Skip to content

Nebraska Late Fee Laws

Last reviewed: July 10, 2026

Maximum late fee
No statutory cap
Grace period
None required

Nebraska sets no statutory dollar cap on residential late fees — Neb. Rev. Stat. § 76-1401 et seq. governs the landlord–tenant relationship, and courts still expect a late fee to be a reasonable estimate of actual damages rather than a penalty.

Nebraska's statute doesn't impose a waiting period, so the lease controls when a late fee may be charged. Charging from day one is legal here only if the lease says so explicitly.

Nebraska imposes no cap or grace period. A late fee is enforceable as a lease term when it's clearly stated and proportionate.

Calculate a late fee with Nebraska's limits preloaded

Automate Nebraska's late fee rules

StackRent tracks every due date, applies your lease's fee rules consistently, and posts the fee to the ledger — automatically, across your whole portfolio.

Frequently asked questions

What is the maximum late fee in Nebraska?
There is no fixed statutory maximum in Nebraska. The fee still has to be reasonable — courts can strike down fees that operate as penalties, so document how yours relates to your actual costs.
Is there a required grace period in Nebraska?
No. Nebraska's statute doesn't mandate a grace period, so the lease determines when a fee kicks in.
Where is this in Nebraska law?
The controlling provision is Neb. Rev. Stat. § 76-1401 et seq.. Legislatures amend these rules, so always confirm the current text via the official source linked above.

This tool is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Rules vary by state and locality and change over time — confirm current requirements for your jurisdiction before acting.

Late fee laws in other states