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Legal & Compliance Jun 3, 2026 4 min read

New Brunswick Landlord Tenant Laws 2026

2026 overview of New Brunswick landlord-tenant law for property managers: leases, deposits, rent increases, evictions, and local compliance risks.

New Brunswick Landlord Tenant Laws 2026

Landlord-tenant law in New Brunswick is provincial, practical, and easy to mishandle if your team uses a generic Canadian checklist. The governing framework is the Residential Tenancies Act (S.N.B. 1975, c.R-10.2), with tenancy issues directed to the Residential Tenancies Tribunal through Service NB. This 2026 overview gives landlords and property managers the operating rules that matter most: leases, deposits, rent increases, eviction files, and local quirks.

The law and tribunal to build around

For New Brunswick, anchor every policy to the Residential Tenancies Act (S.N.B. 1975, c.R-10.2) and the Residential Tenancies Tribunal through Service NB. That sounds obvious, but multi-province portfolios often fail when a team copies a notice, lease clause, deposit rule, or deadline from another jurisdiction.

The first operating rule is to put the province or territory name at the top of every checklist. The second is to separate business judgment from legal procedure. A landlord may decide that a tenant account is too delinquent, that a rent increase is economically necessary, or that a deposit claim is justified. But the action still has to move through the local statute, forms, tribunal, and timing rules.

For a property manager, the practical file should show the lease, ledger, notices, delivery proof, photos, inspections, correspondence, and a chronology that someone outside the company can understand quickly. That recordkeeping discipline is what turns a policy into evidence.

The operating map for landlords

The New Brunswick system should be reduced into an operator map: lease rules, money rules, rent-change rules, access rules, and dispute rules. The statute is the Residential Tenancies Act (S.N.B. 1975, c.R-10.2), and the relevant forum is the Residential Tenancies Tribunal through Service NB.

Important New Brunswick facts from the current brief:

Evictions

  • Eviction is handled through the Residential Tenancies Tribunal.
  • Landlords should align notices, evidence, and applications with Service NB tribunal procedure.
  • The fact bank here does not provide a specific notice period for each ground, so do not invent one.

Deposits

  • The deposit is capped at one month of rent.
  • The deposit is held by the Tribunal, not by the landlord.
  • Interest applies.
  • Higher rents are phased for deposit purposes.

Rent increases

  • New Brunswick no longer has the fixed cap that applied in 2022, but managers should confirm the current position.
  • Only one increase is allowed in a 12-month period.
  • A tenant can request review of a large increase, and phasing may be possible.

Local quirks

  • Deposit handling is unusual because the Tribunal holds the money.
  • Large rent increases should be supported with a clear file because review is available.

Lease setup and onboarding

The lease is where compliance starts. A strong lease process does not mean adding the most aggressive clauses possible. It means using the required form where one is required, avoiding prohibited clauses, and making sure the business terms match the local law.

For New Brunswick, onboarding should cover:

  • rent amount and due date;
  • deposit or advance-rent rule;
  • inspection or condition-report process;
  • entry-notice expectations;
  • repair and maintenance reporting;
  • rent-increase anniversary tracking;
  • tenant communication preferences.

Where the brief identifies a mandatory lease form or a special local requirement, treat it as a launch blocker. A tenant should not move in under a generic lease that your team later has to fix.

Money and dispute readiness

Money compliance is where landlords often create avoidable disputes. Deposits must follow the local cap, trust, interest, prohibition, tribunal-holding, or return rule. Rent increases must respect the local cap or no-cap model, notice period, and one-in-12-month rhythm where provided.

Managers should not rely on memory for annual figures. If a cap, guideline, TAL method, IRAC percentage, CPI link, or temporary rent cap is involved, the current number must be verified before notices are sent. A stale percentage in a template can create dozens of defective notices in one afternoon.

A landlord-tenant file should also be dispute-ready before there is a dispute. Store the lease, ledger, inspections, correspondence, notices, proof of service, and photos in one place. When a problem escalates, the manager should not be searching inboxes or asking a superintendent for old pictures.

How New Brunswick compares

New Brunswick is deposit-strict in an unusual way because the Tribunal holds deposits, while rent is more flexible than capped provinces but still reviewable. In a multi-province portfolio, that comparison matters because the most dangerous mistake is assuming the same lease, deposit, rent-increase, or eviction playbook works everywhere.

Managing this in software

Property management software should store province, tribunal, lease form, deposit cap, rent-increase anniversary, notice history, and evidence in one file. For New Brunswick, the goal is not to replace legal review; it is to stop preventable errors before they become tribunal problems.

Build alerts for the recurring mistakes: generic leases with local clauses missing, wrong deposit amount or label, rent-increase notices sent before the legal anniversary, annual caps copied from an old year, weak inspection evidence, eviction files with no proof of service, and managers using another province's tribunal language.

⚠️ This is general information, not legal advice. Residential tenancy is provincial — verify with the named tribunal or a local lawyer before acting.

New Brunswick province guide
New Brunswick landlord-tenant laws

Governing law: Residential Tenancies Act, S.N.B. 1975, c. R-10.2

Informational, not legal advice. Residential tenancy is provincial — verify with the named tribunal before relying on these summaries.

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