Rent increases predicted for Metro Vancouver as Canada prepares to reopen its borders - Action News
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British Columbia

Rent increases predicted for Metro Vancouver as Canada prepares to reopen its borders

Sites like Liv.rent, Padmapper and Rentals.ca say the average rental rate in Metro Vancouver is still lower than it was before the pandemic, but those numbers are starting to climb.

Some areas already starting to see rents rise as international students, immigrants arrive

A shot of numerous skyscrapers along False Creek in Vancouver.
As Canada prepares to open its borders, some housing analysts say the rental market is about to get more expensive in cities like Vancouver. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

When Peter Dowdy, 35, and his wife were on the hunt for a temporary rental apartment in Vancouver at the beginning of the pandemic, he couldn't believe his luck.

The couple had sold their apartment and were looking for a six-month lease while they searched for a new home to buy.

"Analysts claimed that rental rates had dropped significantly by about a third or so, and that was pretty consistent with our own experience," Dowdy said.

They managed to pay$2,750 per month to rent a home thathad cost $3,500 pre-pandemic. The landlord also threw in a$2,750 move-in incentive.

At the end of the lease in June, when Dowdy and his wife moved into their newly purchased home, he noticed the apartment was listed for $3,000 with no incentives.

Housing analysts say Dowdy's experience is indicative of a broader trend across Canada and Metro Vancouver in particular, especially as Canada prepares to reopen its borders.

Sites like Liv.rent, Padmapper and Rentals.ca say the average rental rate in Metro Vancouver is still lower than it was before the pandemic, but those numbers are starting to climb.

Highest vacancy rate since the '90s

Eric Bond, a senior specialist with the Canada Mortgage Housing Corporation, says the pandemic caused a decrease in demand from key renter groups like international immigrants and service industry workers.

Bond says it also brought on more supply as some homes were converted from short-term vacation rentals into long-term rentals.

As of last October, the vacancy rate in Metro Vancouver had risen to 2.6 per cent from 1.1 per cent.

"That's actually the highest vacancy rate that we've seen in Metro Vancouver since 1999," Bond said.

For Rent sign at 100 per cent occupied outside a property in Vancouver's West End.
The vacancy rate in Metro Vancouver during the pandemic was higher than it's been since the late '90s, but some housing analysts say that's about to change. (David Horemans/CBC)

CMHC'srental market analysis detected a slowdown in rental priceincreases, but not a decline. However, its annual rental housing report includes only purpose-built rentals as well as long-term tenancies with rents protected by provincial law.

Reports from sites like Rentals.ca, Padmapper and Liv.rent, which scrape data from new rental listingson the market, show a decline overall from pre-pandemic rates with a gradual increase over the last month or two.

'Now's the time to try and look'

Nathan Lauster, an associate professor of sociology at the University of British Columbia, says he's not surprised to see rents beginning to rise, although he warns that the situation varies across the region.

Lauster suspects rents within Vancouver will be likely to start rising first because it has several post-secondary institutions and language schools to attractinternational students. It's also a big source of jobs for many new immigrants.

Rates in other municipalities in the metro areaare likely to be different mainly because they have such low rental housing stock to begin with, he says.

Vancouver is an attractive place for many newcomers because of its post-secondary institutions and jobs. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

His advice for renters in Vancouver thinking about moving?

"Now's the time to try and look," he said."I do think that things are going to really tighten up again once we get to September."

Gradual return to normal

CMHC's Bond says the return to normal will be gradual, however.

He points out that many international students and immigrants still face barriers in coming to Canada including rates of COVID-19 infections in their home country or limited access to vaccines.

"I think it will play out over the next few years," he said. "It's not something that can be turned back on immediately."

A sign that reads
CMHC says there are more than 10,000 new rental homes currently under construction in Metro Vancouver. (David Horemans/CBC)

Bond says B.C. was fortunate during the pandemic to not have its construction sector shut down, so new rental housing starts were able to continue.

There are currently 10,321 rental apartments currently under construction in Metro Vancouver a number he says is encouraging but still not enough to ease the tight rental market that has persisted for years.