Rental rate increases for existing tenants of rental properties throughout British Columbia could be capped at 2.5% in 2019, a drop from the planned increase of 4.5%. A 4.5% rental rate increase would be the highest since 2004. Citified.ca
Update September 27, 2018: the government has backed the findings of the task force and will implement a 2.5% maximum rental rate increase for 2019.
British Columbia’s Rental Housing Task Force is recommending the provincial government change the annual allowable rent increase formula to ease pressure on renters.
- changing the maximum rent increase formula, from the current formula of inflation plus 2%, to inflation only (2.5% for 2019), which would remove the automatic 2% yearly increase.
- giving landlords the ability to apply for an additional increase if they can show the formula would not cover maintenance and other costs incurred.
- In April 2018, Premier John Horgan and Selina Robinson, Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing, appointed the three-member Rental Housing Task Force to advise on ways to improve security and affordability for renters and rental housing providers throughout the province.
- Chaired by Chandra Herbert, the Premier’s Advisor on Residential Tenancy, the task force held public consultations throughout the summer, and is reviewing existing B.C. laws as well as approaches in other jurisdictions.
- For over a decade, Ontario and Manitoba have limited rent increases to the inflation rate.
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Article resources
- Read the recommendations on the annual allowable rent increase formula: https://engage.gov.bc.ca/rentalhousingtaskforce/
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