Ontario’s New Standard Residential Lease Agreement

As of April 30th, 2018, most new residential lease agreements must use the new provincial standardized form. Let’s take a look at it.

Ontario’s Ministry of Housing, after extensive consultation from OREA, and some tenant and landlord advocacy groups, has released a new standardized residential lease agreement.
THE PURPOSE

Generally, it feels as though this document is an attempt to limit unlawful practices by unscrupulous landlords, and to protect tenants who may be ignorant of their rights in the rental arena.

Formally, the Ministry states the following as to the purpose of the introduction of a standard lease:

– To use easy-to-understand language
– To help landlords and renters understand their rights and responsibilities
– To reduce illegal terms in leases and misunderstandings caused by verbal tenancy agreements
– To reduce the need for Landlord and Tenant Board hearings to resolve disputes

Ontario’s Minister of Housing, Peter Milczyn, told the CBC upon the release of the form, “[The] standard lease is essentially a plain English or French document that would be common to all tenants and landlords across the province, making it very clear and easy for a tenant to understand what it is they are agreeing to.”

This seems perfectly reasonable so far. We’ve all encountered a less-than-ethical landlord or heard stories about nightmare tenants. An attempt at agreement standardization will make it difficult for a landlords to include unlawful terms like requisite damage deposits, charging interest on rental arrears, limiting the number of guests, or enforcing a ‘no pets’ policy. It will also help tenants understand that they do not have to adhere to these illegal residential lease terms.
WHO NEEDS IT?

The new lease applies to most private rental arrangements, excepting care homes, most social housing, co-operative housing, and a few other special types of tenancy. If you’re tenting your residential unit to a tenant after April 30th, 2018, you are required to utilize the new document.
WHAT HAPPENS IF I DON’T USE IT?

Well, if you have existing tenants or tenants who are not under an existing lease agreement, there’s nothing you have to do, as old or existing leases do not need to be updated.

The kicker here is that if you do not use the new lease for a new tenancy after April 30th, 2018, and do not honour your tenant’s request to provide the new version within 21 days of said request, one month’s rent can be legally withheld. Yes, you read that right. This landlord cannot recall a situation where a tenant can withhold rent as a means to force a landlord to act lawfully. This is BIG. The sceptre of legally withheld rent should go a long way to ensuring landlords provide new lease agreemtns in the timeframe required by the Ministry.

In addition, from the Ministry’s website:
“If the landlord fails to provide the standard lease within 30 days after the renter has begun withholding rent, the renter does not have to repay the one month’s rent. Please note, you cannot withhold more than one month’s rent and you must continue paying your rent for the term of your lease, even if your landlord never gives you the standard lease. However, if a standard lease is not provided, special rules allow you to end your fixed-term lease early.”
Read on, once you’ve picked yourself up off the floor.
ADDITIONAL TERMS

There is an opportunity to add special clauses not accounted for in the standard language of the agreement. Section 15 of the standard lease form allows for tenants and landlords to make additional terms to the lease such as making changes to the unit before the tenant moves in or rules around the usage of common spaces. I believe this section can be best used to avoid tenant-on-tenant disputes around behaviour on your properties.
In case you have any questions about what is legal or illegal, you can call the Landlord Tenant Board for clarification, or refer to the soon-to-be-released guide book, which will be available in 21 different languages for your convenience.
THE FEEDBACK

Landlords I’ve spoken to still decry the lack of ability to collect a damage deposit, and want quicker evictions, but generally are welcoming this announcement.

Tenant advocacy groups like the Federation of Metro Tenants Associations have cheered the introduction of standardized leases, having previously declared that there are “illegal terms on almost every lease” in the province.
The Advocacy Centre for Tenants Ontario (ACTO) is still concerned about the “additional terms” section, and how there may still be illegal terms added to a standard lease if tenants are not savvy enough to spot them. Even if they are, a lack of affordable housing and low vacancy rates leave tenants with little bargaining power to negotiate with landlords.
A quick perusal of the dreaded comment sections on articles surrounding the release of the document predictably found landlords railing against the imbalance in rights afforded the tenant over the landlord. In turn, tenants praised the move and looked forward to bad landlords getting their comeuppance in front of the tribunal for attempting illegal lease terms.

My feeling is that the standard lease form is a welcome addition to landlord and tenant relations. Ultimately, most landlords want a win-win relationship with tenants, which means clear, concise and most of all legal agreement on all terms of a residential tenancy.

Ontario’s New Standard Residential Lease Agreement

You can also find these standard lease agreements on the Ontario Government website at the Ontario Central Forms Repository.