The Coronavirus (Scotland) Bill was passed on Wednesday evening, having been introduced on Tuesday this week as an Emergency Bill. It will come into force after receiving royal assent and will be known as the Coronavirus (Scotland) Act 2020 (“the Act”).
The Scottish Government’s emergency legislation has an important provision for commercial leases.
Current position
Commercial leases can be terminated for non-payment of rent and other sums due under the lease. The exact mechanism will depend on the lease but the legislation (from 1985) requires the landlord to issue a warning letter to the tenant. The warning letter has to give the tenant a minimum of 14 days to make payment of the outstanding arrears. If they fail to do so, the landlord can then terminate the lease.
New position
The Government’s new emergency measures extend the minimum period in the warning letter from 14 days to 14 weeks. This minimum period applies to all leases and includes those where a warning notice may already have been issued. If a warning letter has already been issued, and the 14 days has not yet expired, then that notice will be invalid.
Impact
This will be of some comfort to tenants to know that a landlord is not going to be able to terminate their lease where the financial difficulties may be outside of the tenant’s control. However, the arrears will still be mounting and after the 14 weeks has expired, tenants could still be in a difficult financial position. Landlord and tenants would be well advised to seek early advice from their professional advisors about how best to manage the situation.
This latest measure, coupled with the Scottish courts only dealing with urgent matters at present, effectively puts a halt on evictions for non-payment of rent in the commercial sector, at least for the time being. We'll keep you updated as things progress, but please do get in touch if you have any queries.
Written by
Related News, Insights & Events

Burness Paull reinforces energy team with appointment of leading renewables lawyer
03/06/2025
Burness Paull has appointed highly regarded renewables development lawyer Nicola Scott as a partner in its energy team.

Scotland’s Passive House push: What builders, developers and industry professionals need to know
Scotland is taking bold steps to embed Passive House equivalent standards into its building regulations, with legislative changes already underway.
![Liability And Limitation In Building Safety Disputes The Supreme Court Decision In URS V BDW [2025] UKSC 21](/media/bftbvg3s/liability-and-limitation-in-building-safety-disputes-the-supreme-court-decision-in-urs-v-bdw-2025-uksc-21.webp?width=352&height=200&v=1dbd1583be9d8f0)
Liability and limitation in building safety disputes: The Supreme Court decision in URS v BDW [2025] UKSC 21
In the landmark case of URS v BDW [2025] UKSC 21, the Supreme Court considered a number of significant issues for developers, design engineers and other construction parties.