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Re: “Ontario Tenants Can Now Easily Break A Lease…And This Is A Good Thing!”

Posted: August 21st, 2018, 12:56 am
by Barrie Renter
Very concise and clear how it is easy to break a lease by just not paying rent.

Thank you for the TEACHERS here who have helped so many tenants.

You have earned my utmost respect.

Re: “Ontario Tenants Can Now Easily Break A Lease...JUST DON'T PAY RENT AND LEAVE IN 14 DAYS!"

Posted: August 29th, 2018, 11:03 pm
by Tags
Can the mods make this a "sticky" so tenants will be able to find this and learn the rules? :)

Re: “Ontario Tenants Can Now Easily Break A Lease…And This Is A Good Thing!”

Posted: August 30th, 2018, 10:30 pm
by Sneaky
Robin wrote:
August 19th, 2018, 9:08 pm
Look at the Rental Fairness Act of 2017 which was a good start to helping Tenants:

RTA amendment (to s. 134) prohibits a landlord from collecting or attempting to collect from a former tenant of a rental unit any amount of money "purporting to be rent" with respect to any period after the tenancy has terminated and the tenant has vacated the rental unit. In situations where a tenant wishes to “break” a fixed-term lease, a usual tactic is deliberate non-payment of rent or to hold a "lease-breaking party," in order to receive an eviction notice from the landlord. The eviction notice requires the tenant to vacate the unit within a matter of weeks, and if the tenant does so, the tenancy is terminated.

Prior to the RTA amendments, it was common for landlords to demand or formally claim any lost rent pending re-rental of the unit as “damages” for the tenant’s deliberate breach of contract. Now, such a claim is prohibited, and where a landlord makes demand for same, the landlord is also exposed to substantial fines.
Yes.

Want to move, don't pay rent.

However, make sure you get the legal N4 document and do not simply not pay rent and leave.

Re: “Ontario Tenants Can Now Easily Break A Lease...JUST DON'T PAY RENT AND LEAVE IN 14 DAYS!"

Posted: September 16th, 2018, 9:56 pm
by HowardT
Getting this done took years of hard work.

We need to make sure every Tenant in Ontario realizes you are no longer bound by any type of fixed term lease, as long as you be a bit tricky. (Or sneaky ;) )