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Ontario property management laws — Deposit rules
Ontario Updated June 2026

Ontario Deposit Rules (2026)

Ontario does NOT allow damage/security deposits. The only permitted deposit is a rent deposit of at most one month's (or one rent-period's) rent, applied to the LAST month — and it must earn interest at the guideline rate.

Governing law: Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, s. 105–106

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No damage deposit — at all

It is illegal to collect a "security" or "damage" deposit in Ontario. A landlord cannot require money to cover damage, cleaning, or key cards as a refundable deposit.

Last-month rent deposit only

You may collect a rent deposit of no more than one month's rent (or one rental period for weekly/daily). It can only be applied to the LAST month of the tenancy — never to damage.

Interest is mandatory

The deposit must earn interest annually at the rent-increase guideline rate. Each year the landlord either pays it to the tenant or applies it to top up the deposit to current rent.

Key deposits

A refundable key/fob deposit is allowed but only up to the actual replacement cost. It is not a damage deposit.

Damage is recovered after the fact

Because there is no damage deposit, a landlord recovers damage by applying to the LTB (or Small Claims Court) after the tenancy — not by withholding money up front.

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Not legal advice. Proprietio is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. The content on this page is informational and was researched from publicly available statutes and case law, but state and local landlord-tenant rules change frequently and vary by jurisdiction. For specific situations in Ontario, consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction. Read full disclaimer.