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
| Step | What Happens |
|---|---|
| 1. Negotiate in the offer | Seller requests a rent-back period (e.g., 30–60 days) as a condition of the sale |
| 2. Agree on terms | Buyer and seller agree on rent amount, duration, security deposit, and responsibilities |
| 3. Close the sale | Title transfers to the buyer on the closing date. Buyer pays the full purchase price and takes ownership |
| 4. Seller stays as tenant | Seller pays rent to the buyer and occupies the home for the agreed period |
| 5. Seller vacates | Seller moves out by the agreed date. Buyer inspects and receives possession |
When Rent-Back Agreements Are Used
| Scenario | Why It Helps |
|---|---|
| Seller’s new home isn’t ready | Construction delays, closing date mismatch, or conditional purchase not yet firm |
| Seller hasn’t found a new home | Hot market — seller accepted an offer but needs time to find and close on a purchase |
| School year timing | Seller’s children need to finish the school year before relocating |
| Downsizing transition | Seller needs time to sort belongings, arrange a smaller space, or set up assisted living |
| Buyer wants a competitive offer | Offering a rent-back can make the offer more attractive to the seller |
| Estate sale | Executor needs extra time to clear the property |
Typical Rent-Back Terms
| Term | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Duration | 7–90 days | 30–60 days is most common. Beyond 60 days may complicate buyer’s mortgage |
| Rent amount | Buyer’s daily carrying cost (mortgage + taxes + insurance ÷ 30) | Often set at or slightly above the buyer’s daily cost |
| Security deposit | 1–2 months’ rent or holdback on closing | Held in trust by lawyer or in escrow |
| Utilities | Seller pays during occupancy | Transfer billing responsibility at seller’s departure |
| Insurance | Buyer’s homeowner policy covers the building; seller should maintain tenant/contents insurance | Buyer should confirm with insurer that the rent-back does not void coverage |
| Maintenance | Seller responsible for day-to-day maintenance and minor repairs | Major systems (furnace, roof) — negotiate in agreement |
| Late departure penalty | $100–$500/day or forfeited deposit | Critical to include — this is the buyer’s main protection |
Rent-Back vs Other Options
| Option | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Rent-back agreement | Seller stays in same home; no double move | Buyer delays occupancy; potential tenancy law issues |
| Extended closing date | Simpler — no landlord-tenant relationship | Buyer may not agree; limits buyer’s timeline |
| Bridge financing | Seller buys before selling; no rent-back needed | Bridge loan costs and interest; requires equity |
| Temporary rental | Clean break — seller moves to rental | Double move; rental costs; storage |
| Staying with family/friends | No cost | Stressful; may not be an option |
| Storage + hotel/Airbnb | Flexible timing | Expensive and disruptive |
Setting the Rent Amount
| Calculation Method | Formula | Example ($500,000 Home) |
|---|---|---|
| Buyer’s carrying cost method | (Monthly mortgage + property tax + insurance) ÷ 30 × days | ($2,500 + $400 + $150) ÷ 30 = ~$102/day |
| Market rent method | Comparable rental rate for the property | $2,500/month = ~$83/day |
| Negotiated flat fee | Fixed amount agreed upon | $3,000 for 30 days |
| Zero rent (seller concession) | Seller drops price by equivalent amount | Buyer 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.
Legal Considerations by Province
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.
| Province | Tenancy Legislation | Key Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Residential 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). |
| BC | Residential Tenancy Act (RTA) | Similar protections. Fixed-term tenancies without a move-out clause automatically convert to month-to-month. |
| Alberta | Residential Tenancies Act | Shorter dispute resolution timelines but still creates formal tenancy |
| Quebec | Civil Code / Tribunal administratif du logement | Strong tenant protections; rent-backs are less common |
| Atlantic provinces | Varies | Generally less backlog in dispute resolution |
How to Reduce Tenancy Law Risk
| Strategy | Details |
|---|---|
| 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 penalty | Strong disincentive for overstaying |
| Hold a significant security deposit in trust | Lawyer holds $5,000–$20,000+ that the seller forfeits for late departure |
| Have the agreement reviewed by a real estate lawyer | Essential — generic templates may not address provincial specifics |
| Require the seller to sign an acknowledgment | Seller acknowledges this is a temporary arrangement, not a tenancy |
Impact on the Buyer’s Mortgage
| Issue | Details |
|---|---|
| Occupancy clause | Most residential mortgages require the buyer to move in within 30–60 days of closing |
| Disclosure to lender | Buyer 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 mortgage | The 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
| Coverage | Who Needs It | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Homeowner’s insurance | Buyer (as new owner) | Must notify insurer of the rent-back arrangement. Some policies exclude coverage if the owner is not in occupancy |
| Tenant/contents insurance | Seller | Seller’s belongings are not covered by the buyer’s policy |
| Liability | Both | Buyer’s policy should cover liability for the property; seller should have personal liability on their tenant policy |
| Vacancy exclusion | Buyer to check | Some 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
| Item | Include? |
|---|---|
| Exact move-out date | Yes — specific date, not “approximately” |
| Daily or monthly rent amount | Yes |
| Security deposit amount and who holds it | Yes — lawyer trust account recommended |
| Late departure penalty ($/day) | Yes |
| Utility responsibility | Yes |
| Maintenance and repair responsibility | Yes |
| Insurance requirements for both parties | Yes |
| Condition of property at departure (walkthrough) | Yes |
| Furniture/fixtures included or excluded | Yes — reference the purchase agreement |
| Key return process | Yes |
| Dispute resolution mechanism | Yes — specify mediation or arbitration |
| Statement that this is a license, not a tenancy | Yes — consult lawyer for proper wording |
Cost Example: 45-Day Rent-Back
| Item | Seller Pays | Buyer 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
| Issue | Details |
|---|---|
| Rental income for the buyer | Rent 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/HST | Rent from residential property is exempt (no GST/HST applies) |
Alternatives for Sellers Who Need More Time
| Alternative | Best For | Estimated Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Bridge loan | Buying before selling; need interim financing | $1,000–$5,000 in fees + interest |
| Delayed closing | Extra 30–90 days, no landlord-tenant issue | May lose the buyer |
| Conditional offer on new home | Making purchase conditional on selling current home | Weaker offer; may not be accepted |
| Temporary rental | Full flexibility to take your time | $2,000–$4,000/month + moving costs × 2 |
| Portable mortgage | Transferring your existing mortgage to the new property | Saves penalty costs; requires timing alignment |