Montana Late Fee Laws
no statutory percentage capMontana has no statutory percentage cap on late fees (16 of 51 US jurisdictions cap them), but fees must still be reasonable — courts can strike down excessive charges. The FAQ below covers any other statutory limits that apply.
Educational information: generated from our Montana law database (last updated 2024-01-01). Not legal advice.
How Montana compares
16 of 51 US jurisdictions cap late fees by statute (as a percentage, dollar amount, or formula); the rest rely on reasonableness standards or set no limit. Here is how Montana compares with other states in our database.
| State | Late Fee Laws |
|---|---|
| Montana | no statutory percentage cap |
| Nebraska | no statutory percentage cap |
| Nevada | 5% of monthly rent |
| New Hampshire | no statutory percentage cap |
| New Jersey | no statutory percentage cap |
Frequently asked questions
- Is there a limit on late fees in Montana?
- Montana sets no fixed percentage cap, but late fees must be reasonable and can be challenged if punitive. Late fees should be reasonable (some sources cite $25 or 10% as guideline). Must be detailed in lease agreement.
- Is there a grace period before late fees in Montana?
- Montana has no statutory grace period; any grace period comes from your lease.
- Can I dispute an excessive late fee in Montana?
- Yes. Fees that are disproportionate to the landlord's actual costs can be challenged as unreasonable penalties.
Check Your Lease Against Montana Law
Not sure whether your lease complies with Montana law? Upload it and our analyzer flags problem clauses — deposit terms, entry rights, fees and prohibited provisions — using the same statute-backed database this page is generated from.
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More Montana lease law guides
Educational information generated from state statute data — not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney in Montana for your specific situation.