Canada's Slower Rent Growth Doesn't Erase the 30% Climb Since 2021
National rent prices rose 3.6% in April, down from March's 4.2% pace. But the moderation in the headline inflation rate masks a cumulative squeeze that has permanently altered housing budgets for new tenants.
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National rent prices rose 3.6% in April, down from March's 4.2% pace. But the moderation in the headline inflation rate masks a cumulative squeeze that has permanently altered housing budgets for new tenants.
The latest inflation numbers suggest the Canadian rental market is finally cooling. But for the average tenant looking for an apartment, the math feels less like relief and more like a permanent shift in what housing costs.
The Consumer Price Index for April 2026 showed national rent prices rose 3.6% year over year, a slower pace than the 4.2% jump recorded in March. In British Columbia, the slowdown was even more pronounced, with rent growth easing from 6.4% to 3.4%. That deceleration helped keep the country's overall inflation rate in check, even as gasoline prices spiked.
Yet the moderation in the monthly rate does not erase the new baseline. Rents across Canada are now 30.8% higher than they were in April 2021. That means a tenant moving today faces a fundamentally different pricing environment than someone who signed a lease just three years ago.
The gap between the slowing inflation rate and the reality of the monthly budget is a reminder of how inflation works. Prices are not falling; they are simply climbing less aggressively. For households managing everyday expenses, a slower increase on top of a 30% jump still feels like a squeeze.
Sources & further reading
- Consumer Price Index, April 2026Statistics Canada
- Consumer Price Index Data Visualization ToolStatistics Canada
- British Columbia Population EstimatesStatistics Canada
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