Manitoba Lease Requirements: Form 1, Delivery Deadlines, and Compliance
Complete guide to Manitoba lease requirements including the mandatory Form 1 Standard Residential Tenancy Agreement, the 21-day delivery rule, house rules, a...
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Questo contenuto è solo a scopo informativo ed educativo generale. Non costituisce consulenza legale e non deve essere considerato tale. Le leggi cambiano frequentemente: verifica sempre le normative vigenti e consulta un avvocato abilitato nella tua giurisdizione per consulenza specifica sulla tua situazione. Landager è una piattaforma di gestione immobiliare, non uno studio legale.Informazioni verificate l'ultima volta: April 2026.
A well-drafted lease is a landlord's strongest tool for preventing disputes. In Manitoba, the format of your lease, its required content, and when you deliver it to your tenant are all strictly regulated by the Residential Tenancies Act.
The Standard Residential Tenancy Agreement (Form 1)
Manitoba landlords are legally required to use the Standard Residential Tenancy Agreement (commonly known as Form 1), as prescribed by the Residential Tenancies Branch (RTB). While landlords can technically draft their own form, it must contain all the prescribed information found in Form 1. Most property owners opt to use the exact provincial form to ensure strict compliance.
Required Components of a Compliant Lease
A proper tenancy agreement in Manitoba must include the following:
Fixed-Term vs. Periodic Tenancies
The lease must clearly specify the tenancy type:
- Fixed-term — A lease with a defined start and end date (e.g., one year). The tenancy ends automatically at the expiry date unless renewed.
- Periodic (month-to-month) — Continues indefinitely until either party provides proper notice of termination.
If no term is specified, the tenancy is deemed to be periodic.
Prohibited Lease Clauses The Residential Tenancies
Act voids certain clauses, even if the tenant agrees to them:
- Waiver of tenant rights — Any clause that attempts to waive a right provided by the RTA is void
- Automatic entry provisions — Clauses giving the landlord unlimited access to the unit without notice
- Excessive deposit clauses — Requiring more than 50% of the first month's rent as a security deposit
- Post-dated cheque requirements — Landlords cannot require tenants to provide post-dated cheques as a condition of tenancy
- Pet prohibition overrides — Blanket pet bans may not be enforceable in all circumstances (the RTB examines pet restrictions case by case)
- Waiver of maintenance obligations — The landlord cannot contract out of their duty to maintain the premises
House Rules and Addenda
Landlords may append custom "house rules" to the tenancy agreement, provided these rules:
- Are reasonable and promote safety, welfare, and fair enjoyment of the property
- Apply equally to all tenants in the building
- Are disclosed before signing — pre-existing building rules disclosed prior to lease execution are binding
- Are mutually agreed upon — new rules added to the lease require tenant consent to be enforceable
Common House Rules
- Noise protocols and quiet hours
- Amenity reservation procedures (laundry, gym, common rooms)
- Pet restrictions and pet owner responsibilities
- Smoking and cannabis policies
- Guest and visitor policies
- Parking assignments and rules
- Waste disposal and recycling procedures
The 21-Day Delivery Requirement
Signing the lease is only half the process. The Residential Tenancies Act imposes a strict requirement that the landlord must provide the tenant with a fully executed copy of the signed tenancy agreement within 21 days of signing.
Consequences of Late Delivery
Delivery Methods The executed lease copy can be delivered by:
- Personal delivery (hand-to-hand)
- Registered mail
- Email (if the tenant has agreed to electronic delivery)
Subletting and Assignment
Manitoba's rules on subletting and assignment are governed by the tenancy agreement, subject to RTA protections:
- Landlord consent required — A tenant must obtain written landlord consent before subletting or assigning the lease
- Consent cannot be unreasonably withheld — If a landlord refuses consent without a valid reason, the tenant may apply to the RTB
- Original tenant remains liable — In a subletting arrangement, the original tenant retains responsibility for the lease obligations
- Assignment transfers all rights — In an assignment, the new tenant assumes the original tenant's rights and obligations
Lease Renewals
Fixed-Term Leases At the end of a fixed-term lease, neither party is obligated to renew. If the tenant remains in possession without a new agreement, the tenancy typically converts to a periodic (month-to-month) tenancy on the same terms.
Periodic Tenancies
A periodic tenancy continues indefinitely until terminated by proper notice from either party:
- Tenant — Must provide at least one full rental period's notice (one month for monthly tenancies)
- Landlord — Must provide three months' notice for monthly tenancies (no-fault), or shorter notice for cause
Best Practices for Landlords
- Use the official Form 1 — Do not risk non-compliance by drafting custom forms unless reviewed by legal counsel
- Deliver the signed lease promptly — Aim to deliver within days of signing, not the maximum 21
- Keep a signed copy — Retain a fully executed copy (with both signatures) in your records
- Document house rules separately — Attach rules as an appendix and have the tenant sign acknowledgment
- Review prohibited clauses — Ensure your lease does not contain any terms voided by the RTA
- Track all occupants — Ensure the lease lists every person who will reside in the unit
- Specify utility responsibilities clearly — Ambiguity about who pays for utilities is one of the most common sources of RTB disputes
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