Edmonton property management Canada

Property Management in Edmonton: What It Costs, and How to Self-Manage Instead

Honest math on what a Edmonton property manager actually costs versus running the same rental yourself with SQRFT's leasing tools. Written by Francis on the SQRFT team.

Typical PM management fee

8%

of monthly rent, plus fees

Typical tenant placement

1 month

of rent, one-time

SQRFT leasing plan

From $14.99

per month, up to 5 units

Edmonton example 2-yr saving

~$4,312

on a $1,600/mo rental

Section 1

The honest cost of a PM in Edmonton

Property management fees in Edmonton typically run 8 to 12 percent of monthly rent for standard residential management, plus a one-time tenant-placement fee equal to half a month to a full month of rent at each new tenancy. Some PMs add flat monthly fees, maintenance markups (typically 10 to 20 percent on trade invoices), and administrative fees on top.

Concrete example

On a $1,600 per month Edmonton rental, here is what the arithmetic looks like over a two-year tenancy:

$128

Monthly PM fee at 8% of rent

$3,072

PM fees over 2 years

$1,600

Tenant placement, one-time

Total PM cost over the two-year tenancy: $4,672. That is money that comes off the top of your rent income before you see any of it. On a $200,000 property, that is roughly 2.3 months of profit at a 5 percent yield.

Section 2

What a PM actually does for that money

Property managers earn their fee. It is not free money. A good PM handles all of the following on the landlord's behalf:

  • Tenant screening and placementadvertising, showings, application processing, credit and reference checks, lease signing.
  • Rent collectionmonthly invoicing, follow-up on late rent, deposit accounting.
  • Maintenance coordinationreceiving tenant requests, dispatching trades, quality-checking work, paying invoices.
  • Move-in and move-out inspectionsconducting written inspections and documenting the property condition.
  • Financial reportingmonthly and annual owner statements for accounting and tax.
  • RTDRS representationif a dispute goes to the tribunal, the PM prepares the file and attends the hearing on the landlord's behalf.
  • 24/7 tenant contactthe PM is the point of contact for emergencies so the landlord is not the person answering at 2am.

If you are an out-of-province owner, an owner with 10 or more units, an owner without the time to be responsive, or you simply do not want to deal with tenants directly, all of the above has real value.

Section 3

When a PM makes sense

Genuine reasons to hire a PM

  • You are an absentee owner.You live outside Edmonton or outside Alberta and cannot attend showings, inspections, or RTDRS hearings in person.
  • You own five or more units.The operational load crosses the line where a dedicated pro is more efficient than doing it yourself.
  • The property is commercial or short-term rental.Different skill set, different regulations, and the fee structure is often justified.
  • You genuinely do not want to interact with tenants.A legitimate lifestyle choice. Your fee is buying peace of mind.
  • You have zero real estate experience and one unit.The learning curve on Alberta RTA rules, RTDRS, and inspection standards is real. A PM can be an expensive but effective way to skip it.

Section 4

When you can self-manage

The flip side

  • You have one or two units.The operational load is entirely manageable with good tools.
  • You live in the Edmonton region.You can attend showings, inspections, and hearings in person.
  • You are willing to spend two to four hours a month on the rental.Roughly the time cost of self-managing one unit with modern tools.
  • You want to keep 100 percent of the rent.Not 88 to 93 percent after PM fees.
  • You want direct tenant relationships.Some landlords prefer knowing the tenant themselves; a PM removes that entirely.

Section 5

The SQRFT self-manage stack

SQRFT's leasing plan is designed for the small-portfolio landlord who wants to self-manage without spreadsheets and paperwork. It covers everything a PM does, minus the fee. Current pricing is on the SQRFT pricing page (as the source of truth), starting at $14.99 per month for up to 5 units, then $9.99 per additional unit per month beyond that.

Feature categories

  • Listings.List your Edmonton property on SQRFT with photos, floor plans, and integrated applicant screening.
  • Leases.Alberta RTA compliant lease workflow built into the platform.
  • Inspections.Timestamped move-in and move-out inspection reports with photos, ready for RTDRS if needed.
  • Financials.Rent collection tracking, statements, and receipts for accounting.
  • Maintenance.Tenant ticket system for maintenance requests with a full audit trail.
  • Notices.Alberta RTA notice templates (rent increase, entry, end of tenancy).
  • Disputes.Evidence log and communication history if you end up at RTDRS.
  • Storage.All lease documents, receipts, and evidence stored in one place.
  • Team.Add co-owners or family members as team users on your account.
  • PM tools.For landlords growing into small portfolios, the plan scales.

Side-by-side math

$4,672

2-year total cost with a PM at 8%

~$360

2-year total cost with SQRFT (base plan)

~$4,312

Your keep-your-own-money delta

The practical read

On a $1,600/month Edmonton rental, self-managing with SQRFT keeps roughly $4,312 in your pocket over two years versus a standard 8% PM. That is real money. If you have the time and lean toward the DIY side, this is the honest arithmetic.

Section 6

Edmonton property management market notes

Edmonton has a well-established property management industry serving investors, absentee owners, and rotation workers who own rental properties while working out of town. Fees typically run 8 to 10 percent of monthly rent for standard residential management, with tenant-placement fees usually equivalent to one month of rent.

Edmonton is Canada's most affordable major rental market as of 2026. Purpose-built vacancy sat at 3.4 percent in the CMHC October 2025 survey, with average 1-bedroom asking rents around $1,225 and 2-bedroom asking rents around $1,575. See the full Edmonton rent report for details.

Section 6b

A Edmonton PM angle you may not have considered

Because Edmonton rents are lower than Calgary, the absolute dollar cost of PM fees is lower here, but so is your rental income. The percentage math is the same. A single-unit landlord in Whyte Ave or Windermere often finds the SQRFT self-manage path especially compelling because it puts a bigger share of a smaller rent into their own pocket.

Section 7

If you still want a PM, questions to ask

Not everyone should self-manage, and hiring a PM is a valid choice. If you go that route, ask any prospective Edmonton property manager these questions before signing:

  1. 1
    What is the exact fee structure?Management percent, tenant-placement fee, lease renewal fee, maintenance markup, administrative fees. Ask for a written schedule.
  2. 2
    Do you guarantee tenant placement?Some PMs offer to replace a tenant free if they leave in the first six months. Others do not.
  3. 3
    Minimum contract length?Six-month, twelve-month, or open-ended. Understand your out.
  4. 4
    Cancellation policy?How much notice, what happens to your deposits and files if you leave.
  5. 5
    How do you handle maintenance markups?Some pass invoices through at cost; some add a percentage. Understand which.
  6. 6
    How do you handle RTDRS applications?Included in the management fee, or extra?
  7. 7
    Insurance?Landlord's errors-and-omissions insurance the PM carries, plus your own.
  8. 8
    Response times?How long for tenant maintenance requests? Emergencies?
  9. 9
    How many properties per manager?Fewer is usually better for attention.
  10. 10
    References from current clients?Not just the ones the PM picks. Look up reviews independently.

Section 8

The self-manage checklist

If you have decided to self-manage, here is the standard sequence and how SQRFT handles each step:

  1. 1
    List your property.Create a SQRFT listing with real photos, honest description, and correct Edmonton rent for the market. Free to list.
  2. 2
    Screen applicants.Credit and reference checks integrated. Do not skip this.
  3. 3
    Sign an Alberta RTA compliant lease.The SQRFT lease template covers Alberta's mandatory clauses.
  4. 4
    Run a written move-in inspection.Legally required. Timestamped and photo-backed via SQRFT.
  5. 5
    Collect rent and track payments.Send receipts and monthly statements automatically.
  6. 6
    Manage maintenance through the ticket system.Tenant submits, you dispatch, everyone has a paper trail.
  7. 7
    At end of tenancy, run a written move-out inspection.Deposit accounting follows. Ten-day timeline under Alberta RTA.
  8. 8
    Keep every document in one place.SQRFT stores leases, inspections, receipts, and correspondence for you.

Sources

Where these numbers come from

© 2026 2669425 AB Inc. Property management cost estimates are illustrative and vary by property, tenant, and specific PM. SQRFT plan pricing is current as of the publish date and subject to change; the pricing page is authoritative. This page is for information only and is not financial, legal, or investment advice.