Missouri sets no statutory cap on residential late fees and requires no statutory grace period. The amount is governed by the lease, subject only to the general common-law rule that a fee must be a reasonable estimate of damages rather than an unenforceable penalty. There is no late-fee provision in Chapter 441.
No Missouri statute caps late fees or mandates a grace period for residential rent. Chapter 441 contains no late-fee provision, so the charge is a matter of contract: it must be clearly stated in the lease to be enforceable. Missouri courts apply the general liquidated-damages doctrine β a late fee must approximate the landlord's actual loss from late payment and not operate as a punitive penalty, or a court may decline to enforce it. There is no statutory percentage or dollar ceiling for residential leases (the $20-or-20% reasonableness benchmark in RSMo 415.417 applies to self-service storage, not dwellings). Because no statute requires it, a landlord may charge a late fee on the first day rent is overdue unless the lease provides otherwise.
No specific statutory penalty. An excessive or unreasonable late fee may be struck down by a court as an unenforceable penalty rather than valid liquidated damages, leaving the landlord unable to collect it.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
See how Gladstone'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 If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.