Yukon Landlord Required Disclosures: What to Provide Tenants
Guide to mandatory landlord disclosures in Yukon — tenancy agreements, condition inspection reports, minimum rental standards, rent receipts, and contact inf...
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เนื้อหานี้มีวัตถุประสงค์เพื่อให้ข้อมูลทั่วไปและการศึกษาเท่านั้น ไม่ถือเป็นคำแนะนำทางกฎหมายและไม่ควรถือเป็นเช่นนั้น กฎหมายมีการเปลี่ยนแปลงบ่อยครั้ง — ควรตรวจสอบกฎระเบียบปัจจุบันเสมอและปรึกษาทนายความที่ได้รับใบอนุญาตในเขตอำนาจศาลของคุณสำหรับคำแนะนำเฉพาะสถานการณ์ของคุณ Landager เป็นแพลตฟอร์มการจัดการอสังหาริมทรัพย์ ไม่ใช่สำนักงานกฎหมายข้อมูลได้รับการยืนยันล่าสุด: March 2026.
Yukon landlords are required to provide tenants with specific information and documents at the start of a tenancy and upon request throughout the rental period. Failure to meet these disclosure obligations can limit your rights — including your ability to deduct from a security deposit or issue a valid eviction notice.
Required Disclosures at a Glance
1. Written Tenancy Agreement
While Yukon permits oral tenancy agreements, written agreements are strongly recommended and required for fixed-term tenancies. If a written agreement exists, the landlord must provide a copy to the tenant within 21 days of the agreement being signed.
The tenancy agreement must include the following mandatory information:
- Landlord's name, address, and phone number (for service of notices)
- Tenant's emergency contact phone number
- Address of the rental unit
- Date the agreement was made and the tenancy's start date
- End date (if fixed-term)
- Description of any additional spaces the tenant has access to (parking, storage, laundry)
- A copy of the minimum rental standards from the Residential Tenancies Act
2. Standard Mandatory Terms
Every tenancy agreement — whether written or oral — must incorporate the standard terms prescribed by the Residential Tenancies Act, covering:
- Subletting and assignment rights
- Condition inspection procedures
- Permitted and prohibited fees
- Landlord entry rules
- Procedures for ending the tenancy
- Lock policies
- Rent increase rules
- Repair and maintenance obligations
- Water and plumbing provisions
Landlords cannot include terms that contract out of the Act's provisions. Any clause in a lease that gives the landlord more rights (or the tenant fewer rights) than the Act allows is void.
3. Condition Inspection Report
Before a tenant moves in, the landlord and tenant must jointly inspect the rental unit and complete a Condition Inspection Report. This report documents the state of the unit before occupancy.
A second inspection is required at the end of the tenancy.
The landlord must:
- Complete the report at move-in
- Provide a signed copy to the tenant within 14 days of move-in
- Retain the report for use at move-out when assessing deductions from the deposit
Failure to conduct the inspection or provide the report may bar the landlord from making deductions from the security deposit based on damage.
4. Minimum Rental Standards
Landlords must provide a copy of the minimum rental standards as set out in the Residential Tenancies Act regulations. These standards outline the basic health, safety, and habitability requirements that all rental units must meet.
5. Rent Receipts
Yukon landlords must provide a rent receipt whenever a tenant requests one. Best practice is to issue receipts routinely (monthly) to maintain clear payment records and prevent disputes.
6. No Application Fees
Landlords are prohibited from charging application fees for processing rental applications. Collecting such fees is a violation of the Residential Tenancies Act.
How to Stay Compliant
- Use the government template — The Yukon government provides a tenancy agreement template that includes all mandatory disclosures.
- Inspect thoroughly — Complete the Condition Inspection Report in detail with photos; both parties must sign.
- Keep landlord information current — Update tenants if your address or contact number changes.
- Issue receipts promptly — Respond to rent receipt requests immediately to avoid disputes.
- Don't charge illegal fees — Application fees are prohibited; only security and pet deposits may be collected upfront.
Elevate Your Yukon Property Management
Adhering to Yukon's Residential Landlord and Tenant Act or complex commercial lease frameworks requires a precise and highly resilient operational strategy. Overlooking the 15-day security deposit return deadline, the 12-month minimum rent increase interval, or proper RTO eviction notices can result in significant financial penalties, delayed proceedings, and loss of revenue. Landager delivers a streamlined, comprehensive property management solution that automates key compliance workflows. From tracking the exact delivery times for standard lease obligations to executing sophisticated operational analytics, Landager seamlessly manages your entire Yukon portfolio, empowering landlords in Whitehorse and beyond to maximize efficiency and fundamentally eliminate compliance vulnerabilities.
Back to Yukon Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
Landager helps landlords store condition inspection reports, track disclosure compliance, and generate professional tenancy documentation. Learn more about Landager.
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