Montana Commercial Late Fees and Grace Periods - commercial
Understand the laws governing late rent payments for commercial properties in Montana, highlighting the lack of statutory caps and the power of strict lease ...
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本内容仅供一般信息和教育目的。它不构成法律建议,不应作为法律建议依赖。法律法规经常变化——请务必核实当前法规并咨询您所在司法管辖区的持证律师,以获取针对您具体情况的建议。Landager 是一个物业管理平台,而非律师事务所。信息最后验证时间: April 2026.
Montana Commercial Late Fees and Grace Periods
Official Law Citation: The enforcement of commercial late fees falls under general contract principles and Title 70, Chapter 26 of the Montana Code Annotated.
Montana's residential laws strictly cap late fees at the greater of 10% of monthly rent or $25. Commercial landlords in Montana face no such statutory restrictions.
Because commercial leases are viewed as sophisticated business contracts, the state allows landlords massive latitude to aggressively penalize late rent payments. The rules surrounding late rent, fees, and grace periods are dictated entirely by the commercial lease agreement.
1. No Statutory Grace Period Exists
There is no Montana statute that legally grants a commercial tenant extra time to pay their rent without consequence.
If a commercial lease states rent is due "on the 1st of the month in advance," the tenant is legally in default if the funds have not cleared by midnight on the 1st.
While almost all well-drafted commercial leases include a negotiated "grace period" (e.g., "rent is due on the 1st, but no default interest will accrue if paid by the 5th"), this is entirely a contractual concession. If the lease lacks a written grace period, the landlord can instantly initiate the default process on the 2nd of the month.
2. Enforcing Commercial Late Penalties
Because there is no statutory "late fee" formula, the financial penalty must be explicitly written into the commercial lease to be enforceable. Generally, commercial landlords manage two mechanisms to punish late payments:
The Flat "Late Fee" Administration Charge
This is a fixed dollar amount or percentage applied immediately when the grace period expires. It is designed to cover the administrative headache of chasing down the tenant via accounting staff.
- A flat fee of $50 to $250, or a straight 5% charge on the outstanding balance, is very common and completely enforceable in Montana courts.
Default Interest (The Per Diem Penalty)
This is the heavier hammer. A standard commercial clause dictates that if rent goes unpaid beyond the grace period, "Default Interest" begins accruing daily on the outstanding balance until the ledger is settled.
- The "Penalty Rule": While not capped by statute, Montana contract law prohibits enforcing a clause that is purely a "punitive penalty" designed solely to terrorize a party. The interest rate must be commercially justifiable.
- Typical Rates: Therefore, commercial leases usually peg the default interest rate firmly to an established financial metric, adding a heavy margin (e.g., "4% above the Bank of England base rate," or firmly setting a high but defensible 12% to 18% annual interest rate).
3. The Ultimate Penalty: Default and Eviction
The true penalty for late commercial rent in Montana isn't the 12% interest-it's the catastrophic threat of losing the entire business premises and the associated build-out investment.
Unlike residential eviction notices, commercial default notices are heavily dictated by the lease.
- The statutory default for unpaid rent in Montana commercial real estate is a 15-Day Notice to Cure.
- However, the vast majority of commercial leases aggressively shorten this period to a strict 3-day or 5-day Notice to Pay or Quit.
If the rent and the accumulated Default Interest are not paid within those 3 or 5 days, the landlord files an Unlawful Detainer lawsuit in Montana District Court.
See our Commercial Eviction Process guide.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, payment deadlines, and important communications - making it easy to stay compliant with Montana regulations.
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