Where has rent spiked and where is it the cheapest in Canada? Here's what StatCan data revealed | Page 893 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: National Post
Author: Ellie Hutchings
Publication Date: June 10, 2026 - 12:20

Stay informed

Where has rent spiked and where is it the cheapest in Canada? Here's what StatCan data revealed

June 10, 2026

New data from Statistics Canada has revealed current average asking rents across the country’s metropolitan areas and, in good news for renters, prices have decreased in the first quarter of 2026.

The Quarterly Rent Statistics program, which uses listings posted on major rental platforms for Canada’s census metropolitan areas (CMAs), revealed that the average asking rent for a two-bedroom apartment was $2,150 per month in the first quarter of 2026, down 0.9 per cent from the first quarter of 2025, when the figure was $2,170.

Average asking rents for two-bedroom apartments decreased for most metropolitan areas across Canada, declining to $2,660 in Toronto (-1.1 per cent), $1,900 in Montréal (-1.6 per cent), $3,100 in Vancouver (-2.2 per cent) and $2,350 in Ottawa–Gatineau (-5.6 per cent).

Asking rents for a two-bedroom apartment decreased the most in Kingston, Ont., down from $1,960 in the last quarter of 2025 to $1,920 in 2026, a 5.9 per cent decline.

This decline was followed by the 5.6 per cent decrease in Ottawa–Gatineau, as well as a 5 per cent decrease in Abbotsford–Mission, B.C., and a 4.5 per cent decrease in London, Ont.

At the other end of the scale, Saskatoon saw the biggest increase in asking rents, growing from $1,540 to $1,630 per month (+9.4 per cent). This was followed by Greater Sudbury, Ont., with an increase of 7.7 per cent, and Regina, where asking rents increased by 5.7 per cent.

The StatCan data also revealed the current asking rents for rooms, one-bed apartments, two-bed apartments and houses with three or more bedrooms across Canada’s CMAs.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, Vancouver came in as the city with the highest asking rents, with single rooms priced at an average of $1,060 per month, one-bed apartments at $2,290, two-bed apartments at $3,100 and houses at $4,860.

Vancouver has long been considered the most expensive city in Canada, with real estate brokerage Pine ranking it the least affordable city in the country last month due to the monthly cost of living and house prices.

A 2025 study from Chapman University , in California, ranked Vancouver as the fourth most expensive city worldwide, behind Hong Kong, Sydney, and San Jose.

Meanwhile, the StatCan report found that Sherbrooke, Que., had the cheapest average asking rents for a room, at $520, while one-bedroom apartments were cheapest in Trois-Rivières, Que. ($980), two-bedroom apartments were cheapest in Drummondville, Que. ($1,230), and houses were cheapest in Moncton, N.B. ($1,910).

The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), which helped conduct the Quarterly Rent Statistics program, puts the easing of asking rents down to increased supply and slower demand.

In Toronto and Vancouver, landlords also point to increased competition from a surge in new condos, many of which can’t be absorbed in the ownership market, as a driver of lower asking rents.

“Conditions are expected to continue easing as new units take longer to be absorbed and competition from rental condominium apartments increases,” CMHC said.

And the StatCan report isn’t the only recent research to shine a light on rental prices in Canada. Rentals.ca has released its June 2026 Rent Report , which also showed a decline in asking rents.

The average rent for residential properties in Canada declined for the 20th straight month, down 7.8 per cent from a high of $2,202 in May 2024, it revealed.

Interestingly, the report also found that Nova Scotia is now the most expensive province for condominium and purpose-built apartments, overtaking B.C., which Rentals.ca attributes to “a high concentration of new and higher-priced supply in the Halifax and Dartmouth region.”

This is consistent with the StatCan data, which noted that average asking rents in Halifax increased by 5.4 per cent in the first quarter of 2026.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.



Unpublished Newswire

 
A Quebec judge has sentenced an Inuk man to 33 months in prison for nearly beating his uncle to death last summer with a metal bar while he was under a court order to stay away from the man. Timothy Assapa, 34, who “describes violence as ‘thrilling,'” pleaded guilty to assault with a weapon and aggravated assault for attacks on his uncle, Sajuilie Assapa, on Jan. 4, 2025, and June 28, 2025. The first one involved striking his uncle on the head with a pair of scissors after they argued about alcohol, causing a cut above the hairline. In the June attack, Assapa beat his uncle to...
July 5, 2026 - 09:21 | Brandon Rudick | National Post
Gail Asper tells me quietly but firmly: “My trust has been absolutely broken.” She is energized and resolute, but notably not angry. The 66-year-old daughter of the late Israel (Izzy) Asper — the media titan and Jewish philanthropist who envisioned and heavily funded the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg — has watched with deepening dismay as the institution she helped build appears to sideline the very community that made it possible. One week ago, “Palestine Uprooted: Nakba Past and Present” opened at this national, federally funded human rights museum. It shares...
July 5, 2026 - 08:42 | Donna Kennedy-Glans | National Post