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Victoria’s advertised one-bed rental prices soar 15.8% year over year: report

Median one-bed advertised rents in Victoria now at $1,390 a month, fifth-priciest in Canada, says PadMapper
Padmapper January 2019
Source: PadMapper

With rental vacancies still incredibly tight and new rent control caps coming into play, the price of advertised rents in major B.C. cities are climbing way above inflation, a new study has found.

According to the January 2019 monthly report by rental website PadMapper, the median advertised rent for a one-bed apartment in Victoria in December 2018 soared by 15.8 per cent year over year, to $1,390 a month.

That’s the fifth highest median price for one-bed rents in Canada after Toronto, Vancouver, Burnaby and Montréal. It’s also the joint-largest annual price increase for one-bed rents, with Quebec City and London, ON, also seeing 15.8 per cent annual increases.

Victoria also saw two-bedroom advertised rents rise well above inflation, up 5.3 per cent year over year to $1,590.

Vancouver’s one-bed advertised rents increased 6.5 per cent year over year to $2,130 a month. That’s the second-highest price in Canada, after Toronto’s $2,260 – itself a whopping 11.9 per cent annual rise.

Burnaby saw one-bed advertised rents soar by 9.8 per cent year over year to $1,570 a month, which was once again the third-highest in Canada.

Fourth-placed Montréal’s one-bed advertised rents rose 14.5 per cent year over year to $1,500.

As PadMapper uses only its own listings to calculate median rents, its results can vary month to month. 

The allowable annual rent hike that B.C. landlords can impose on sitting tenants has been two per cent plus inflation, which in 2018 totalled four per cent. As of 2019, this allowable increase will be reduced to inflation only, set at 2.5 per cent for 2019.

However, this does not include any increases to rents on advertised units between tenancies, which are the prices captured by PadMapper. Rental price increases between tenancies are currently at the discretion of the landlord and are not government controlled.

A combination of rising costs and taxes, and the incoming rent-control cap, could be the reason for the spike in advertised rents in December.

PadMapper said in its nationwide report, “In terms of year-over-year changes, a majority of rents (17 out of 24 [Canadian cities surveyed]) saw double-digit growth rates between one and two bedroom prices. It seems Canada remains a hot market for rentals as we begin the new year and isn’t showing signs of slowing down.”