Nova Scotia Lease Requirements: Standard Form, Mandatory Clauses, and Rules

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Guide to Nova Scotia lease requirements including the mandatory Standard Form of Lease (Form P), required clauses, verbal vs written leases, and tenant pr...

Melvin Prince
6 min lukuaika
Vahvistettu Apr 2026Kanada flag
Vuokrasopimuksen vaatimuksetNova ScotiaVakiomuotoinen vuokrasopimusLomake-PVuokrasopimus

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Region
Nova Scotia
Governing Law
Residential Tenancies Act
Last Verified
2026-04-10

Nova Scotia has specific requirements for residential lease agreements, centered on the mandatory use of the provincial Standard Form of Lease (Form P). Understanding these requirements helps landlords create enforceable, compliant rental agreements.

Standard Form of Lease (Form P)

Nova Scotia requires all residential tenancies to use the government's Standard Form of Lease (Form P). This is not optional — the statutory conditions contained in Form P apply to every residential tenancy in the province, even if:

  • The parties use a different or custom lease agreement
  • The tenancy is based on a verbal agreement only
  • The lease does not reference the Standard Form

Why This Matters

The Standard Form sets baseline protections that cannot be contracted away. Any clause in a custom lease that contradicts the statutory conditions in the Standard Form is void and unenforceable.

Required Lease Contents

Every residential lease in Nova Scotia must clearly include the following information:

Required ElementDescription
Property addressFull civic address of the rental unit
Landlord's nameLegal name of the landlord or property management company
Tenant's name(s)Names of all tenants on the lease
Rent amountMonthly rent and the date it is due
Utilities/servicesWhat utilities or services are included in the rent
Lease termStart date, end date, and type (fixed-term or month-to-month)
Security depositAmount collected (max 50% of one month's rent)
Maintenance responsibilitiesWho is responsible for what maintenance
Pet policyWhether pets are permitted and any restrictions
Additional rulesLandlord rules (e.g., smoking, noise, parking)
Landlord contact informationName, civic address, mailing address, phone, email (as of April 30, 2025)

Written vs. Verbal Leases

While verbal agreements are legally valid in Nova Scotia, a written lease is strongly recommended for both parties. Key considerations:

Verbal Leases

  • Legally enforceable but difficult to prove in disputes
  • The statutory conditions from the Standard Form still apply
  • The tenancy is generally treated as month-to-month

Written Leases

  • Provide clear evidence of agreed terms
  • Reduce disputes over rent amount, included services, and rules
  • Required to include landlord contact information (as of April 30, 2025)
  • Landlord must provide a signed copy to the tenant within 10 days

Lease Types

Fixed-Term Lease

  • Has a defined start and end date
  • Rent cannot be increased during the term
  • At the end of the term, the tenancy may convert to month-to-month unless renewed
  • Landlord must provide proper notice if not renewing

Month-to-Month Lease

  • Continues indefinitely until terminated by either party
  • Rent can be increased with 4 months' written notice (subject to the 5% cap)
  • Either party can end the tenancy with proper notice (typically one full rental period)

Year-to-Year Lease

  • Automatically renews annually unless terminated
  • Rent increase notice must be provided 4 months before the anniversary date
  • Termination notice requirements apply

Prohibited Lease Clauses

The following clauses are void and unenforceable in Nova Scotia residential leases:

  • Waiver of tenant rights — Any clause requiring a tenant to give up rights under the RTA
  • Excess security deposits — Amounts exceeding 50% of one month's rent
  • Additional fees — Pet deposits, cleaning fees, key deposits, or other non-rent charges
  • Automatic rent increases — Clauses that increase rent without proper notice
  • Mandatory arbitration — Clauses that bypass the Residential Tenancies Program dispute process
  • Entry without notice — Clauses waiving the 24-hour notice requirement for landlord entry

Subletting

As of September 20, 2024, it is illegal for tenants to sublet their unit for more rent than they are currently paying. Tenants may still sublet with the landlord's consent, but the subtenant cannot pay more than the original tenant's rent.

Delivering the Lease

Landlords must provide the tenant with a signed copy of the lease within 10 days of signing, along with a free copy of the Residential Tenancies Act. Failure to do either gives the tenant the right to terminate the tenancy.

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Always use a written lease — Even though verbal agreements are valid, a written lease prevents disputes
  2. Use the Standard Form of Lease (Form P) — Start with the provincial form and add permitted additional terms
  3. Review any custom clauses — Ensure they don't contradict the statutory conditions
  4. Include all required contact information — Name, civic address, mailing address, phone, and email
  5. Deliver signed copies promptly — Provide the tenant with their copy within 10 days
  6. Keep copies on file — Retain signed copies of all lease agreements for your records
  7. Update leases when laws change — Review your lease template when new amendments take effect

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.

Back to Nova Scotia Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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