Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Landlords squeezed under rent cap

In 2014, landlords in British Columbia can raise the rent by 2.2%.
gv_20140108_biv0111_140109964
Apartment buildings in Vancouver

In 2014, landlords in British Columbia can raise the rent by 2.2%.

Why 2.2%? It is based on the official inflation rate in July of last year, which was pegged at .02%.

However, as the B.C. Landlords Association notes, BC Hydro rates are to rise 28% over the next five years, starting with a 9% hike in 2014; and Vancouver property taxes will jump 1.9% this year.

According to the BC Residential Tenancy Act, a B.C. landlord “may impose a rent increase that is no greater than the percentage amount calculated as follows: the inflation rate plus 2% equals the allowable rent increases.”

While the rate is low compared to past rent increase guidelines, B.C. landlords are actually getting a pretty good deal in B.C. compared to some other provinces. Most other provinces base the rent increase only on the inflation rate, the Association notes.

For example in Ontario landlords can only raise the rent 0.8% in 2014. In Manitoba landlords can only raise the rent by 2% in 2014.