Manitoba Commercial Rent Increases: Lease Structures, CPI Escalations, and Market Adjustments

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Complete guide to commercial rent increases in Manitoba covering the absence of rent control, stepped increases, CPI escalations, percentage leases, and rene...

Melvin Prince
7분 소요
확인됨 Apr 2026캐나다 flag
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Unlike residential properties, which are restricted by the Manitoba Residential Tenancies Branch's strict annual rent increase guideline (1.8% for 2026), commercial landlords enjoy near-total freedom when setting and raising rent. The critical element, however, is that this freedom must be firmly established within the lease agreement from day one.

Rent Review
Per Lease Terms
Annual Adjustments
Common in Commercial

Commercial vs. Residential Rent Increase Rules

Commercial Rent Review Process in manitoba

1

Review Rent Clause

Check the specific rent review method in the commercial lease (CPI, fixed %, or market review).

2

Calculate New Amount

Apply the agreed formula to calculate the adjusted rent.

3

Serve Written Notice

Provide written notice of the new rent per the lease’s required notice period.

4

Obtain Valuation if Market Review

Commission an independent market rent valuation if required by the lease terms.

FeatureResidentialCommercial
Rent control1.8% guideline (2026)No statutory cap
Frequency limitOnce every 12 monthsNo statutory limit
Notice period3 months, RTB-approved formAs specified in lease
Mid-lease increasesGenerally prohibitedPer lease escalation clauses
Above-guideline applicationRTB process availableN/A — no guideline exists
Governing authorityRTBCourts

No Statutory Rent Control

Manitoba has no rent control legislation governing commercial properties:

  • A commercial landlord is free to increase rent by any percentage
  • There is no statutory "once every 12 months" restriction
  • There is no mandated notice period for rent increases
  • There is no provincial body that reviews or approves commercial rent increases

However, rent cannot simply be raised arbitrarily during a fixed-term lease. Increases during a lease term must adhere exactly to the escalation clauses negotiated in the binding commercial lease. Without an escalation clause, the landlord cannot increase rent until the lease expires and is renegotiated.

Common Commercial Rent Escalation Clauses

Because landlords cannot unilaterally rewrite a lease mid-term, anticipating inflation and rising overhead costs is a foundational element of commercial lease negotiations.

1. Stepped Rent Increases

The simplest and most predictable method. The lease states the exact base rent for each year of the term:

YearBase Rent (per sq ft)Monthly Rent (5,000 sq ft)
Year 1$20.00$8,333
Year 2$21.00$8,750
Year 3$22.00$9,167
Year 4$23.00$9,583
Year 5$24.00$10,000

Advantages:

  • Complete predictability for both parties
  • No calculation disputes
  • Easy budgeting and financial planning

Disadvantages:

  • Does not account for unexpected inflation
  • May undervalue the space in a rapidly appreciating market
  • Landlord may not keep pace with actual cost increases

2. CPI Escalations

Rent is tied directly to the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for Manitoba or Canada as a whole. The lease dictates whether the increase is 100% of the CPI change or a fraction:

Common CPI structures:

  • 100% CPI — Rent increases by the full CPI percentage change year-over-year
  • CPI + fixed premium — Example: CPI + 1% per year
  • CPI with floor and cap — Example: Minimum 2% increase, maximum 5% increase, regardless of actual CPI

Benefits for landlords:

  • Automatic inflation protection during long-term leases (5, 10, or 15 years)
  • Objective, verifiable calculation based on government data
  • Reduces renegotiation frequency

3. Percentage Leases

Common in retail environments (shopping malls, strip malls, entertainment complexes):

  • Tenant pays a base rent plus a negotiated percentage of gross sales
  • The percentage typically applies only to sales above a defined breakpoint
  • As the tenant's business grows, the landlord's income grows proportionally

Example structure:

  • Base rent: $3,000/month
  • Percentage rent: 5% of gross sales exceeding $500,000/year
  • If tenant grosses $700,000: Additional rent = 5% × $200,000 = $10,000/year

4. Operating Cost Escalation

In NNN and modified gross leases, rent effectively increases through rising operating costs:

  • Property taxes — Assessed annually by the municipality
  • Insurance premiums — Subject to annual renewal rates
  • CAM costs — Common area maintenance charges fluctuate with actual expenses

These costs are passed through to the tenant as "additional rent" and can increase annually without being classified as a formal rent increase.

Renewals and Market Adjustments

When a commercial lease expires, the landlord holds full authority to set a new rental rate (unless the lease contained an option to renew at a pre-determined rate).

Option to Renew at Fixed Rate

Some leases grant the tenant an option to renew at a specified rate:

  • The rate may be stated explicitly (e.g., "$25/sq ft for the renewal term")
  • Provides certainty for both parties
  • Landlord may undervalue the space if market rates have increased significantly

Option to Renew at Fair Market Value (FMV)

More commonly, leases contain an option to renew at Fair Market Value:

  • The landlord and tenant negotiate the new rate based on current market conditions
  • If they cannot agree, the lease typically prescribes an arbitration process
  • A neutral commercial real estate appraiser or arbitrator determines the FMV
  • The arbitrator's decision is binding on both parties

No Renewal Option

If the lease contains no renewal option:

  • The landlord can offer a new lease at any rate
  • The tenant can accept, negotiate, or vacate
  • The landlord has no obligation to renew the tenancy

Right of First Refusal

Some commercial leases include a right of first refusal (ROFR) on adjacent spaces or the same space at renewal:

  • If the landlord receives a bona fide offer from a third party, the existing tenant has the right to match it
  • The ROFR must be clearly drafted to avoid disputes
  • Time limits for the tenant's response should be specified (typically 5–15 business days)

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Draft escalation clauses carefully — Ensure the lease clearly specifies the exact mechanism, calculation, and timing of every rent increase
  2. Use CPI with floors and caps — Protect against deflation while giving tenants reasonable cost certainty
  3. Include additional rent provisions — Clearly define what constitutes "additional rent" beyond base rent
  4. Monitor market rates — Track comparable commercial rents in your area to ensure renewals reflect current market value
  5. Include arbitration provisions — For FMV renewal options, specify a clear, cost-effective arbitration process
  6. Address holdover rent — Specify the rent rate if a tenant remains after lease expiry without a renewal (typically 150–200% of the final month's rent)
  7. Review escalation calculations annually — Verify that each year's increase is correctly calculated per the lease terms

Back to Manitoba Commercial Tenancy Laws Overview.

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