Business Day

How much interest can my body corporate charge me?

- Send your personal finance questions to money@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

QI inadverten­tly shortpaid my levy and my body corporate is charging me interest at a rate of 30% a year on the amount in arrears.

What is the maximum interest that can be charged on such an account? — Name withheld Trudie Broekmann, an attorney who specialise­s in consumer law at Broekmann Attorneys, replies:

AIn terms of regulation­s under the Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act, bodies corporate may charge interest on arrear levies, but the interest rate must not exceed the maximum interest rate as prescribed by regulation­s under the National Credit Act. The maximum rate applicable to an

“incidental credit agreement” is 2% a month. So, 24% a year is the maximum allowed by law.

However, in terms of the Consumer Protection Act, a body corporate is a supplier of goods and services to owners and tenants. As such, the levies charged by a body corporate must be reasonable, just and equitable. An interest rate of 24% — I would say anything higher than the prime rate — is unreasonab­le, unjust and inequitabl­e, and therefore prohibited by the act.

The consumer act overrules sectional titles act regulation­s because the consumer act states that a provision that extends greater protection to a consumer prevails over any contradict­ory provision.

A body corporate is not supposed to be a profit-making enterprise, but should rather work on cost recovery.

The remedy is to report the body corporate to the National Consumer Commission.

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