Close Menu
  • Commercial Real-estate
  • Agents
  • Brokerage
  • Buying
  • Selling
  • Rent
  • Technology
What's Hot

Acclaimed Australian chefs compare Sydney, Melbourne dining scenes

June 5, 2026

Charter Hall buys Tooronga Village shopping centre in $79m Melbourne deal

June 4, 2026

How to evict a housemate

June 4, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Real Estate MasterReal Estate Master
  • Commercial Real-estate
  • Agents
  • Brokerage
  • Buying
  • Selling
  • Rent
  • Technology
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Real Estate MasterReal Estate Master
Home»Commercial Real-estate»Incentive offers rise as apartment operators compete with condos for tenants
Commercial Real-estate

Incentive offers rise as apartment operators compete with condos for tenants

April 30, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email

Free parking, free wifi and signing bonuses are just some of the perks apartment building owners are offering prospective tenants as competition in the rental market intensifies.

According to a new report from real estate research firm Urbanation, 66 per cent of rental projects in the Greater Toronto Hamilton Area (GTHA) offered incentives to attract tenants in the first quarter of 2026 — up from 62 per cent a year ago and double the amount offered two years ago.

Urbanation said the use of incentives has become widespread in the GTHA, with institutional, purpose-built operators such as CAPREIT and Minto Apartments offering months of free rent, free parking and “special offers” like free WiFi and $500 signing bonuses.

The firm found that the most common incentive in the first quarter of the year was two months of free rent, offered by 47 per cent of rental projects, up from 32 per cent in the same period last year. At the same time, the number of projects offering one rent-free month dropped to 42 per cent from 53 per cent last year.

Other variations of the free rent theme became popular in the first quarter, with offers of a free month-and-a-half and a free three months increasing from two per cent to six per cent and one per cent to four per cent, respectively.

A break on rent wasn’t the only incentive that became more common last year. Cash move-in bonuses also topped the list of perks, jumping from 10 per cent to 17 per cent year over year in Q1.

See also  Municipal fees on a new home in Toronto average $200,000. In Moncton? $10,000

Rising inventory and weakened demand in both the resale and new condo market have redirected investors and institutional buyers to the rental market. Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation has also noted a rise in projects pivoting from ownership to rental over the last year.

Purpose-built rentals are facing unprecedented competition, said Shaun Hildebrand, president of Urbanation.

“Rental operators are grappling with a deluge of supply at the moment, due to intense competition from the condo market and a surge in tenants moving to get a better deal,” he said.

Vacancy rates in buildings that have passed the lease-up phase and are now operating normally increased by 5.4 per cent in the first quarter of 2026, up from 3.6 per cent a year earlier.

Urbanation reported that this occurred as population inflow slowed and tenant turnover added to the supply of available units. The availability rate, which includes vacant units and units that have an imminent vacancy on the books, reached a record 8.0 per cent.

The impact of rising vacancies and more units coming to market is beginning to show up in pricing. Urbanation found that, when accounting for the monetary value of incentives offered in the market, net rents in the first quarter declined by 3.8 per cent annually to a 16-quarter low of $3.52 per square foot. The incentives reduced rents by an average of 13 per cent or $379.

“This brought purpose-built rents in line with condo rents averaging $2,543 in Q1,” Urbanation said in its report.

While it appears that rental completions slowed to the tune of 61 per cent year over year in the first quarter, Urbanation reported that the eight-quarter low of 915 units negates several projects that pushed occupancy timelines to later quarters. More than 3,200 units across 17 projects are expected to come online in the second quarter alone, and nearly 9,000 units are expected over the next year.

  • How a collapsing rental market is costing some homeowners
  • Boomers are dragging their feet to downsize
See also  Mould in a rental property: Is it a landlord's or tenant's responsibility?

Developers are continuing to advance new rental projects in early 2026, with 3,674 units (up 12 per cent) breaking ground in the first quarter, bringing the latest 12-month total for starts to a multi-decade high of 10,388 units.

“Supply pressures will persist this year as apartment completions run high and population growth slows, creating a window of opportunity for renters to capitalize on improved affordability,” Hildebrand said.

• Email: shcampbell@postmedia.com

Source link

apartment compete condos incentive offers Operators Rise tenants
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Acclaimed Australian chefs compare Sydney, Melbourne dining scenes

June 5, 2026

Charter Hall buys Tooronga Village shopping centre in $79m Melbourne deal

June 4, 2026

Retail stores abandoned over Australia’s relaxed laws

June 4, 2026

Revelop billionaires add to empire with $126m Sydney mall buy

June 3, 2026

McDonald’s new $6m Clyde restaurant to create 260 jobs

June 3, 2026

Bunnings swallows industrial empire whole in mega merger

June 2, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
Commercial Real-estate

Acclaimed Australian chefs compare Sydney, Melbourne dining scenes

June 5, 2026

Acclaimed Australian chefs who have established their culinary footprint in cities like Sydney and Melbourne…

Charter Hall buys Tooronga Village shopping centre in $79m Melbourne deal

June 4, 2026

How to evict a housemate

June 4, 2026

How to Sell a House in 2026

June 4, 2026
Our Picks

Justin Liberman-backed consortium Shor Property picks up Melbourne tower

May 29, 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo

Subscribe to Updates

About Us
About Us

Real advice for all things real estate: buying, selling, market trends, renovation ideas, decor inspo, celebrity real estate news and More

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Our Picks

Acclaimed Australian chefs compare Sydney, Melbourne dining scenes

June 5, 2026

Charter Hall buys Tooronga Village shopping centre in $79m Melbourne deal

June 4, 2026

How to evict a housemate

June 4, 2026
© 2026 Housing Seller - All rights reserved
  • Contact
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.