Quebec Rent Increase Laws & TAL Calculation Details
Understand how rent increases work in Quebec, including TAL calculation methods, notice periods, tenant refusals, and exceptions for new buildings.
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Unlike jurisdictions with fixed statutory rent control caps, Quebec uses a unique, expense-based calculation method administered by the Tribunal administratif du logement (TAL). This means the legal rent increase for your property depends directly on its specific operating costs and improvements.
Does Quebec Have Rent Control?
Yes, but not in the form of a fixed flat percentage (like 2% or 5%). Quebec relies on a formula that evaluates specific building expenses to determine a "fair and reasonable" increase.
Each year, the TAL publishes "reference percentages" based on average inflation for various categories (e.g., taxes, insurance, energy, major repairs).
For the 2026–2027 lease renewal cycle (leases end between April 2, 2026, and April 1, 2027), the TAL estimated a baseline average increase of 3.1% for basic unheated apartments with no major renovations. However, your legal increase might be higher or lower depending on your exact bills.
How Rent Increases are Calculated
The legal increase is determined by the variation in your operating expenses over the past year. The TAL provides an official Calculation Tool that tallies:
- Municipal / School Taxes
- Insurance Premiums
- Energy Costs (if heat/electricity is included in the rent)
- Maintenance Costs
- Major Repairs or Improvements (An established percentage of the cost of new roofs, windows, etc., can be added. Recently, the calculation was revised to allow landlords to add approximately 5% of renovation costs to the annual rent to recoup investments over 20 years instead of 30+).
The Notice Process and Timelines
in quebec
Use the TAL’s Calculation Tool to determine the legal rent increase based on variations in building operating costs (taxes, insurance, energy, major repairs).
Provide a formal ’Notice of Rent Increase’ to the tenant within the legal window: 3–6 months before lease end for 12+ month leases, 1–2 months for shorter leases.
The tenant has exactly 1 month to accept, refuse but stay, or refuse and vacate. No response = acceptance.
If the tenant refuses but stays, the landlord must apply to the TAL within 1 month to have the rent ’fixed’ — otherwise the lease renews at the old rent.
A TAL adjudicator reviews the landlord’s actual building expenses and applies the official calculation formula to determine the binding legal increase.
To raise rent, a landlord must send a formal, written "Notice of Rent Increase and Modification of Another Condition of the Lease."
Notice Deadlines:
- Lease of 12 months or more: 3 to 6 months before the lease ends.
- Lease of less than 12 months: 1 to 2 months before the lease ends.
How Tenants Can Respond
Upon receiving the notice, the tenant has precisely one month to reply. The tenant has three options:
- Accept the increase: The lease is renewed under the new terms. If the tenant does not reply within one month, the law assumes they have accepted the increase.
- Refuse the increase, but choose to stay: The tenant objects to the amount but wishes to renew the lease.
- Refuse and leave: The tenant gives notice that they will not renew the lease and will vacate on the specified end date.
What Happens if the Tenant Refuses (Option 2)?
If the tenant refuses the rent increase but stays, the landlord has one month from receiving the refusal to apply to the TAL to have the rent "fixed."
If the landlord fails to apply to the TAL within that month, the lease is renewed at the old rent and conditions.
If the landlord applies, a TAL judge will ask the landlord to submit their building expenses. The judge will use the TAL Calculation Tool to determine the strict legal increase and enforce it on both parties.
Exemptions for New Construction
Under Section F of the mandatory lease, a landlord is exempt from the TAL's rent-fixing rules (meaning the tenant cannot refuse the increase and must accept it or leave) if:
- The building was constructed 5 years ago or less.
- The building's use was changed to residential 5 years ago or less.
To benefit from this exemption, the landlord must have clearly checked and filled out Section F of the lease when the tenant originally signed it.
How Landager Helps
Calculating rent increases and managing refusal deadlines is arguably the most complex administrative task for Quebec property managers. Landager's rent adjustment tools integrate the logic of the TAL's calculation method with your recorded building expenses and automatically remind you to send notices within the 3-to-6-month legal window.
Back to Quebec Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
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