Quebec’s 2025 Rent Hike: A Slap in the Face to Tenants
Quebec’s housing market is in turmoil, and the Administrative Housing Tribunal (TAL) has just made things worse. By approving a staggering 5.9% rent increase for unheated dwellings in 2025—the highest in over 30 years—the TAL has essentially handed tenants a financial eviction notice. This decision isn’t just out of touch; it’s a blatant dismissal of the struggles of ordinary Quebecers already battling a housing affordability crisis.
The Numbers Speak: A Grim Reality for Tenants
The TAL’s rent increase guidelines for 2025 are as follows:
- Unheated dwellings: 5.9%
- Electric heating: 5.5%
- Natural gas: 5.0%
- Heating oil: 4.1%
What This Means for You:
If you’re paying $1,000 a month in rent, expect to shell out an additional $59 each month—or $696 a year. And that’s just the baseline. Factor in municipal taxes and renovation surcharges, and your rent could climb by 8.5%. Saving for the future? Forget about it.
Tenants and Advocates Sound the Alarm
- Jonathan Carmichael (BAIL):
“This isn’t just disappointing—it’s catastrophic. The TAL is pushing thousands of households to the brink of financial ruin.” - Amy Darwish (Parc-Extension Action Committee):
“This is a direct attack on immigrant communities. Over 75% of us are renters, and now we’re being priced out of our own neighborhoods. It’s shameful.” - RCLALQ:
“The TAL’s guidelines are absurd. Where is rent control? Where is the lease registry? The government is watching tenants suffer and doing nothing.”
Landlords’ Crocodile Tears
- Eric Sansoucy (CORPIQ):
“We need this increase to cover our costs!” Really? While tenants are choosing between rent and groceries, landlords cry victim. - Martin A. Messier (APQ):
“The TAL’s calculations don’t account for our struggles!” Try living paycheck to paycheck while your rent devours half your income.
Government Response: Too Little, Too Late
- Housing Minister France-Élaine Duranceau:
“It’s tough for tenants, but we’re focusing on long-term solutions.” Translation: We’re not doing anything to help you now. The government’s “solution”? Build 560,000 housing units by 2034. Great, but how does that help families facing homelessness today? - Québec Solidaire:
“We need rent control and immediate action.” Finally, someone is speaking sense. Too bad the government isn’t listening.
The Bigger Picture: A Rigged System
- Rising Rents: Montreal rents jumped 7.7% in 2023, with new tenants facing 10% increases. Landlords are thriving while tenants are sinking.
- Low Vacancy Rates: Quebec’s rental vacancy rate sits at a dismal 1.3%. Finding an affordable home? Nearly impossible.
- Homelessness on the Rise: In September 2024, 427 households were listed as homeless—up from 334 in July. How many more will join them because of this rent hike?
What Can Tenants Do?
- Refuse Rent Increases: Tenants have the right to challenge hikes. If your landlord insists, they must justify the increase to the TAL.
- Organize and Resist: Groups like SLAM are leading “refuse together” campaigns. Strength in numbers—let’s show landlords and the government that tenants won’t be bullied.
Conclusion: A Crisis Ignored, a Population Betrayed
The TAL’s 5.9% rent increase is more than a policy—it’s an attack on tenants. While landlords cry about their costs and the government hides behind empty promises, ordinary Quebecers are left to fend for themselves.
This isn’t just a housing crisis; it’s a moral failure.
Quebec’s leaders must act before it’s too late. Until then, tenants must stand together and fight back.