rent ontario

Ontario rents have risen an astounding 27% in just a few years

Buying a home in the Toronto area has long been completely out of the question for most who live here thanks to real estate prices skyrocketing ever further beyond what anyone can afford on a typical income, but rentals are quickly catching up, too, not just in the city but across Ontario.

As not just owning, but also leasing becomes progressively less tenable and forces people to consider leaving the province, new data puts into perspective just how bad the situation has gotten over the last few years, even for those who have accepted that they will be tenants forever.

The Canadian Rental Housing Index released by the B.C. Non-Profit Housing Association on Monday outlines how rent prices have escalated in each part of the nation from 2016 to 2021, and the findings are jarring.

The assessment, which examined rent prices, income levels, density, and housing quality across locations and demographics, indicates "a staggering increase in rental costs and significant housing challenges faced by renter households across the country" on top of "a number of other worrying affordability trends."

This was found to be the case especially — and most concerningly — in provinces that were already expensive, where "a substantial surge" in rent prices was noticed over the time period.

While B.C. led the way with a whopping 30 per cent increase in average rents over the five years surveyed, Ontario was not far behind, with a whopping 27 per cent jump. The two provinces also have the highest proportion of renters spending what the association calls "unaffordable or crisis amounts" on housing costs.

In Ontario, 15 per cent of people are dedicating more than half their monthly income — that crisis amount — to keeping a roof over their head, while 38 per cent are spending 30 per cent of their earnings.

Approximately half a million households nationwide are also living in overcrowded conditions to afford the cost of living, a trend that is on the rise. Marginalized groups are, of course, the most impacted.

The organization says this shows a collective failure of the government and other stakeholders to invest in rental housing to keep prices at reasonable levels.

"This data is a call to action that we need to do more to address rental costs, rental housing quality," the report continues.

"We cannot ignore the significant proportion of renter households burdened with unaffordable housing expenses [and] we must work together to create a future where all Canadians can access quality housing."

The index put the average that Ontarians are spending on rent and utilities, regardless of income level, at $1,946 per month based on 2021 census data.

Lead photo by

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