Ontario Rent Increase Rules: Guidelines, Notice Requirements, and Exemptions
Complete guide to Ontario rent increase regulations including the 2026 guideline of 2.1%, 90-day notice requirements, above guideline increases, and exempt properties.
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.
Ontario regulates rent increases through an annual rent increase guideline that caps what most landlords can charge. Understanding these rules is essential — increasing rent without following proper procedures can result in the increase being void and the tenant seeking a refund.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed paralegal or attorney in Ontario for guidance specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
2026 Rent Increase Guideline
The Ontario rent increase guideline for 2026 is 2.1%, the lowest rate in four years. This guideline is based on the Ontario Consumer Price Index (CPI) and is capped at a maximum of 2.5% by statute.
| Year | Guideline Rate |
|---|---|
| 2026 | 2.1% |
| 2025 | 2.5% |
| 2024 | 2.5% |
| 2023 | 2.5% |
| 2022 | 1.2% |
Rules for Increasing Rent
Frequency
- Rent can only be increased once every 12 months
- The increase cannot take effect until at least 12 months after the last increase or the start of the tenancy
Notice Requirements
- Landlords must provide 90 days' written notice before the increase takes effect
- Notice must be given using the official Form N1 (Notice of Rent Increase)
- Informal notices (emails, text messages, verbal) are not legally valid
- The notice must specify the new rent amount and the effective date
Amount
- The increase cannot exceed the annual guideline for most units
- For 2026, the maximum guideline increase is 2.1%
- The guideline applies to most residential rental units in Ontario
Exempt Properties
Some rental units are not subject to the rent increase guideline, meaning the landlord can increase rent by any amount (with 90 days' notice):
| Property Type | Exempt? |
|---|---|
| Units first occupied for residential purposes after November 15, 2018 | ✅ Exempt |
| New additions to existing buildings occupied after November 15, 2018 | ✅ Exempt |
| Most new basement apartments occupied after November 15, 2018 | ✅ Exempt |
| Community housing units | ✅ Exempt |
| Long-term care homes | ✅ Exempt |
| Commercial properties | ✅ Exempt |
| Units occupied before November 15, 2018 | ❌ Subject to guideline |
Even for exempt properties, landlords must still provide 90 days' written notice using Form N1.
Above Guideline Increases (AGIs)
Landlords may apply to the LTB for an above guideline increase in specific circumstances:
Eligible Grounds
- Capital expenditures — Significant repairs or improvements (e.g., new roof, boiler replacement, elevator modernization)
- Increased operating costs — Substantial increases in municipal taxes or utility costs
- Security services — New or significantly increased security costs
AGI Limits and Process
- Maximum AGI is 3% above the guideline per year for capital expenditures
- The increase is phased over three years for capital expenditure claims
- Landlords must file an L5 Application with the LTB
- The LTB holds a hearing and may approve, modify, or deny the application
- Capital expenditure increases expire after the repayment period (typically 10-15 years), and rent must be rolled back
What Happens If a Rent Increase Is Invalid
If a landlord increases rent improperly (wrong form, insufficient notice, above guideline without approval), the tenant can:
- Pay only the legal rent amount — Ignore the illegal increase
- File a T1 Application with the LTB to determine the lawful rent
- Seek a rebate for any overpayment within the past 12 months
The LTB can order the landlord to rebate all overpaid rent plus interest.
Rent Discounts and Temporary Reductions
If a landlord temporarily reduces rent (e.g., a one-time discount or COVID-related reduction), the original lawful rent remains the base for future increases — not the discounted amount. However, if the reduced rent has been consistently charged for 12+ months, it may be considered the new lawful rent.
Best Practices for Ontario Landlords
- Use Form N1 — Always use the official LTB form for rent increase notices
- Give 90 full days — Count carefully; insufficient notice voids the increase
- Check if your property is exempt — Post-November 2018 units can increase by more than the guideline
- Document AGI expenditures — Keep all receipts and contractor invoices if applying for above guideline increases
- Update the rent deposit — When rent increases, adjust the last month's rent deposit accordingly
- Track guideline rates — The rate changes annually; use the correct year's rate
How Landager Helps
Landager automatically tracks rent increase eligibility dates, calculates guideline-compliant increases, and generates Form N1 reminders — ensuring your rent increases are always timely and legally valid.
Sources & Official References
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