Maine Commercial Eviction Process: Notices and FED Actions

A landlord's guide to the commercial eviction process in Maine, covering lease-defined notices, Forcible Entry and Detainer actions, and prohibitions on self-help.

3 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.

While commercial landlords in Maine enjoy vast contractual freedom, they share one strict limitation with residential landlords: evictions must be executed through the court system.

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

No Self-Help Evictions

In some jurisdictions, a commercial lease can contain a clause granting a landlord the right to lock out a defaulting tenant without a court order. Maine law frowns heavily upon this practice.

Regardless of aggressive boilerplate language in a commercial lease, a landlord should not independently change the locks, disconnect the utilities, or physically remove a business's inventory. Doing so constitutes a wrongful eviction and exposes the landlord to severe lawsuit damages. The only safe and legal path is through a Forcible Entry and Detainer (FED) lawsuit.

Notice Requirements Dictated by the Lease

In residential Maine real estate, a landlord must always wait 15 days for rent to be late, and then serve a 7-Day Notice.

In commercial real estate, the lease dictates the notice.

  • A commercial lease can stipulate that rent is in default the moment it is one day late, requiring only a 3-Day Notice to Cure.
  • A lease may specify that non-monetary violations (like operating hours violations) require a 15-Day Notice to Cure.

If the commercial lease is entirely silent on notice periods (which is rare for professionally drafted documents), the landlord defaults to Maine's standard statutory notices (e.g., a 7-Day Notice for non-payment or a 30-Day Notice to terminate a tenancy-at-will).

The Forcible Entry and Detainer Process

If the notice period expires and the tenant has not vacated or cured the default, the landlord proceeds with a lawsuit.

  1. File the Complaint: The landlord files a Forcible Entry and Detainer complaint in the District Court. Commercial landlords generally name both the corporate entity on the lease and any personal guarantors.
  2. Service of Process: A sheriff or special process server officially serves the tenant.
  3. The Hearing: Commercial evictions are typically bench trials. Landlords must present the lease, the specific Notice of Default served, proof of service, and a detailed rent ledger proving the breach.
  4. Order and Writ of Possession: If successful, the judge grants an eviction. Unlike residential cases where judges may grant sympathetic delays, commercial tenants are usually expected to vacate immediately upon the issuance of the Writ of Possession (typically 7 days after the judgment).

Sheriff Execution and Distraint

If the business continues to operate against the Writ of Possession, the landlord takes the order to the county sheriff, who physically executes the eviction.

For commercial properties with large volumes of inventory or heavy equipment, the sheriff will usually require the landlord to coordinate a bonded moving and storage company to clear the premises. In certain limited commercial scenarios, a landlord may seek a court order to assert a lien against the tenant's property left in the building to satisfy unpaid rent, though this requires separate, specific legal maneuvering.

How Landager Helps

Landager’s document generation tools immediately format legally accurate Default Notices mapped precisely to the bespoke timelines defined in your specific commercial lease file. Having digital ledgers formatted properly is critical when proving non-payment in a Maine commercial FED proceeding.

Back to Maine Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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