What is the difference between a commercial lease dispute and a residential tenancy dispute in Ontario?
Commercial leases fall under the Commercial Tenancies Act and are litigated in Superior Court, with landlord self-help remedies like distress and lockout. Residential tenancies fall under the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 and are heard at the Landlord and Tenant Board, where self-help eviction is illegal.
How long does it take to evict a residential tenant in Ontario?
Residential evictions in Ontario currently take three to twelve months or more, depending on the LTB’s backlog, the grounds, and whether the tenant disputes the application. L1 non-payment cases settle fastest; contested L2 and N12 cases take longest. Sheriff enforcement adds further weeks.
Can a commercial landlord lock out a tenant in Ontario?
Yes, where the lease permits re-entry and required notice has been served. Once a landlord locks out, the lease is terminated and the landlord must mitigate by re-letting. The tenant can apply for relief against forfeiture to be restored to possession.
What is the landlord’s right of distress under Ontario law?
In a commercial tenancy, distress allows a landlord to seize and sell a tenant’s goods on the premises to satisfy unpaid rent, without a court order. Distress preserves the lease, unlike lockout. The right does not exist in residential tenancies.
What is a bad-faith N12 eviction and what compensation can a tenant recover?
A bad-faith N12 is one where the landlord’s stated personal-use intention was not genuine, for example, the unit is re-rented at a higher rent within 12 months. Remedies can include up to twelve months’ rent abatement, the rent differential at a new unit, moving costs, and general damages.
Do I need a lawyer to represent me at the Landlord and Tenant Board?
No, parties can represent themselves. But LTB outcomes turn on procedural compliance, evidentiary preparation, and credibility at hearing. Self-represented errors, like the wrong N-notice or missed witnesses, routinely sink winnable cases.
Can a residential landlord increase rent in Ontario?
Most rents are capped by the annual rent increase guideline, with 90 days’ notice on form N1. Landlords can apply for an L5 above-guideline rent increase for capital expenditures or operating cost increases. Units first occupied after November 15, 2018 are exempt from the guideline.
My commercial tenant has stopped paying rent, what should I do first?
Read the lease before doing anything. The strategic question is whether to keep the tenant and pursue distress, or remove them through termination and lockout. Each path turns on the rental market, the tenant’s solvency, and the cost of re-letting.
Can I evict a tenant when I sell the property in Ontario?
Only through an N12 served on behalf of the purchaser, after the sale is firm, where the purchaser or a close family member intends to occupy in good faith. The notice requires one month’s compensation and is enforceable through an L2 application.
What happens if my landlord refuses to make repairs?
Ontario landlords have a statutory duty to maintain a unit in a good state of repair. The remedy is a T6 maintenance application at the LTB, which can yield rent abatements, repair orders, or authorization for the tenant to do the work and deduct from rent.