What late fees can a landlord charge in Michigan?

Verified July 7, 2026 All Michigan topics →

Michigan sets no statutory cap on residential late fees and mandates no grace period, so the lease controls — a late fee must actually appear in the lease to be collectable.

The Truth in Renting Act limits what lease provisions are enforceable, and a fee large enough to function as a penalty risks being struck under general contract law.

Michigan late fees at a glance

Statutory cap No statutory cap (see reasonableness standard and notes)
Mandatory grace period None mandated statewide
Must be in the lease Yes
Daily fees Not addressed by statute; subject to general contract-law limits.
Reasonableness standard No statutory cap or mandated grace period; lease terms control, but the Truth in Renting Act (MCL 554.631 et seq.) voids certain unlawful lease provisions and excessive fees risk unenforceability as penalties under general contract principles.

Notes and caveats

Cap and grace period are null because no statute sets them. Michigan is a 'lease controls, contract-law backstop' state.

Statute citations

How this record was verified: Web verification against legislature.mi.gov statute text (MCL 554.602, 554.604, 554.605, 554.607, 554.609, 554.613) and the Michigan Judicial Institute Landlord-Tenant Benchbook (courts.michigan.gov) for 554.611, 554.134, 554.633 context.