Nova Scotia Landlord Required Disclosures: What You Must Provide Tenants
Complete guide to Nova Scotia's mandatory landlord disclosures including the RTA copy requirement, lease delivery, contact information, and tenant notific...
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Nova Scotia law requires landlords to provide specific information and documents to tenants at various stages of the tenancy. Failure to comply can result in the tenant gaining the right to terminate the lease. The April 30, 2025 amendments to the Residential Tenancies Act added new contact information disclosure requirements.
Mandatory Disclosures
1. Copy of the Residential Tenancies Act
Landlords must provide each tenant with a free copy of the Residential Tenancies Act (RTA) within 10 days of the earliest of:
- The lease start date
- The date the tenant signs the lease
- The date the keys are delivered
The copy may be provided in paper or electronic format — a web link to the official legislation is acceptable.
Penalty for non-compliance: If the landlord fails to provide the RTA, the tenant may terminate the tenancy.
2. Copy of the Signed Lease
Landlords must provide a copy of the signed lease to the tenant within 10 days of signing. Both the landlord and tenant should retain copies.
Penalty for non-compliance: If the landlord fails to provide a copy of the lease, the tenant may terminate the tenancy.
3. Landlord Contact Information (Effective April 30, 2025)
As of April 30, 2025, landlords must include the following contact information in the lease:
Any changes to this contact information must be provided to the tenant in writing within 30 days.
4. Standard Form of Lease
All residential tenancies must use the provincial Standard Form of Lease (Form P). The statutory conditions contained in the Standard Form of Lease apply to every tenancy, even if the parties used a different lease agreement or only a verbal agreement. Landlords must ensure tenants receive a copy of this form.
5. Security Deposit Information
When collecting a security deposit, landlords must inform the tenant:
- The exact deposit amount (maximum 50% of one month's rent)
- That the deposit will be held in a trust account
- That interest will be paid annually or at the end of the tenancy
- The process for claiming deductions at the end of the tenancy
Additional Disclosure Obligations
Rent Increase Notice
Landlords must provide at least 4 months' written notice before increasing rent. The notice must specify:
- The current rent amount
- The new rent amount
- The effective date of the increase
- That the increase does not exceed the 5% cap (while the cap is in effect)
Entry Notice
Landlords must provide at least 24 hours' written notice before entering a tenant's unit for non-emergency purposes. The notice should include:
- The date and approximate time of entry
- The reason for entry
Exception: In genuine emergencies (e.g., fire, flood, gas leak), immediate entry without notice is permitted.
Changes to Services or Facility
If the landlord plans to make changes to the services or facilities included in the rental agreement, the tenant must be notified in advance with reasonable notice.
Disclosure Timing Summary
Best Practices for Landlords
- Build disclosures into your onboarding process — Create a checklist of all required disclosures and complete them before or at move-in
- Use the Standard Form of Lease — Don't rely on custom agreements that may miss statutory requirements
- Keep proof of delivery — Have tenants sign an acknowledgment of receipt for the RTA and lease copies
- Update contact information promptly — Set a reminder to notify tenants within 30 days of any changes
- Provide rent increase notices early — Don't wait until the last moment; give yourself a buffer beyond the 4-month minimum
- Use email for electronic delivery — Email provides a built-in record of delivery dates
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.
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