Your rent payment is likely your largest monthly bill. Unlike a mortgage, it normally does nothing for your credit score — unless you use a rent reporting service.
How rent reporting works
- You sign up with a rent reporting service
- The service verifies your rent payments (via bank records, landlord confirmation, or direct integration)
- Payments are reported monthly to Equifax and/or TransUnion
- Your on-time rent history appears on your credit report as a tradeline
For credit bureaus, this functions similarly to any other recurring payment — it shows lenders you reliably meet financial obligations.
Canadian rent reporting services compared
| Service | Reports To | Who Initiates | Cost | Retroactive Reporting |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Landlord Credit Bureau (LCB) | Equifax | Landlord or tenant | Varies — often free for tenant | Varies |
| Chexy | Equifax | Tenant | ~$5–$8/month | Up to 24 months (extra fee) |
| FrontLobby | Equifax + TransUnion | Landlord or tenant | Tenant plan available | Yes, up to 24 months |
| Borrowell Rent Advantage | Equifax | Tenant | Free with Borrowell account | Up to 24 months |
Landlord Credit Bureau (LCB)
The largest and most established Canadian rent reporting service. Works best when your landlord enrolls, but tenants can sign up independently. Well known by landlords, which can also benefit your rental application history.
Chexy
Tenant-driven service — you sign up directly without needing landlord involvement. You pay rent through Chexy, which processes the payment to your landlord and reports the transaction to Equifax. Also allows payment by credit card for points.
FrontLobby
Reports to both major Canadian credit bureaus, giving you broader coverage. Offers both landlord and tenant sign-up options. Retroactive reporting available.
Borrowell Rent Advantage
Offered through Borrowell (Canada’s largest free credit monitoring service). Tenant-initiated and free for Borrowell account holders. Reports to Equifax. One of the easiest sign-up experiences.
Who benefits most from rent reporting
| Situation | Expected Benefit |
|---|---|
| No credit history (newcomers, young adults) | High — establishes a positive tradeline from day one |
| Thin credit file (1–2 accounts) | High — adds depth to a weak file |
| Rebuilding after missed payments | Moderate — positive history helps, but negative history takes time to age off |
| Strong credit (750+) | Low marginal benefit — already well-established |
Does your landlord need to participate?
Not always. Several services (Chexy, Borrowell Rent Advantage, FrontLobby tenant plan) are tenant-initiated — you sign up without any action required from your landlord. If you use Chexy, rent is routed through the platform, so your landlord still receives payment normally.
What to confirm before signing up
- Which credit bureau(s) the service reports to
- Whether the cost is worth it for your credit situation
- Whether retroactive reporting is available and at what cost
- How rent payments are processed (directly to landlord vs. through a platform)
Combining rent reporting with other credit-building tools
Rent reporting works best as one piece of a broader credit strategy:
| Tool | Impact |
|---|---|
| Rent reporting service | Adds payment history from largest bill |
| Credit card (paid in full monthly) | Adds revolving credit history, keeps utilization visible |
| Secured credit card | Starting point if score is very low |
| Credit-builder loan | Adds installment history if you have none |
Key takeaway
Rent reporting is one of the simplest ways for Canadian renters to build credit with money they are already paying. Services like Borrowell Rent Advantage offer free tenant-initiated reporting. Sign up, pay on time, and your rent will start contributing to your credit score within 30–60 days.
Top rent reporting services in Canada
| Service | Cost | Reports to | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Borrowell Rent Advantage | Free (with Borrowell account) | Equifax | Most widely used in Canada |
| Chexy | ~$4.99/month | Equifax | Also offers rent payment by credit card |
| FrontLobby | Free basic / paid tiers | Equifax, TransUnion | Also reports positive and negative data |
| Rental Kharma | ~$8.95/month | TransUnion | US-focused, limited Canada coverage |
Most services require you to connect your bank account or upload rent payment receipts to verify payments. Reports are submitted to Equifax and/or TransUnion on a monthly or regular basis.
How much does rent reporting improve your credit score?
Results vary significantly depending on your starting point:
- No credit history: Adding a consistent rent payment tradeline can raise your score by 40–80+ points over 6–12 months
- Thin credit file (1–2 accounts): Expect 20–50 points improvement
- Established credit (5+ accounts): Improvement is smaller — rent is one factor among many
The effect is most pronounced for newcomers to Canada, young adults with limited credit history, and anyone who has been credit-invisible.
Frequently asked questions
Does rent reporting hurt your credit score if you miss a payment? Yes. Services like FrontLobby report both positive and negative rental data. If you miss a rent payment that has been reported, it will appear as a negative item on your credit file — similar to a missed credit card payment. Read the terms carefully before enrolling.
Can landlords report rent to credit bureaus without your consent? In Canada, landlords generally must have your consent to share your personal financial information with third parties. However, some landlords proactively use platforms like FrontLobby that notify tenants and allow opt-in reporting. A landlord reporting negative rental history without consent may violate PIPEDA.
How long does it take for rent to appear on your credit report? Most rent reporting services update credit bureaus monthly. After enrollment and your first verified payment, allow 30–60 days for the tradeline to appear on your Equifax or TransUnion report.
Related Reading
- Does a Car Loan Help Build Your Credit Score in Canada?
- Finances After Selling Your House in Canada | What To Do With the Proceeds
- How To Build Credit as a Renter in Canada
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