Michigan has no statute capping residential late fees or setting a grace period. A late fee is enforceable only if the lease provides for it, and Michigan courts will scrutinize charges that are unreasonable or function as an unlawful penalty rather than a reasonable estimate of the landlord's loss.
No Michigan statute sets a maximum late fee, a percentage limit, or a mandatory grace period for residential rent. A late fee is purely a matter of contract: it is enforceable only if the written lease provides for it, and the amount must be reasonable. Michigan contract law disfavors penalty clauses, so a late fee that bears no reasonable relationship to the landlord's actual damages can be struck down as an unenforceable penalty, and many courts treat fees of roughly 4-5% of monthly rent as the practical ceiling for reasonableness. There is no separate statutory late-fee statute in the Michigan residential landlord-tenant chapter (MCL Ch. 554); the absence of a cap means the lease terms and the common-law reasonableness/penalty doctrine control.
No specific statutory penalty. An unreasonable late fee can be voided by a court as an unenforceable penalty under Michigan contract law; only fees provided for in the lease are collectible.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Ann Arbor, MI
Ann Arbor prohibits storing abandoned, inoperable, or unregistered vehicles on public streets or visible on private property. Vehicles may be tagged and towe...
Ann Arbor, MI
Ann Arbor regulates electric vehicle charging infrastructure for residential and commercial properties. Building codes may require EV-ready parking in new co...
Ann Arbor, MI
Ann Arbor regulates overnight parking on public streets. Many areas restrict parking between certain hours or require permits for overnight street parking.
Ann Arbor, MI
Ann Arbor requires pool barriers meeting safety codes to prevent drowning. Fences must be at least 4 to 5 feet tall with self-closing, self-latching gates.
Ann Arbor, MI
Ann Arbor requires permits for retaining walls above a certain height, typically 4 feet. Engineering review may be required for taller walls.
Ann Arbor, MI
Ann Arbor restricts or prohibits intentional feeding of wildlife including deer, coyotes, and bears. Feeding wildlife creates public safety hazards and nuisa...
See how Ann Arbor's late fees & grace periods rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.