New York Late Rent Fee Laws: HSTPA Caps, Grace Period & Enforcement

Understand New York's strict late fee rules under the HSTPA including the $50/5% cap, mandatory 5-day grace period, and why late fees can't trigger eviction.

4 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.

The HSTPA of 2019 imposed one of the strictest late fee regimes in the country. New York landlords have a hard statutory cap on the amount they can charge, a mandatory grace period, and significant limitations on how late fees can be collected.

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

The Hard Cap: $50 or 5%

Under NY Real Property Law § 238-a, the maximum late fee a landlord can charge for late residential rent payment is the lesser of:

  • $50, or
  • 5% of the monthly rent
Monthly Rent5% of RentMaximum Late Fee
$800$40$40 (5% is less than $50)
$1,000$50$50 (equal)
$1,500$75$50 ($50 cap applies)
$2,500$125$50 ($50 cap applies)
$5,000$250$50 ($50 cap applies)

For the vast majority of New York apartments—especially in NYC where rents regularly exceed $1,000—the effective cap is $50. This is one of the lowest maximum late fees in the United States.

Mandatory 5-Day Grace Period

New York law requires landlords to provide a 5-day grace period before any late fee can be assessed. If rent is due on the 1st, the earliest a late fee can be charged is the 6th of the month.

Additionally, if the 5th day falls on a weekend or legal holiday, the grace period extends to the next business day.

The landlord must also send a notice via certified mail if rent is not received within 5 days of the due date.

Late Fees Cannot Trigger Eviction

This is a critical distinction in New York law. Late fees are not "rent" in Housing Court. This means:

  • A landlord cannot include unpaid late fees in a 14-day rent demand (the required precursor to a non-payment eviction).
  • A landlord cannot evict a tenant solely for failing to pay late fees.
  • To collect unpaid late fees, a landlord must bring a separate civil action in small claims or civil court.

This effectively makes late fees a secondary, collection-only tool—not a lever for threatening eviction.

Bounced Check Fees (2025 Update)

As of 2025, a new rule prohibits landlords from charging a fee for a dishonored check (bounced check) that exceeds the actual fee the landlord's bank charged them. Previously, some landlords charged $50+ for returned checks; this is now capped at the bank's actual cost.

Rent-Stabilized Units

For rent-stabilized apartments, late fees can only be charged if a provision for them was included in the tenant's original lease. A landlord cannot retroactively add a late fee clause during a renewal.

Best Practices for New York Landlords

  1. Include the fee in the lease: Even though the cap is statutory, the lease should explicitly state the late fee amount (no more than $50 or 5%), the grace period, and when the fee applies.
  2. Send certified mail notices: The law requires notification via certified mail if rent is late by 5 days. Keep proof of mailing.
  3. Track late fees separately: Since late fees cannot be combined with rent demands, maintain a separate ledger for late fee balances.
  4. Don't rely on late fees as income: With a $50 maximum, late fees in New York are a compliance exercise, not a revenue stream.

How Landager Helps

With a $50 cap and a mandatory 5-day grace period, miscalculating or over-charging a late fee exposes you to tenant complaints and potential DHCR action. Landager's rent collection system automatically applies the HSTPA-compliant late fee exactly on day 6, caps the charge at $50 or 5% (whichever is less), and maintains a separate, auditable late fee ledger—ensuring perfect compliance without manual effort.

Back to New York Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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