Built around the Ontario Standard Lease, the LTB, and N1–N13 notices.
Rent increases capped at the provincial guideline (1.5% in 2024, 2.5% in 2025) — miss the math and your N1 gets tossed.
Mandatory Ontario Standard Lease (Form 2229E) since 2018 — using your own template makes the lease unenforceable after 30 days notice.
LTB hearing backlogs of 8–12 months — a single clerical error on an N4 sends you back to the start of the queue.
Form 2229E with all required clauses, additional terms validated against the LTB's published list of unenforceable terms.
Every notice number, autofilled with the right tenant addresses, served date, and termination date math.
The current and previous years' guideline percentages built in — and 90-day notice tracking so N1s never go out late.
The Government of Ontario publishes the annual rent increase guideline each summer for the following calendar year. Central Rentals shows the current guideline inside the rent increase tool so your N1 always matches.
Yes. Since April 30, 2018, all private residential tenancies in Ontario must use the Ontario Standard Lease (Form 2229E). If you don't, the tenant can give you 60 days' written notice asking for one, and after 30 more days they can withhold one month's rent.
You must serve the correct N-form (most commonly N4 for unpaid rent or N12 for owner-use), wait the legally-required notice period, then file an L-form with the Landlord and Tenant Board. Self-help eviction is illegal and exposes you to up to $50,000 in fines.
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