Medicine Hat News

National rental price up 3% from last year, while vacancy rates hold steady: CMHC

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Canadian tenants faced another year of affordabil­ity challenges as rents crept up nationally and were particular­ly high in Vancouver and Toronto.

The findings from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.’s annual rental market report released Friday show the average rent for a two-bedroom home in the 37 areas the federal housing agency studied increased to $1,167 last year, a three per cent rise from $1,128 in 2020 and $1,080 in 2019.

Bob Dugan, CMHC’s chief economist, attributed the rise in rent to a supply and demand imbalance, and said the increase was also affected by the different speeds of recovery cities have experience­d in the latest stage of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Vancouver and the Greater Toronto Area, he said, were facing the most severe affordabil­ity challenges because those cities held onto the highest average monthly rent for a two-bedroom apartment. Vancouver rent increased 2.4 per cent to $1,824, while rent in the GTA rose 1.5 per cent to $1,666.

“When you look at lower income households the mismatch between affordable rentals and the number of households gets worse,” he said.

“Last year in Toronto and Vancouver, only 0.2 per cent of the rental universe was affordable for the bottom 20 per cent of earners.”

CMHC and Dugan found someone renting a two-bedroom purpose-built apartment in Vancouver would have to work 198 hours per month to keep monthly rent at 30 per cent of their gross income, the threshold of affordabil­ity.

In Toronto, it would take 178.3 hours per month, up 7.6 hours from last year.

“That person has to work more than full-time or needs a second tenant in the unit with them to make that rent affordable, if they’d like to get it down to 30 per cent of income,” said Dugan.

“That’s an even bigger mismatch, when you get to that bottom 20 per cent (of earners), so that’s something that’s a concern to us.”

In some markets, where people flocked to find more space when their employers allowed remote work, the year-over-year increase in hours needed to work to keep monthly rent at 30 per cent of a gross income was even more dramatic than what Toronto experience­d.

In Peterborou­gh, Ont., where the average two-bedroom unit monthly rent was $1,316, it took 160.5 hours to achieve that feat last year, up 36.7 hours from 123.8 hours in 2020.

In Windsor, Ont., where the average two-bedroom rent rose by more than five per cent to hit $1,154, CMHC estimated it would take 137.8 hours, an 18.6-hour jump from 119.2 hours in 2020.

This surge could persist, if people continue to gravitate to suburban and rural markets, because it will take supply time to catch up, said Dugan.

“I’m sure that the city planners in some of these smaller communitie­s didn’t have a fiveyear plan that included a pandemic,” said Dugan.

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