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Young professionals struggle to rent in 'crazy' real estate markets

From recruiting roommates to promoting themselves to potential landlords, people in their 20s and 30s are forced to find creative ways to deal with 'crazy' rental markets in Vancouver and Toronto.

'It's impossible and that's with two working professional people,' frustrated apartment-hunter says

With a vacancy rate of less than one per cent, Vancouver has one of the tightest rental markets in the country. (CBC)

For many young professionals chasingthedream of home ownership,"I'll be renting forever" isa common lamentas real estate prices in hotspots like Toronto and Vancouver remain sky-high.

But even with good jobs and decent incomes, some 20- and 30-somethings are realizingthat renting an apartment or condo is no easy task in theseenormouslycompetitive housing markets.

"It's impossible and that's with two working professional people," said Alena Rebmann, 32, of Surrey, B.C.,whois searching for an apartment or condoto rent in Vancouver with her husband,Nawab Singh.

Alena Rebmann posted this photo of her and her husband on Craigslist as part of their 'Apartment Wanted' ad. Rebmann says she had seen others taking this personal approach to introduce themselves to potential landlords and hoped it would help them stand out in the crowd of would-be tenants. (Alena Rebmann/Craigslist)

With a maximum budget of $2,500 a month, the two technology professionals are willing to cram into a small space if it means they can live in a downtown neighbourhood they like.

"We'll even settle for a bachelor [apartment]," she said.

Vancouver's rental vacancy rate is less than one per cent the second lowest recorded in the country after Victoria according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC).

Toronto's vacancy rate of 1.6 per cent is also well below the rates in other large Canadian cities, including Montreal (four per cent), Calgary (5.3 per cent) and Halifax (3.4 per cent).

On Friday, real estate consulting firm UrbanationannouncedToronto's condo rental market "has become severely undersupplied," with rents rising to an average of just under $2,000 permonth.

"It's crazy," said Toronto-based real estate agentJarrodArmstrong. "Despite all the towers, all the cranes, all thehighrises...there is a limited number of rentals in the city."

'It's a landlord's market,' says Toronto real estate agent Jarrod Armstrong. 'We list a property, we get 20, 30 showings in a week.' (Jarrod and Karolina Armstrong Real Estate)

Airbnbhas been blamed for worsening the situation in Vancouver and Toronto bytaking more apartments and condos out ofthe long-term rental market as owners try to make more money by renting them to more people for short stays.

Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson has said he wants to combat the trend byimposinga licence requirement on short-term rentals. He has also vowed to create a vacancy tax oninvestmenthomes including condosthat owners leaveempty inan effort to encourage more rental availability.

But experts say the rental crunches inboth citiesare largely due to broader economic factors, including a combination ofpositive growthin the job market with prohibitivelyhigh housing prices.

When the job market improves and young people are working,they're more likely to"move out of their parents' basements" and look for homes of their own, saidAndrew Scott, asenior market analyst for the Greater Toronto Area with CMHC.

Despite condo development in downtown Toronto, the demand for rentals remains high. Analysts with the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation say that demand is partly fuelled by employment growth, because young people tend to move out of their parents' homes and look for rentals when they get jobs. (Chris Roussakis/Reuters )

But asthesenew renters enter the market, existing tenantsaren't creating new vacancies, since they're choosing to keep rentinginstead of trying to buy a pricey home.

Thatcombination contributes to a"very tight rental market," saidRobyn Adamache, CMHC'sprincipal market analyst in Vancouver.

She says the rental landscape in Vancouver is also complicated by its geography, which limits how much new housing can be created.

"We're surrounded by the mountains, the ocean, the border," Adamache said, noting there'salso a significant amount of land in the Vancouver area reserved for agriculture that can't be developed.

Roommates needed

Whatever the reasons behind the low vacancy rates, young professionals in both cities are trying different tactics to deal with high rental prices and stiffcompetition for the apartments and condosthat become available.

Sami Larbi, 27, recently got a promotion at thesoftware firm where he works and is eager to finally move out of his parents' home in Vancouver. With amonthly rent budget of $1,200, hehas reluctantly placed an ad on Craigslist seeking a roommate.

"I've lived with my big family all my life, so it would be nice to live by myself for once," Larbisaid. "But that's just not a reality in Vancouver."

He says many of hisfriends are in the same boat.If they have a boyfriend or girlfriend, they move in together to save on rent.If they don't, they need one or two roommates to share the cost.

It's crazy.Despite all the towers, all the cranes, all thehighrises...there is a limited number of rentals in the city.- Torontoreal estate agentJarrodArmstrong

Even whenthey can afford the rent,potential tenants often find themselves in competition with several othersvying for the same apartment or condo.

Some people, like Rebmannin Vancouver, try to set themselves apart from the rest of the crowd byposting ads with photos andinformation about themselves that they hope will appealto landlords.

"My husband and I are a quiet, clean, non-smoking, respectable professional couple with a small kitten(our cat has clipped nails so she does not scratch)," Rebmann's"Apartment Wanted" adon Craigslist reads. "Please call/email /text me. We are very reliable and have excellent references!"

'Call back and it's gone'

She says they make sure they have the necessary documentation ready for landlords,including references andpaystubs.

"[It's] almost like a full ...background screening check on every level," she said. "You submit all this and you look fantastic on paper and you go and you ... get interviewed in order to even be considered a candidate."

Rebmann, whohas been searching for a few months, says rental units aresnapped up almost as soon as they are listed.

"Every day I'm like on Craigslist and talking to realtors," she said. "They'll have something and thenI'll call back and it's gone."

Shane Lee and his wife, Eunyoung Park, used a real estate agent specializing in rentals to navigate the competitive apartment and condo market in Toronto. (Shane Lee)

Shane Lee, a 29-year-old who works at a car dealership in Toronto, said he and his wife had to be "lightning quick" to renttheir one-bedroom-plus-dencondominium, at a cost of $1,850 per month,in the developing downtown neighbourhood of Regent Park.

The couple enlisted the help of a real estate agent (who works with Jarrod Armstrong)to find a rental home something Lee said he hadn't needed to do when searching for a place to live several years ago.

"I've never needed help from anybody, I kind of just browsed myself, found a place and, you know, made it happen on my own."

But he doubts the couple would have even known their condo was available to rent without the agent's help, because many units didn't appear in thelistings they were searching themselves.

"She had a lot of options that we didn't even know existed," Leesaid."It's definitely not a renter's market."


With files from Mike Laanela and Ramna Shahzad