Managing a rental property takes more time and effort than most new investors expect. The decision between self-managing and hiring a property manager directly affects your profits, your stress level, and how effectively you can scale your portfolio. This guide compares both approaches with real numbers so you can make the right choice for your situation.
Self-Management vs Property Manager: Overview
| Factor | Self-Managing | Property Manager |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost | $0 (your time) | 8–12% of gross rent |
| Time commitment | 5–15 hours/month per property | 1–2 hours/month per property |
| Tenant screening | You handle | PM handles |
| Rent collection | You handle | PM handles (direct deposit systems) |
| Maintenance coordination | You call contractors | PM has contractor network |
| Emergency calls | You answer (nights, weekends) | PM answers |
| Eviction process | You navigate | PM handles (experienced) |
| Legal compliance | You research | PM stays current |
| Vacancy marketing | You list and show | PM lists, shows, and fills |
| Financial reporting | You track in spreadsheet | PM provides monthly/annual reports |
Property Management Fees
Fee Structure
| Fee Type | Typical Range | What It Covers |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly management fee | 8–12% of gross rent | Day-to-day management, rent collection, tenant relations |
| Tenant placement fee | 50–100% of one month’s rent | Advertising, showings, screening, lease signing |
| Lease renewal fee | $100–$300 or 25% of one month’s rent | Renewed lease negotiation and paperwork |
| Vacancy fee | $0–50% of management fee | Some PMs charge reduced fee during vacancy |
| Maintenance markup | 0–15% on contractor invoices | Coordination and oversight of repairs |
| Eviction management | $200–$500+ | Serving notices, filing applications, attending hearings |
| Property inspection | $50–$150 per inspection | Typically 1–2 per year; sometimes included |
| Setup / onboarding fee | $200–$500 | One-time fee for new properties |
Cost Example: $2,200/Month Rental
| Fee | Annual Cost |
|---|---|
| Management fee (10%) | $2,640 |
| Tenant placement (one turnover per year at 50% of rent) | $1,100 |
| Lease renewal | $200 |
| 2 inspections | $200 |
| Total annual PM cost | $4,140 |
| After tax deduction (30% bracket) | $2,898 net cost |
PM Cost as Percentage of Total Expenses
| Scenario | Monthly Rent | Monthly PM Fee (10%) | Total Monthly Expenses (All-In) | PM as % of Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SFH, Edmonton | $2,000 | $200 | $2,700 | 7.4% |
| Duplex, Calgary (2 units) | $3,600 | $360 | $4,800 | 7.5% |
| Condo, Toronto | $2,500 | $250 | $3,900 | 6.4% |
| Fourplex, Winnipeg | $5,200 | $520 | $6,400 | 8.1% |
When to Self-Manage
| Scenario | Why Self-Management Works |
|---|---|
| 1–2 properties near your home | Short drive for maintenance; manageable workload |
| You’re handy / can do minor repairs | Saves contractor costs; faster response times |
| You’re learning the business | Self-managing teaches you how rentals really work |
| Tight cash flow margins | PM fee could turn break-even into negative cash flow |
| You have flexible time availability | Can handle daytime showings and emergency calls |
| Single-family or small property | Fewer tenants = fewer interactions |
Self-Management Tasks and Time
| Task | Frequency | Time Per Occurrence | Annual Hours |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent collection and bookkeeping | Monthly | 1 hour | 12 |
| Maintenance coordination | As needed | 2–5 hours/issue | 20–40 |
| Tenant communication | Ongoing | 1–2 hours/month | 12–24 |
| Property inspections | 2–4×/year | 1–2 hours each | 4–8 |
| Lease renewal | Annually | 2–3 hours | 2–3 |
| Tenant turnover (if occurs) | 0–1×/year | 15–30 hours | 0–30 |
| Tax preparation / record keeping | Annually | 3–5 hours | 3–5 |
| Total (no turnover year) | — | — | 53–92 hours |
| Total (with 1 turnover) | — | — | 68–122 hours |
Self-Management Tools
| Tool | Purpose | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Cozy / Avail / RentFaster | Tenant screening, lease signing, rent collection | Free–$25/month |
| Google Sheets / Excel | Income and expense tracking | Free |
| Google Drive / Dropbox | Document storage (leases, receipts, photos) | Free |
| Kijiji / Facebook Marketplace / Rentals.ca | Vacancy advertising | Free |
| Buildium / TenantCloud (for multiple properties) | Full property management software | $25–$100/month |
| Separate bank account | Keep rental finances separate from personal | Free (business account) |
| Credit check services (Equifax, Certn) | Tenant credit and background checks | $15–$50 per check |
When to Hire a Property Manager
| Scenario | Why a PM Makes Sense |
|---|---|
| 3+ properties | Self-managing multiple properties is a part-time job |
| Property is far from where you live | 30+ minute drive makes response time and showings impractical |
| Full-time demanding job | Maintenance emergencies don’t respect your work schedule |
| Scaling your portfolio rapidly | Your time is better spent finding next deal, not fixing toilets |
| High-turnover property (furnished, STR) | Constant tenant management is unsustainable without help |
| Difficult tenant situation | PM has experience with evictions and difficult conversations |
| You just don’t enjoy it | The stress of self-managing reduces your quality of life |
How to Choose a Property Manager
Interview Questions
| Question | What You’re Looking For |
|---|---|
| How many units do you manage? | 50–300 is a good range. Under 20 may be too small to be reliable; over 500 can mean you’re just a number |
| What is your vacancy rate? | Should be equal to or below market average for the area |
| What is your average time to fill a vacancy? | 2–4 weeks is good; over 6 weeks is a concern |
| What is your fee structure? | All-inclusive vs à la carte; get everything in writing |
| How do you screen tenants? | Must include credit check, employment verification, previous landlord reference |
| How do you handle maintenance? | In-house team or contractor network? Who approves expenses? What’s the spending threshold before requiring your approval? |
| Can I see a sample management agreement? | Review every clause; understand termination terms |
| How do you communicate with owners? | Monthly reports? Online portal? What information is included? |
| What is your eviction experience? | How many evictions have they handled? Process and timeline? |
| Can I speak to 3 current clients? | Reference check — ask about responsiveness, transparency, and satisfaction |
Red Flags
| Red Flag | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Won’t provide references | Hiding poor performance |
| No written management agreement | No accountability or clear terms |
| Very low fees (under 6%) | May make up for it with hidden charges or poor service |
| High tenant placement fees + frequent turnover | Incentivized to churn tenants |
| No online portal or reporting | Outdated operations; hard to track your property |
| Won’t let you approve expenses above a threshold | You could get surprise bills |
| Long contract with high termination fee | Locks you in even if service is poor |
What to Expect in a Management Agreement
| Clause | What to Look For |
|---|---|
| Term | Month-to-month is best; avoid 1-year lock-in with penalty |
| Termination | 30-day notice; no termination fee (or minimal) |
| Fee structure | All fees clearly itemized; no “miscellaneous” charges |
| Spending authority | Threshold for requiring owner approval ($300–$500 common) |
| Owner disbursement | Monthly deposit of net rent to your account by a set date |
| Insurance | PM carries E&O (errors and omissions) insurance and general liability |
| Tenant placement process | Described in detail; you approve final tenant selection |
| Maintenance protocol | How emergencies are handled; contractor selection process |
Property Management by Province
| Province | PM Licensing Required? | Key Regulations |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | No specific PM licence (must follow RTA) | Landlord and Tenant Board governs disputes; PM acts as landlord’s agent |
| BC | Some municipalities require business licence | Residential Tenancy Branch governs disputes |
| Alberta | Must register as a brokerage if collecting rent on behalf of others in some cases | Real Estate Act may apply — verify |
| Manitoba | No specific PM licence | Residential Tenancies Branch |
| Quebec | Must be a licensed broker to manage for others | Régie du logement for disputes |
| Saskatchewan | No specific PM licence | Office of Residential Tenancies |
| Nova Scotia | No specific PM licence | Residential Tenancies program |
Self-Manage vs PM: Financial Comparison (Per Property)
| Item | Self-Manage | With PM (10%) |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly rent | $2,200 | $2,200 |
| PM fee (10%) | $0 | –$220 |
| Tenant placement (amortized monthly) | $0 | –$92 |
| Your time (10 hrs/month × $30/hr) | –$300 (opportunity cost) | –$50 |
| Contractor costs | Market rate | Market rate + 0–10% markup |
| Effective monthly cost | $300 (time) | $362 (fees) |
| Tax deductibility | $0 (can’t deduct your time) | $312 × 30% = $94 saved |
| Net after-tax cost | $300 | $268 |
At $30/hour opportunity cost and a 30% tax bracket, a property manager is actually cheaper than self-managing on an after-tax basis for a single property. The break-even point for self-management is when your time is worth less than ~$25/hour.
Scaling: Self-Manage to PM Transition Plan
| Properties | Recommended Approach |
|---|---|
| 1–2 | Self-manage (learn the business; maximize cash flow) |
| 3–5 | Consider PM for the properties furthest from you; self-manage the rest |
| 5–10 | Full PM for all properties; your time is better spent on acquisitions |
| 10+ | PM mandatory; consider a PM who offers portfolio-level services |