Nova Scotia Rent Increase Rules: Caps, Notice Periods, and Tenant Rights

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Guide to Nova Scotia rent increase regulations including the 5% annual cap extended to 2027, 4-month notice requirement, and fixed-term lease restrictions.

Melvin Prince
6 دقيقة قراءة
مُتحقق منه Apr 2026كندا flag
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Notice Period
4 Months
Frequency
Once per 12 Mo
Interim Cap
5% Per Year

Nova Scotia has implemented strict rent increase regulations in recent years, including a temporary rent cap that has been extended multiple times. Understanding these rules is essential for landlords to remain compliant while managing rental income.

The Nova Scotia Rent Cap

Nova Scotia introduced a temporary rent cap to protect tenants from excessive increases during the housing crisis. The cap has been extended and currently runs through December 31, 2027.

Current Cap Rates

PeriodMaximum Annual Increase
20245%
20255%
January 1, 2026 – December 31, 20275%

The 5% cap applies to the total annual rent increase — it is not tied to the Consumer Price Index (CPI) as in some other provinces.

What the Cap Covers

The rent cap applies to all residential rental properties in Nova Scotia, including:

  • Apartments
  • Single-family homes
  • Townhouses and duplexes
  • Mobile homes (manufactured housing)
  • Rooms in rooming houses

Exemptions

There are very few exemptions from the rent cap. New construction is not exempt — the cap applies to all residential tenancies regardless of when the building was constructed.

Rent Increase Rules

Frequency

Only one rent increase is permitted within any 12-month period. Landlords cannot increase rent more than once per year, regardless of circumstances.

Notice Requirements

Landlords must provide tenants with at least 4 months' written notice before a rent increase takes effect. The notice must include:

  • The current rent amount
  • The proposed new rent amount
  • The effective date of the increase
  • That the increase does not exceed the rent cap

Fixed-Term Leases

Rent cannot be increased during a fixed-term lease. Increases may only take effect:

  • At the start of a new lease term (after the fixed term expires)
  • During a month-to-month tenancy (with proper 4-month notice)

Year-to-Year Leases

For year-to-year leases, the landlord must provide 4 months' written notice before the anniversary date of the lease.

Calculating the Maximum Increase

The maximum increase is 5% of the current rent amount:

Current Monthly RentMaximum Increase (5%)New Maximum Rent
$1,000$50$1,050
$1,500$75$1,575
$2,000$100$2,100
$2,500$125$2,625

Rounding

The maximum increase amount should be calculated precisely. If the result contains cents, the landlord should round to the nearest cent.

Disputing a Rent Increase

Tenants who believe a rent increase exceeds the cap or was not properly noticed can:

  1. Contact the landlord directly to discuss the issue
  2. File a complaint with the Residential Tenancies Program
  3. Request a hearing before a Residential Tenancy Officer

If the increase is found to exceed the cap, the Residential Tenancy Officer can order the landlord to reduce the rent and refund any overpayment.

What Happens When the Cap Expires

The rent cap is currently set to expire on December 31, 2027. After expiration:

  • Landlords will still be required to provide 4 months' notice for rent increases
  • Only one increase per 12-month period will be permitted
  • There will be no percentage cap on the increase amount unless new legislation is enacted

Landlords should monitor legislative developments as the expiry date approaches.

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Track your increase dates — Ensure you don't increase rent more than once per year
  2. Provide notice early — Send the rent increase notice at least 4 months before the effective date
  3. Calculate carefully — Verify that the increase does not exceed 5% of the current rent
  4. Keep records — Document all rent increase notices and tenant acknowledgments
  5. Plan ahead — Factor the rent cap into your financial projections for the property
  6. Monitor the cap timeline — Stay informed about potential extensions or changes to the rent cap

Back to Nova Scotia Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

Strategic Compliance Framework for Nova Scotia

Operating as a landlord in Nova Scotia requires a sophisticated understanding of the Residential Tenancies Program, which serves as the primary regulatory body for the province. Unlike some jurisdictions where common law might offer more leeway, Nova Scotia’s Residential Tenancies Act is highly prescriptive, especially regarding the 'Standard Form of Lease' and the handling of security deposits. Landlords are legally required to hold security deposits—which are strictly capped at one-half of one month’s rent—in a dedicated trust account and return them within a tight 10-day window following the termination of the tenancy. Failure to adhere to these timelines or attempting to charge unauthorized fees, such as pet deposits or application fees, can lead to immediate disputes and potential fines through an Application to Director (Form J).

Furthermore, the province has implemented significant interim measures that impact long-term property investment strategies. The most notable is the 5% rent cap, currently slated to remain in effect until the end of 2027, which limits annual increases for existing tenants regardless of the lease type. This, combined with the requirement to provide a full four months’ notice before the anniversary date of the tenancy, means that administrative precision is not optional—it is a business necessity. Commercial property management, by contrast, operates under the Commercial Tenancies Act and common law, where the lease agreement reigns supreme and market-driven negotiations dictate terms. This dual-track legal environment necessitates a rigorous separation of management protocols to ensure that residential protections are never accidentally breached in a commercial context, or vice versa.

How Landager Helps

Managing properties in Nova Scotia requires navigating a rapidly evolving legislative landscape, particularly with the introduction of the 5% interim rent cap and shortened eviction timelines. Landager's comprehensive platform protects NS landlords by automating the strict 4-month notice requirement for rent increases aligned with the tenancy anniversary date. Furthermore, the platform tracks the precise 3-day arrears window before a Form D can be legally served, ensuring your compliance is never in question. From managing security deposit trust account records to facilitating the 10-day return timeline, Landager provides a digital safety net that shields you from the complexities of the Residential Tenancies Program.

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