
New Brunswick Landlord-Tenant Laws (2026)
The Act is administered by the Residential Tenancies Tribunal at Service New Brunswick. The Tribunal holds deposits, resolves disputes, and can review large rent increases.
Governing law: Residential Tenancies Act, S.N.B. 1975, c. R-10.2
Stop tracking landlord-tenant laws by hand
Proprietio handles landlord-tenant laws 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.
Entry rules
A landlord must give reasonable written notice (generally 24 hours) to enter for non-emergency reasons.
Repairs
The landlord must keep the premises fit for habitation and in good repair.
The Tribunal
Residential Tenancies Officers mediate and adjudicate; the Tribunal also holds security deposits.
Deposits
Held in trust by the Tribunal, with interest, returned through it.
No contracting out
Terms conflicting with the Act are void.
Stop tracking New Brunswick compliance in spreadsheets
Proprietio keeps your leases, deposits, rent increases, and notices province-aware — so you stay onside with the New Brunswick tribunal without memorizing the Act.