Skip to main content

Rent-Back Agreement in Canada: Selling Your Home and Renting It Back (2026)

Updated

A rent-back agreement — also called a sale-leaseback or post-closing occupancy agreement — lets a home seller stay in the property as a tenant after closing. This arrangement gives sellers breathing room to find their next home while giving buyers a competitive edge in a tight market. In Canada, rent-back agreements are legal but require careful structuring to avoid mortgage, tax, and tenancy law complications.

How a Rent-Back Agreement Works

StepWhat Happens
1. Negotiate in the offerSeller requests a rent-back period (e.g., 30–60 days) as a condition of the sale
2. Agree on termsBuyer and seller agree on rent amount, duration, security deposit, and responsibilities
3. Close the saleTitle transfers to the buyer on the closing date. Buyer pays the full purchase price and takes ownership
4. Seller stays as tenantSeller pays rent to the buyer and occupies the home for the agreed period
5. Seller vacatesSeller moves out by the agreed date. Buyer inspects and receives possession

When Rent-Back Agreements Are Used

ScenarioWhy It Helps
Seller’s new home isn’t readyConstruction delays, closing date mismatch, or conditional purchase not yet firm
Seller hasn’t found a new homeHot market — seller accepted an offer but needs time to find and close on a purchase
School year timingSeller’s children need to finish the school year before relocating
Downsizing transitionSeller needs time to sort belongings, arrange a smaller space, or set up assisted living
Buyer wants a competitive offerOffering a rent-back can make the offer more attractive to the seller
Estate saleExecutor needs extra time to clear the property

Typical Rent-Back Terms

TermTypical RangeNotes
Duration7–90 days30–60 days is most common. Beyond 60 days may complicate buyer’s mortgage
Rent amountBuyer’s daily carrying cost (mortgage + taxes + insurance ÷ 30)Often set at or slightly above the buyer’s daily cost
Security deposit1–2 months’ rent or holdback on closingHeld in trust by lawyer or in escrow
UtilitiesSeller pays during occupancyTransfer billing responsibility at seller’s departure
InsuranceBuyer’s homeowner policy covers the building; seller should maintain tenant/contents insuranceBuyer should confirm with insurer that the rent-back does not void coverage
MaintenanceSeller responsible for day-to-day maintenance and minor repairsMajor systems (furnace, roof) — negotiate in agreement
Late departure penalty$100–$500/day or forfeited depositCritical to include — this is the buyer’s main protection

Rent-Back vs Other Options

OptionProsCons
Rent-back agreementSeller stays in same home; no double moveBuyer delays occupancy; potential tenancy law issues
Extended closing dateSimpler — no landlord-tenant relationshipBuyer may not agree; limits buyer’s timeline
Bridge financingSeller buys before selling; no rent-back neededBridge loan costs and interest; requires equity
Temporary rentalClean break — seller moves to rentalDouble move; rental costs; storage
Staying with family/friendsNo costStressful; may not be an option
Storage + hotel/AirbnbFlexible timingExpensive and disruptive

Setting the Rent Amount

Calculation MethodFormulaExample ($500,000 Home)
Buyer’s carrying cost method(Monthly mortgage + property tax + insurance) ÷ 30 × days($2,500 + $400 + $150) ÷ 30 = ~$102/day
Market rent methodComparable rental rate for the property$2,500/month = ~$83/day
Negotiated flat feeFixed amount agreed upon$3,000 for 30 days
Zero rent (seller concession)Seller drops price by equivalent amountBuyer accepts delayed possession in exchange for better price

Most common approach: Buyer’s daily carrying cost + a small premium ($10–$25/day). This ensures the buyer is not subsidizing the seller’s occupancy.

Tenancy Law Risk

The biggest legal risk in a rent-back is accidentally creating a formal tenancy that gives the seller full tenant protections — including the right to stay beyond the agreed date and challenge eviction.

ProvinceTenancy LegislationKey Risk
OntarioResidential Tenancies Act (RTA)If the agreement is structured as a lease, the seller gains full tenant rights. Eviction requires Landlord and Tenant Board hearing (months-long backlog).
BCResidential Tenancy Act (RTA)Similar protections. Fixed-term tenancies without a move-out clause automatically convert to month-to-month.
AlbertaResidential Tenancies ActShorter dispute resolution timelines but still creates formal tenancy
QuebecCivil Code / Tribunal administratif du logementStrong tenant protections; rent-backs are less common
Atlantic provincesVariesGenerally less backlog in dispute resolution

How to Reduce Tenancy Law Risk

StrategyDetails
Use a “license to occupy” rather than a “lease”A license is a personal, revocable permission to use space — not a tenancy. Lawyers can draft this specifically
Keep the period short (under 60 days)Shorter periods are less likely to trigger tenancy protections
Include a specific end date and penaltyStrong disincentive for overstaying
Hold a significant security deposit in trustLawyer holds $5,000–$20,000+ that the seller forfeits for late departure
Have the agreement reviewed by a real estate lawyerEssential — generic templates may not address provincial specifics
Require the seller to sign an acknowledgmentSeller acknowledges this is a temporary arrangement, not a tenancy

Impact on the Buyer’s Mortgage

IssueDetails
Occupancy clauseMost residential mortgages require the buyer to move in within 30–60 days of closing
Disclosure to lenderBuyer must tell the lender about the rent-back arrangement before closing
Short rent-back (under 30 days)Most lenders are fine with this
Medium rent-back (30–60 days)Many lenders will approve with written explanation
Long rent-back (60+ days)Lender may require investment/rental property terms (higher rate, 20% down)
CMHC-insured mortgageThe property must be owner-occupied. Extended rent-backs could violate CMHC’s occupancy requirement

Buyer’s action: Before agreeing to a rent-back, the buyer should get written confirmation from their lender and mortgage insurer (if applicable) that the arrangement is acceptable.

Insurance Considerations

CoverageWho Needs ItNotes
Homeowner’s insuranceBuyer (as new owner)Must notify insurer of the rent-back arrangement. Some policies exclude coverage if the owner is not in occupancy
Tenant/contents insuranceSellerSeller’s belongings are not covered by the buyer’s policy
LiabilityBothBuyer’s policy should cover liability for the property; seller should have personal liability on their tenant policy
Vacancy exclusionBuyer to checkSome policies void coverage if the property is “vacant” (check definition — usually 30+ days unoccupied, but rent-back occupancy should not trigger this)

Rent-Back Agreement Checklist

ItemInclude?
Exact move-out dateYes — specific date, not “approximately”
Daily or monthly rent amountYes
Security deposit amount and who holds itYes — lawyer trust account recommended
Late departure penalty ($/day)Yes
Utility responsibilityYes
Maintenance and repair responsibilityYes
Insurance requirements for both partiesYes
Condition of property at departure (walkthrough)Yes
Furniture/fixtures included or excludedYes — reference the purchase agreement
Key return processYes
Dispute resolution mechanismYes — specify mediation or arbitration
Statement that this is a license, not a tenancyYes — consult lawyer for proper wording

Cost Example: 45-Day Rent-Back

ItemSeller PaysBuyer Receives
Rent (45 days × $110/day)$4,950$4,950
Security deposit (held in trust)$5,000 (returned if no issues)Security against damage/late departure
Seller’s tenant insurance~$50
Buyer’s mortgage, taxes, insurance (45 days)~$4,600 (covered by rent)
Net cost to seller~$5,000 + insurance
Net to buyer$350 surplus or break-even

Tax Implications

IssueDetails
Rental income for the buyerRent received is taxable income. Buyer can deduct proportionate mortgage interest, property tax, insurance, and maintenance for the rent-back period
Principal residence exemption (buyer)Short rent-back (under 60 days) is unlikely to affect the buyer’s principal residence exemption. CRA allows reasonable delays in occupancy
Capital gains (seller)The principal residence exemption applies based on when the seller lived in the home, not the closing date. The rent-back period after closing is not counted as the seller’s ownership
GST/HSTRent from residential property is exempt (no GST/HST applies)

Alternatives for Sellers Who Need More Time

AlternativeBest ForEstimated Cost
Bridge loanBuying before selling; need interim financing$1,000–$5,000 in fees + interest
Delayed closingExtra 30–90 days, no landlord-tenant issueMay lose the buyer
Conditional offer on new homeMaking purchase conditional on selling current homeWeaker offer; may not be accepted
Temporary rentalFull flexibility to take your time$2,000–$4,000/month + moving costs × 2
Portable mortgageTransferring your existing mortgage to the new propertySaves penalty costs; requires timing alignment
🏦

We use Wealthsimple for everyday banking. Get a $25 bonus when you open a free chequing account.

No monthly fees · 4% interest on deposits · Free e-Transfers · Takes 3 minutes

Get Your $25 Bonus →