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First Apartment Financial Guide Canada 2026 | Costs, Budgeting & Tips

Updated

Moving into your first apartment is exciting — and expensive. This guide walks you through every financial aspect of renting your first place in Canada so you do not get caught off guard.

True Cost of Your First Apartment

The rent amount is just the beginning. Here is what you actually need to budget.

Upfront Move-In Costs

CostAmountNotes
First month rent$1,500–$2,600Always required
Last month rent$1,500–$2,600Required in ON, common elsewhere
Damage/security depositUp to 1 month rentRequired in BC, AB, Atlantic Canada
Key/fob deposit$100–$300Refundable
Application fee$0–$50Covers credit check
Moving expenses$200–$2,000DIY vs movers
Total upfront (estimate)$3,500–$8,000+Varies by province and city

Ontario: First + last month rent. No damage deposit allowed for residential units.
BC: Up to half a month rent as deposit. Last month rent deposit also common.
Alberta: Up to one month rent as deposit. No last month required.

Ongoing Monthly Costs

ExpenseTypical RangeNotes
Rent$1,050–$2,600Varies widely by city
Electricity$50–$120If not included in rent
Internet$60–$100Shop around for deals
Renters insurance$15–$30Usually required by landlord
Tenant’s share of heat$0–$150Often included in older buildings
Parking$0–$250If applicable
Total monthly estimate$1,175–$3,250

See average rent by province for current prices in your city.

The Apartment Budget Template

For a $1,800/month apartment in a mid-sized city:

CategoryMonthly Amount
Rent$1,800
Electricity$80
Internet$70
Renters insurance$25
Groceries$400
Transportation$150
Phone$60
Total necessities$2,585

To cover this comfortably (keeping housing at 30% of income), you need a gross income of about $72,000/year.

Use our rent affordability calculator to find your number.

Searching for Your First Apartment

Where to Look

PlatformBest For
Rentals.caAll property types, Canada-wide
KijijiPrivate landlords, good deals
Facebook MarketplaceSocial connections, local
ZumperUrban apartments, newer buildings
PadMapperMap-based search
CraigslistCareful — verify listings

What to Look For in a Listing

CheckWhy
Utilities includedAffects true monthly cost
Lease length12 months vs month-to-month
Parking includedSave $100–$250/month
Pets allowedIf applicable
Laundry (in-unit vs shared vs none)Convenience and cost
Neighbourhood safetyWalk at different times

Viewing Apartments: Questions to Ask

CategoryQuestions to Ask
UtilitiesWhich utilities are included? What is average monthly hydro cost?
BuildingIs there in-suite laundry? Is there secure bike storage?
LandlordHow quickly do you respond to maintenance requests?
LeaseIs the lease 12 months? Month-to-month after that?
Rent increasesWhen was the last increase? What is the provincial guideline?
Move-inWhat is included (appliances, window coverings)? Any parking?

Renters Insurance: Non-Negotiable

Renters insurance costs $15–$30/month and covers:

CoverageWhat It Protects
Contents insuranceYour belongings (theft, fire, water damage)
Personal liabilityIf you accidentally cause damage or injury
Additional living expensesHotel and meals if your unit is uninhabitable

Without renters insurance, if your apartment floods or catches fire, you lose everything with no compensation. Your landlord’s insurance covers the building, not your stuff.

Get quotes from Square One, CAA, or your existing insurer.

Setting Up Your New Apartment

Before Move-In

  • Confirm utilities included vs your responsibility
  • Set up electricity account (contact local provider)
  • Set up internet (book 2 weeks in advance)
  • Get renters insurance (send confirmation to landlord)
  • Set up mail forwarding from previous address
  • Take photos/video of every room before moving in (document pre-existing damage)

Essential First Apartment Purchases (Budget)

ItemCost RangePriority
Bed frame + mattress$400–$1,500Critical
Basic kitchen supplies$150–$400Critical
Cleaning supplies$50–$100Critical
Shower curtain + rod$30–$80Critical
Basic tools (hammer, screwdriver set)$40–$80High
Vacuum and mop$80–$200High
Lamps$50–$200Medium

Budget tip: Facebook Marketplace, Kijiji, IKEA, and thrift stores are your best friends for furnishing a first apartment.

Understanding Your Lease

ClauseWhat It Means
TermFixed period (usually 12 months) or month-to-month
Rent amountBase rent — confirm what is included
Damage deposit rulesHow and when it is returned
Notice to vacateHow much notice you must give (typically 60 days)
Pet policyAllowed, not allowed, or with deposit
SublettingWhether you can sublet with landlord’s consent
Rent increase noticeWhen and how increases are communicated

Province-specific rules matter. Read your province’s tenancy act or use Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) resources.

Rent Increase Rules by Province

ProvinceRent Control?2026 Guideline
OntarioYes (pre-2018 units)2.5%
British ColumbiaYes3.5%
ManitobaYes3%
Prince Edward IslandYes3%
AlbertaNoNo cap
SaskatchewanNoNo cap
Nova ScotiaTemporary cap5%
QuebecGuideline-basedThrough housing tribunal

Your Rights as a Tenant

RightWhat It Means
Quiet enjoymentLandlord cannot enter without 24-hour notice
Habitable conditionLandlord must maintain heat, plumbing, safety
Protection from illegal entryLandlord must give written notice except in emergency
Right to challenge increasesYou can dispute increases above guidelines
Security deposit returnMust be returned within set timeframe after move-out

If your landlord violates your rights, contact your provincial residential tenancy board.