From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishnon-paymentˌnon-ˈpayment noun [uncountable] BFPAY FORwhen you do not pay the money that you owe in tax, rent etcnon-payment of She was finally evicted in April for non-payment of rent.
Examples from the Corpus
non-payment• That was welcomed by the organisations that had campaigned for non-payment.• The company last year cut off thousands of domains for non-payment.• When the council sought to evict him for non-payment of the extra rent he pleaded in defence that the resolution was invalid.• The hon. Gentleman has made much of the power of imprisonment for non-payment.• The threat of imprisonment for non-payment of local taxes is not unique to the community charge.• Inside was a summons for non-payment of a parking ticket.• Dissatisfaction, exacerbated by the non-payment of the usual bonuses, led to a mass exodus and mutiny.• High unemployment, non-payment of state wages and pensions and official cronyism and corruption will all be election issues.non-payment of rent• There is a possibility of eviction for non-payment of rent, or of harassment of a tenant whose behaviour is unacceptable.• Forfeiture for non-payment of rent follows a different procedure from that of forfeiture for breach of any other covenant in the lease.From Longman Business Dictionarynon-paymentˌnon-ˈpayment noun [uncountable]COMMERCE when a person or organization does not make a payment that should be madeThey were sued for alleged non-payment of bills and loans.