee calculations based on your lease terms, tracks payment dates, applies the mandatory grace period, and maintains a clear audit trail — helping you enforce fees consistently and compliantly.

Back to Texas Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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