Vancouver leads the way as Canadian rent prices hit new high for 6th month in a row: report - Action News
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Vancouver leads the way as Canadian rent prices hit new high for 6th month in a row: report

The average askingpricefor a rental unit in Canada reached $2,178 last month, a 9.9 per cent year-over-year increase and continuing a trend that has seen asking rents hit new highs for six months in a row.

Average rent for one-bedroom in Canada reached $1,906 in October; in Vancouver it was $2,872

Sign that says for rent.
Average asking rents in Canada increased 1.4 per cent month over month in October, according to a report released by Rentals.ca and Urbanation. (David Horemans/CBC)

The average askingpricefor a rental unit in Canada reached $2,178 last month, a 9.9 per cent year-over-year increase and continuing a trend that has seen asking rents hit new highs for six months in a row.

That's according to the latest rentalpricereport released by Rentals.ca and Urbanation thatanalyzesmonthly listings from the former's network. The findings show while October's annual rate ofrentgrowth in Canada was down from the 11.1 per cent jump in September, it still marked the second fastest annual increase of the past seven months.

On a monthly basis, average asking rents increased 1.4 per cent in October, a slight decrease from the monthly gains of 1.5 per cent in September and 1.8 per cent in August, which was attributed to seasonal factors.

The average cost of a one-bedroom unit in October was $1,906, up 14 per cent from the same month in 2022, while the average askingpricefor a two-bedroom was $2,255, up 11.8 per cent annually, according to the report.

Vancouver led the way again as Canada's most expensive city for renters, with the average one-bedroom unit listed at $2,872 and a two-bedroom at $3,777 both down from September's asking prices, but up 6.7 per cent and 5.5 per cent, respectively, on an annual basis.

Toronto was the next highest ranked major city at $2,607 for a one-bedroom and $3,424 for a two-bedroom.

The report saidrentinflation in Canada is being driven bypriceincreases in Alberta, Quebec and Nova Scotia, in part because of strong population growth and large infusions of new rental supply priced at above-average market rents.

'People are almost out of options'

"I get asked all the time, 'How are people affording this?' The answer is they're not," said Rentals.ca spokespersonGiacomo Ladas.

"Rents are getting so high to the point where people are almost out of options. They're looking desperately to find more affordable rents."

Out of Canada's largest cities, Calgary topped the list in annualrentgrowth for apartments for the ninth straight month.

Asking rents for purpose-built and condominium apartments in Calgary rose 14.7 per cent year-over-year to reach an average of $2,093, while Montreal was in the second spot with annualrentgrowth of 10.2 per cent, for an average of $2,046 in October, the data shows.

"We can tell that because there's so much interprovincial migration going on that people are leaving areas like Ontario and B.C. and they're searching for more affordable rents, and they're going to places like Calgary," said Ladas.

He noted a major factor driving uprentprices is the trend of fewer people looking to become homeowners, given the ongoing climate of high interest rates. One-third of Canadian households are renters, the rate for which is growing twice as fast as it is for homeowners, he added.

"People are not moving out and going into the home-ownership market because they can't with these rates," he said.