Free Guide · Updated March 2026

New to Canada?
Here's how renting works.

A practical, province-by-province guide to finding a rental in Canada — tenancy laws, documents you need, how to avoid scams, and a move-in checklist.

The Process

How renting works in Canada

Whether you're moving from another country or another province, the process is the same.

01

Understand the Market

Learn how renting works in your province — deposits, lease types, and tenant rights.

02

Prepare Your Documents

Government ID, proof of income, credit report, and references from previous landlords.

03

Search & Apply

Browse listings, visit units (or request video tours), and apply with your Tenant Passport.

04

Sign & Move In

Review your lease, do a move-in inspection, set up utilities, and get tenant insurance.

Province by Province

Rental laws vary by province

Canada doesn't have one set of rental rules — each province has its own tenancy laws. Here are the three most common destinations.

Alberta

Governed by the Residential Tenancies Act (RTA)

Rent ControlNo rent control
Security DepositMax 1 month's rent (includes pet deposit)
Notice to End Tenancy3 months for monthly tenancies
Pet PolicyLandlord can ban pets
Key DifferenceFixed-term leases end automatically — no notice required from either party

Why Alberta? No PST, lower cost of living, strong job market, and 80,000+ people move here every year. Read our full Alberta guide →

Your Checklist

Move-in checklist

Everything you need to do, in order. Bookmark this page and check items off as you go.

1

Before You Move

Research rental prices in your target city
Get a copy of your credit report (Equifax or TransUnion)
Collect references from previous landlords
Prepare proof of income (pay stubs, employment letter, or CRA Notice of Assessment)
Set a realistic budget — rent should be under 30% of gross income
Build your SQRFT Tenant Passport to streamline applications
2

Finding a Place

Browse verified listings on SQRFT.ca
Visit units in person or request live video tours
Never send money before seeing the unit or signing a lease
Check the neighbourhood — transit, grocery, schools, parks
Ask what's included (utilities, parking, laundry, storage)
Compare at least 3 units before committing
3

Signing the Lease

Read the full lease before signing — every clause
Confirm lease type: fixed-term vs. month-to-month
Verify the deposit amount matches provincial law
Understand rent increase rules for your province
Do a thorough move-in inspection with photos
Get tenant insurance ($20-40/month — protects your belongings)
4

After Move-In

Set up utilities (electricity, gas, water, internet)
Update your address with CRA, bank, employer
Get a provincial health card if moving from another province
Exchange your driver's license within 90 days (most provinces)
Register to vote at your new address
Know how to file a dispute if issues arise
Stay Safe

How to spot rental scams

Newcomers are the #1 target for rental scams. If you see any of these red flags, walk away.

They ask for money before you've seen the unit
The rent is significantly below market rate
They're "overseas" and can't show the property
They want payment in Bitcoin, gift cards, or wire transfer
The listing photos look too professional or stolen
They pressure you to decide immediately

Tip: Use verified platforms like SQRFT where listings and landlords are verified. Read our full scam prevention guide for more.

For Tenants

Apply faster with
SQRFT Passport

Build your verified rental identity once — employment, income, references, credit — then share it with any landlord in Canada. No more filling the same forms over and over.

Free for all tenants
Build once, apply everywhere
You control who sees your data
Revoke access anytime
Create Your Free Passport

What's in your Passport?

Personal InformationReady
Employment & IncomeReady
Rental HistoryReady
ReferencesReady
Credit ConsentReady
Pet & Vehicle InfoReady
Co-applicant (optional)Ready
Documents & IDReady
FAQ

Common questions from newcomers

Ready to find your new home?

Browse verified listings across Alberta — real photos, transparent pricing, no hidden fees.

Alberta's trusted rental marketplace · Free for tenants