Texas Commercial Late Fees: Lease Terms, Enforcement, and Best Practices

Guide to Texas commercial late fee practices including lease-based fee structures, enforcement strategies, and key differences from residential late fee rules.

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.

Unlike residential leases in Texas, commercial late fee terms are governed almost entirely by the lease agreement. There is no statutory grace period, no percentage cap, and no specific enforcement framework — giving commercial landlords broad discretion in structuring late payment consequences.

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.

Commercial vs. Residential Late Fees

FeatureResidentialCommercial
Statutory grace period2 full days requiredNone — lease governs
Fee cap10–12% of rentNone — lease governs
Must be in written leaseYesYes (best practice)
Daily fees allowedYesYes
Penalty for violation$100 + 3× fee + attorney's feesContract remedies
Lockout for nonpaymentProhibitedPermitted (with notice)

No Statutory Limits

Texas does not impose statutory limits on commercial late fees:

  • No mandatory grace period — landlords can charge fees immediately when rent is late
  • No percentage cap — the fee amount is negotiated in the lease
  • No specific statutory penalties for landlord violations (contract law applies)

However, courts may still refuse to enforce late fees that are unconscionable or that function as penalties rather than a reasonable estimate of damages.

Common Late Fee Structures

Flat Fee

A fixed amount charged when rent is late:

  • Example: $500 late fee if rent is not received by the 5th of the month
  • Simple to calculate and enforce
  • Should be proportional to the rent amount

Percentage of Rent

A percentage of the monthly rent:

  • Common range: 5% to 10% of the overdue rent
  • Example: 5% of $10,000 = $500 late fee
  • Scales automatically with rent increases

Daily Fees

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

  • Example: $250 initial fee + $50 per day until paid
  • Incentivizes faster payment
  • Should include a reasonable cap to avoid unconscionability challenges

Interest on Overdue Rent

Some commercial leases charge interest on unpaid rent:

  • Common rate: 1% to 1.5% per month (12–18% annually)
  • Must comply with Texas usury laws — the maximum rate for commercial transactions is generally 18% per year (Finance Code §302.001)
  • Interest provisions should be clearly stated in the lease

Lease Drafting Best Practices

Essential Late Fee Provisions

A well-drafted commercial late fee clause should include:

  1. Grace period (if any) — while not required, a 3–5 day grace period is common
  2. Fee amount or calculation method — flat amount, percentage, or daily rate
  3. When the fee is triggered — specific day rent becomes "late"
  4. How fees are assessed — automatically or upon written notice
  5. Cumulative fees — whether additional fees accrue for continuing delinquency
  6. Application of payments — specify whether payments are applied to rent first, then fees (or vice versa)

Sample Late Fee Language

"If any installment of Base Rent or Additional Rent is not received by Landlord within five (5) days after the date it is due, Tenant shall pay a late charge equal to five percent (5%) of the overdue amount. In addition, any unpaid amounts shall bear interest at the rate of one percent (1%) per month from the date due until paid in full. Landlord's acceptance of a late charge shall not constitute a waiver of Tenant's default with respect to such overdue amount nor prevent Landlord from exercising any other rights and remedies available under this Lease or at law."

Enforcement Strategies

Lockout for Nonpayment

Commercial landlords in Texas have the unique right to lock out tenants for nonpayment under Property Code §93.002:

  • Post a written notice on the front door with contact information for obtaining a new key
  • The new key must be available during the tenant's regular business hours
  • The key must be provided upon payment of delinquent rent

See our Commercial Eviction Process guide for details.

Landlord's Lien

The landlord may enforce a statutory lien on the tenant's property located on the premises to secure unpaid rent (Property Code §54.021).

Default and Remedies

Persistent late payment may constitute a default under the lease, allowing the landlord to:

  • Terminate the lease
  • Accelerate remaining rent
  • Pursue damages and attorney's fees
  • Exercise the lockout remedy
  • Enforce the landlord's lien

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Vague fee language — ambiguous terms invite disputes; be specific about amounts, timing, and calculation
  2. Excessive fees — courts may refuse to enforce fees that function as penalties rather than reasonable liquidated damages
  3. Inconsistent enforcement — applying late fees selectively can undermine your ability to enforce them later
  4. Ignoring usury limits — interest charges must comply with Texas usury laws
  5. Failing to specify payment application — unclear payment application order can create disputes
  6. Not documenting late payments — maintain records of due dates, payment dates, and all fees assessed

Rent Collection Best Practices

  1. Send payment reminders — a courtesy reminder 3–5 days before rent is due
  2. Offer multiple payment methods — ACH, wire transfer, check, online portal
  3. Issue late notices promptly — notify the tenant in writing as soon as rent becomes delinquent
  4. Apply fees consistently — enforce your late fee policy uniformly across all tenants
  5. Maintain clear records — document all transactions, communications, and fee assessments
  6. Review lease terms annually — ensure late fee provisions remain appropriate for market conditions

How Landager Helps

Landager automates rent tracking, late fee calculations, and payment reminders for commercial properties — helping you enforce lease terms consistently while maintaining positive tenant relationships.

Back to Texas Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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