When renting in stratas, tenants and landlords must follow provincial legislation including the Strata Property Act and regulations, the Residential Tenancy Act and the strata's bylaws and rules. Stratas are not allowed to have rental-restriction bylaws but they can have bylaws which restrict or ban short-term rentals.
Learn more on this page:
Renting to tenants in strata housing
Strata bylaws and rules
The rights and obligations of landlords
The rights and obligation of tenants assigned rights by the landlord and long-term tenants
The rights and obligations of strata corporations
Strata corporations cannot screen tenants
Renting in strata housing is not the same as renting in non-strata titled housing. Landlords and tenants need to comply with strata legislation including signing a “Form K: the Notice of Tenant’s Responsibilities” and following the strata's (or section's) bylaws and rules.
Landlords, owners, tenants, visitors and occupants must follow the strata's bylaws and rules. Strata bylaws and rules can affect owners and tenants in many different ways including: restricting or banning pets, banning smoking anywhere in the strata corporation including people's homes, even specifying the type of window coverings.
To help ensure a successful tenancy, landlords must give their tenants a copy of the strata's (or section's) bylaws and rules; this is also a legal requirement.
Strata bylaws can vary widely and can also change over time.
Strata corporations and sections can fine strata owners and tenants who don’t follow the bylaws and rules.
A landlord can evict a residential tenant if the tenant repeatedly or continually contravenes a reasonable and significant strata bylaw or rule.
If significant strata bylaws are repeatedly or continuously broken by a tenant, the strata corporation can take steps to evict the tenant. The Residential Tenancy Branch Policy Guideline #27 (updated November 21, 2022) has more information on this.
Under the Strata Property Act, a landlord is:
A landlord has a right under the Strata Property Act to:
Under the Strata Property Act, a landlord must:
Landlords may assign any of their rights and obligations to tenants provided that they give written notice of the assignment to the strata corporation stating:
[Exception: The owner’s responsibility to pay the cost of remedying contraventions or fines on behalf of the tenant cannot be assigned to the tenant.]
Prior to November 24, 2022, tenants who were family members of an owner (as defined in regulation) automatically had all the rights and obligations of a long-term tenant. If this outcome is still desired, the owner would need to assign these rights and provide a written notice to the strata corporation.
Residential tenants under a long-term lease of three or more years have the same rights and obligations as owners (the landlord) under the Strata Property Act, regulations, bylaws and rules (with the exceptions noted below) for the duration of the lease.
Before exercising any rights of the owner (landlord), long-term tenants must provide the strata corporation with written notice of: the time period of the lease; and their name.
Furthermore, long-term tenants may never, without the consent of the owner, exercise any right of an owner to:
Some of the specific obligations of long-term tenants are:
Some of the specific rights of long-term tenants are:
A strata corporation has the following rights under the Strata Property Act in relation to tenants:
A strata corporation has the following right under the Standard Bylaws (which may be amended) in relation to tenants: it can by majority vote, ask a tenant to leave a general meeting if the tenant does not have the right to vote.
Under the Strata Property Act a strata corporation must:
A strata corporation has the following obligation under the Standard Bylaws (which may be amended): it must allow, if permitted by the chair, a tenant to participate in discussion at an annual or special general meeting even if the tenant does not have the right to vote.
Under the Strata Property Act, the strata corporation cannot:
However the strata corporation can pass a bylaw to restrict or ban short-term rentals by either owners or tenants.
References to Strata Property legislation:
Sections of the Act: 1, 28, 35, 36, 45, 54, 76, 110, 124, 125, 129-135, 137, 138, 142, 145-148, 164, 165, 173, 174, 173, 175, 177, 178
Standard Bylaws (which can be amended) 3, 4, 7, 26
Find it fast: a handy site map listing all the strata housing web pages.
The information on this website about strata housing is provided for the user’s convenience as a basic starting point; it is not a substitute for getting legal advice. Learn more about the site’s purpose and limits. The content on this website is periodically reviewed and updated by the Province of British Columbia as per the date noted on each page: November 26, 2022.