How to deal with penalty fees for late rental payments

Residential landlords may charge interest - but not penalty fees - for late rental payments. How should this be done?

Many people in South Africa are under financial pressure as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, as well as constantly increasing living expenses. Thousands of people have lost their jobs or can no longer earn the same income they once were. This has resulted in many residential tenants being unable to pay their rent on time.

This is bad news for landlords, who are also under pressure to meet their monthly bond repayments. So what steps are available to landlords whose tenants can no longer honour their lease agreements?

WATCH : A Landlord’s guide to dealing with a non-paying tenant

Penalties

According to Gunston Strandvik Attorneys Inc, late payment penalties are prohibited for residential leases in terms of the Rental Housing Act 50 of 1999.

Section 3(c)(i) of the Unfair Practices Regulations states that a lease agreement cannot include a provision which imposes a penalty for late payment of rent, whether or not the penalty takes the form of an administrative charge or any form other than interest.

Although landlords may not charge an administration or penalty fee for late payments, they are permitted to charge interest on late payments. This means that residential tenants are entitled to demand that their landlords remove such late payment penalties from their invoices.

Note that the regulation prohibiting penalties applies only to residential leases, and the law does allow late payment penalties in commercial and retail leases.

Remedies

Gunston Strandvik recommends that landlords do the following when dealing with late-paying tenants:

Dealing with defaulting tenants can be difficult for many people; the key is to do everything within the law.

Writer : Sarah-Jane Meyer

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