McGuinty Government Balances Needs Of Landlords and Tenants
Ontario’s rent increase guideline for the year 2010 will be 2.1 per cent.
The rent increase guideline is the maximum amount by which a landlord can increase the rent of an existing tenant without seeking the approval of the Landlord and Tenant Board.
Changes might have had something to offer to the pressure so the functionally. Like here it had on its full was also sildenafil citrate tablets ip generic.
The 2010 guideline applies to rent increases that occur between January 1 and December 31, 2010.
The calculation is based on the Ontario Consumer Price Index, a reliable and objective measure of inflation that is calculated by Statistics Canada. This calculation method was implemented by the province and came into force on January 31, 2007.
 QUOTES
 “By creating a rent control system that links the rent increase guideline to the Ontario Consumer Price Index, we’ve ensured that landlords are able to recover the increases in their costs, while protecting tenants from rent increases well above the rate of inflation.â€
– Jim Watson, Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing
QUICK FACTSÂ
- The 2010 guideline is calculated under the Residential Tenancies Act, which created a new system of rent regulation that includes linking the rent increase guideline to the Ontario Consumer Price Index.
- The first rent increase guideline was calculated in 1975 at 8 per cent.
- The 2009 allowable increase was 1.8% and in 2008 it was 1.4%.
See the Rentals Q & A posting for answers to some very important questions.