Flat pricingNo per-door feeNo sales call
Manitoba property management laws — Rent increase rules
Manitoba Updated June 2026

Manitoba Rent Increase Rules (2026)

Manitoba has rent regulation: an annual rent-increase guideline set by the province, one increase per 12 months, and 3 months' written notice. Some units (e.g. newer buildings, higher-rent units) are exempt.

Governing law: The Residential Tenancies Act, C.C.S.M. c. R119

Stop tracking rent increase rules by hand

Proprietio handles rent increase rules automatically — deadlines, notices, and state-aware lease terms built into rent collection, leases, and maintenance. One flat plan, all features included.

Not ready to talk? Get a free rental audit. This guide is general information, not legal advice.

The annual guideline

The province sets a yearly rent-increase guideline. Increases above it require approval from the Branch. Confirm the current year's percentage before issuing notice.

Once per year, 3 months' notice

Rent can rise once every 12 months with at least 3 months' written notice.

Exemptions

Newer buildings (within a set number of years of first occupancy) and certain higher-rent units can be exempt from the guideline — verify the current exemption thresholds.

Above-guideline increases

A landlord can apply to the Branch to justify an increase above the guideline based on costs.

Notice form

Use the proper notice; an improper increase is not enforceable.

Looking for property management software that handles province-specific compliance automatically? See Proprietio pricing — flat tiers, no per-door fees, CAD billing, 48-hour migration.

Stop tracking Manitoba compliance in spreadsheets

Proprietio keeps your leases, deposits, rent increases, and notices province-aware — so you stay onside with the Manitoba tribunal without memorizing the Act.

Not legal advice. Proprietio is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. The content on this page is informational and was researched from publicly available statutes and case law, but state and local landlord-tenant rules change frequently and vary by jurisdiction. For specific situations in Manitoba, consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction. Read full disclaimer.