Manitoba Rent Increase Laws: 2026 Guidelines, Exemptions, and Above-Guideline Applications
Complete guide to Manitoba rent control including the 2026 guideline of 1.8%, three-month notice requirements, exemptions for new construction and high-rent ...
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Manitoba is one of the few Canadian provinces that actively enforces rent control through annual guidelines set by the Residential Tenancies Branch (RTB). Unlike Alberta or British Columbia, where landlords have broad discretion on rent amounts, Manitoba strictly caps increases for most residential units.
The Annual Rent Increase Guideline
Rent Increase Process in manitoba
Check Applicable Rules
Confirm the rent increase complies with frequency and notice rules under Residential Tenancies Act (CCSM c R119).
Prepare Written Notice
Draft a formal written rent increase notice stating the new amount and effective date.
Serve the Required Notice Period
Deliver the notice at least 3 Months Written Notice before the new rent takes effect.
Allow Tenant Challenge Period
The tenant may contest excessive increases through Residential Tenancies Branch (RTB) within the prescribed time.
Every year, the provincial government publishes an annual "rent increase guideline" that acts as a hard cap on standard rent increases for most residential units.
Recent Guideline History
The guideline is typically calculated based on the percentage change in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for Manitoba, adjusted by the RTB.
Key Rules for Rent Increases
Manitoba's rent increase rules are among the most prescriptive in Canada:
1. Once Every 12 Months
Landlords may only increase a tenant's rent once every 12 months. This limitation applies strictly:
- The 12-month clock runs from the date of the last increase, not from the lease start date
- If the previous tenant's rent was increased 6 months ago, you cannot raise rent for a new tenant until a full 12 months have passed from that increase
- You cannot circumvent this rule by issuing a new lease at a higher rate
2. Mandatory Three-Month Written Notice
Landlords must provide at least three full months' written notice before a rent increase takes effect. Key requirements:
- Notice must be given using the official RTB-approved form ("Notice of Rent Increase" or "Notice to New Tenant")
- An informal letter, email, or text message is not legally sufficient
- The notice period is calculated in complete calendar months
- Example: To increase rent effective August 1, the notice must be served no later than April 30
3. No Mid-Lease Increases
For fixed-term leases, rent cannot be increased during the lease term unless the lease specifically contains a rent escalation clause that complies with the guideline. In practice, most fixed-term residential leases in Manitoba do not contain escalation clauses.
4. No Increases Beyond the Guideline
Standard rent increases cannot exceed the published guideline without an approved above-guideline application. Any increase above the guideline percentage without RTB approval is void and unenforceable.
Exemptions to the RTB Guideline
Certain rental units are exempt from the strict percentage cap, though landlords of exempt units must still follow the three-month notice period and the once-every-12-months rule:
| Certain non-profit housing co-operatives with separate funding arrangements |
Important Note on Exemptions
Even for exempt units, the landlord must:
- Provide the full three-month written notice
- Wait at least 12 months between increases
- Use the official RTB notice form
- Act in good faith — unreasonably large increases on exempt units may still be challenged at the RTB
Applying for an Above-Guideline Increase
If a landlord can demonstrate that the permitted guideline increase will not be sufficient to cover significantly increased operating expenses, they can petition the RTB for an above-guideline rent increase.
Eligible Grounds Above-guideline increases may be granted for:
- Substantial increases in property taxes
- Significant increases in insurance premiums
- Major capital improvements to the building (roof replacement, boiler upgrade, elevator modernization)
- Exceptional increases in utility costs that the landlord pays
Application Process
- Serve Notice — Provide tenants with the standard 3-month written notice proposing the higher amount
- File with RTB — Submit the formal application to the RTB no later than 14 days after notifying the tenants
- Submit Documentation — Provide extensive financial documentation proving the hardship, including:
- Operating expense statements for the past 2–3 years
- Tax assessment notices
- Insurance renewal documents
- Capital improvement invoices and contractor quotes
- RTB Review — The RTB reviews the application and may schedule a hearing
- Final Order — The RTB issues a decision approving, modifying, or denying the requested increase
If the Application is Denied or Modified
If the RTB refuses the full amount or approves a lesser increase:
- The landlord must refund or credit tenants for any overpayments made during the review process
- The adjusted amount becomes the new lawful rent
- The landlord cannot re-apply for the same expenses
Rent Reduction Applications
Tenants can also apply to the RTB for a rent reduction if:
- Services or amenities have been removed or significantly reduced
- The landlord has failed to maintain the property
- Operating costs have materially decreased (e.g., property tax reduction)
Rent Increase Calculation
When calculating the dollar amount of a rent increase:
Formula: Current Monthly Rent × Guideline Percentage = Maximum Increase
Example: $1,200/month × 1.8% = $21.60 → New rent = $1,221.60
Landlords may round to the nearest dollar, but cannot exceed the guideline percentage. The RTB provides an online calculator to assist with these calculations.
Best Practices for Landlords
- Calendar your notice deadlines — Track the 3-month notice window for every unit in your portfolio
- Use official RTB forms — Never rely on informal communication for rent increase notices
- Verify exemption status — Confirm with the RTB whether your property qualifies for a guideline exemption before issuing a higher increase
- Document operating expenses — Maintain organized records in case you need to apply for an above-guideline increase
- Monitor guideline announcements — The RTB publishes the next year's guideline in advance; plan accordingly
- Track the 12-month rule carefully — Remember it applies per unit, not per tenant
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