Modern Canadian apartment building with balconies representing the 18-month rent decline trend
Industry

Canada's Rents Have Fallen for 18 Straight Months. Here's What That Means for Property Managers.

TL;DR: According to Rentals.ca's National Rent Report for March 2026, average asking rents across Canada dropped to $2,008/month — a 35-month low, and the 18th consecutive month of declines. The pace of decline is the steepest in nearly five years. For Canadian property managers and purpose-built rental operators, this isn't a temporary dip. It's a structural reset that demands a different approach to leasing.

The Numbers: What Rentals.ca's March 2026 Data Actually Shows

The Rentals.ca National Rent Report for March 2026 is one of the most comprehensive reads on Canadian asking rents available. The headline is hard to ignore.

$2,008/mo
National average asking rent, March 2026 — a 35-month low, down 5.3% year-over-year. [Source: Rentals.ca National Rent Report, April 2026][1]
18 months
Consecutive months of declining asking rents nationally — the longest sustained decline in recent Canadian rental history.
29%
Canada's rent-to-income ratio in March 2026 — below the 30% affordability threshold for the first time in over six years.
-9.0%
Year-over-year drop in asking rents for houses and townhouses — the steepest decline among all unit types.

Breaking Down the Decline by Unit Type

Not all rental product is falling equally. The Rentals.ca data reveals a clear hierarchy of pain:

The divergence between purpose-built and condo rental performance is one of the most important signals in this data. When investor-owned condos flood the market, they tend to undercut on price to minimize carrying costs. That puts downward pressure on the entire market, including professionally managed stock nearby.

Regional Picture: Where It's Falling Fastest

The Rentals.ca data shows province-level declines dominated by Ontario, B.C., and Alberta — the three largest rental markets in Canada.

The only provinces posting rent growth are Nova Scotia (+3.9%), Saskatchewan (+3.7%), and Manitoba (+3.4%) — smaller markets with more stable domestic demand and less exposure to the immigration policy shock that hammered Ontario and B.C.

The Edmonton picture is particularly striking. A CBC News report from April 23, 2026 described Edmonton as a full renter's market, with the average rent across all unit types sitting at $1,589/month — down 2.4% year-over-year. Shamon Kureshi, president of Hope Street Management Corporation, noted the complete reversal from two years prior: "Things were crazy. Renters were nervous and there was talk of a rental housing crisis." That crisis is now firmly on the other side of the ledger.

Why Is This Happening?

Three structural forces are converging simultaneously:

1. Population growth has stalled. Canada's immigration policy changes led to a sharp decline in non-permanent residents through 2025. Temporary residents — international students, foreign workers — are among the most likely cohorts to rent rather than own, and their departure removed a significant source of absorption that had underpinned rental demand for years.

2. New supply is arriving at scale. Federal incentives including GST waivers on new rental construction and CMHC's MLI Select insurance program drove a surge in apartment starts from 2022 to 2024. Those units are now completing. According to CMHC, housing starts in Canada rose 6% in 2025 — and new rental completions are continuing to hit the market at elevated rates through 2026.

3. Investor-owned units are flooding back. Condo investors who couldn't sell into a soft resale market have had no choice but to list for rent. This unplanned supply increase — concentrated in the condo segment — is compressing asking rents in precisely the markets (downtown Toronto, Metro Vancouver) where purpose-built operators are trying to compete.

The Affordability Milestone Nobody Expected

Here's the stat that should stop every property manager and developer in their tracks: Canada's national rent-to-income ratio dropped to 29% in March 2026 — falling below the 30% affordability threshold for the first time in over six years.

For years, the affordability crisis in Canadian rental housing was a primary story. Governments allocated billions, developers built at record pace, and advocacy groups tracked every fractional increase in the ratio. Now that ratio has crossed back below 30% — not because incomes surged, but because rents fell fast enough to close the gap.

The affordability milestone is real. But for property managers running portfolios in this environment, it means the leverage has shifted decisively to the renter. Prospects have more choice, more time, and more negotiating power than at any point in the last six years.

What This Means for Property Managers and PBR Operators

The 18-month rent decline creates a clear set of operational implications:

Pricing discipline matters more than it ever did during the growth cycle. In 2021 and 2022, almost any pricing cleared quickly. In 2026, overpricing by even 3-5% against local comparables can add weeks to your vacancy timeline — and in a market with declining rents, weeks translate directly into dollars per unit.

Speed and response quality are now competitive differentiators. When renters have more options and less urgency, they don't wait for callbacks. The property that responds first, with the most useful and specific information, wins the lease. In the growth cycle, any decent property could afford to be slow. In a renter's market, that margin is gone.

Purpose-built operators have a structural advantage — if they use it. The Rentals.ca data makes clear that purpose-built apartments are outperforming condo rentals in terms of rent stability. Professional management, better product quality, and consistent service are genuine differentiators when renters have choices. The question is whether operators can translate that quality advantage into a faster, more responsive leasing experience — or whether they cede ground to cheaper condo competition on price.

The lease-up risk for new PBR projects is real. Developers with assets in lease-up are now competing in a market where new-tenant rents are declining and prospects have more alternatives. Bank covenants requiring 90%+ occupancy within defined windows are harder to hit when absorption has slowed. Speed and responsiveness at the top of the funnel — the inquiry-to-tour conversion stage — is where those lease-up timelines are won or lost.

"Canada has entered a phase where demographic acceleration is no longer doing the work of market clearing on its own. Supply is arriving into an environment of slower population growth. That shift alters the pricing mechanism across the entire housing system."

How SimpleTurn Helps in This Market

This is precisely the market that separates property management operations that invested in leasing infrastructure from those that didn't.

SimpleTurn's Deep Research capability pulls live Canadian neighbourhood data — transit scores, walk scores, competitive rent comparisons, school ratings, and nearby amenities — and makes it instantly available to AI leasing agents during prospect conversations. When a prospective tenant compares three properties in an evening, the one that answers every question instantly, at any hour, with the most specific and confident information wins.

SimpleTurn agents respond in seconds — 11 PM on a weekday, 6 AM on a weekend, any day of the year. No inquiry goes unanswered, no prospect waits until Monday morning while your competitors respond Friday night. Qualified, tour-ready leads are handed off with full conversation context so your human leasing team closes from strength.

In a market defined by declining rents, rising competition, and renters who have genuine choices, the operations that lease fastest are the ones that respond fastest. That's what SimpleTurn delivers.

Use our ROI Calculator to see the impact on your specific portfolio. Or talk to our team directly.

Frequently asked questions

Is Canada's rental market declining everywhere?

No. While the national average asking rent fell 5.3% year-over-year to $2,008/month in March 2026, the decline is concentrated in Ontario (-4.4%), B.C. (-4.8%), and Alberta (-4.6%). Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba are all still posting rent growth. Edmonton and Calgary have seen the sharpest local reversals, while Halifax remains a relatively tight market driven by domestic migration.

Why are condo rentals declining faster than purpose-built apartments?

Investor-owned condos that can't sell in a soft resale market are being listed for rent instead, flooding supply into specific submarkets. These units tend to be priced to minimize carrying costs, undercutting professionally managed stock. Purpose-built apartments are professionally managed, higher quality on average, and not subject to the same panic-listing dynamic — which is why they're falling more slowly (3.9% vs. 6.9% year-over-year).

What does rent-to-income falling below 30% mean for landlords?

The rent-to-income ratio dropping to 29% nationally means renters have more choices and less financial pressure to act quickly. The urgency that drove fast lease-up in 2021-2023 is gone. Prospects will take more time, compare more options, and negotiate more aggressively. Landlords and property managers need to compete on response speed, information quality, and service — not just price.

How long will the Canadian rental market decline last?

Most forecasters, including RBC Economics and CMHC, expect the decline to continue through 2026 and potentially into 2027, driven by the ongoing completion of purpose-built rental units started in 2022-2023. A recovery in rental demand would require a resumption of population growth — likely tied to a stabilization of immigration levels — which most analysts project to resume more meaningfully after 2026.

What is the biggest leasing mistake property managers make in a renter's market?

Pricing above market and responding slowly. In a tight market, overpriced units still lease. In a renter's market, they sit. The second-biggest mistake is treating after-hours and weekend inquiries as low priority — in a market where prospects are evaluating multiple properties simultaneously, the first responder typically wins the tour booking.

How does SimpleTurn help property managers compete in a declining rent environment?

SimpleTurn deploys AI leasing agents that respond to every inquiry instantly, 24/7, with property-specific answers drawn from live Canadian neighbourhood data. In a market where renters have more choices and less urgency, removing response delay and after-hours gaps is one of the highest-leverage operational changes a PMC can make. SimpleTurn also provides qualified, tour-ready lead handoffs so your human team closes from context rather than starting from scratch.

Sources & references

  1. Rentals.ca, "National Rent Report – March 2026," April 2026. rentals.ca/national-rent-report
  2. CBC News, "Renter's market in Edmonton as building boom meets drop in demand," April 23, 2026. cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton
  3. RBC Economics, "Canada's population downturn, rising supply to keep apartment rents in check," March 2026. rbc.com/en/economics
  4. CMHC, "Housing Market Outlook 2026." cmhc-schl.gc.ca

Statistics cited are from the most recent available data at time of publication. Market data may have changed since this article was written.

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The SimpleTurn Team

SimpleTurn Technologies

SimpleTurn is built by a team of AI engineers and property management veterans based in Canada, focused on transforming how properties connect with prospective tenants.

See what SimpleTurn discovers about your property

Enter any Canadian property address and watch our AI research it in real-time — Walk Score, transit, comparable rents, neighbourhood insights, and more.