Lease and Rental Management
Purchasing a first rental property in Ontario is one of the most significant financial decisions many people make. Getting the fundamentals right from the start β location, financing, property selection, and management strategy β determines whether the investment builds wealth or creates ongoing headaches.
Location selection should prioritize rental demand sustainability. Properties near employment nodes, universities, hospitals, or transit hubs have built-in demand that persists through economic cycles. Avoid chasing the most affordable absolute price point at the expense of location quality β vacant properties in poor locations are more expensive than occupied properties in good ones.
Ontario Tenancy Law
Financing a rental property in Ontario requires a minimum 20% down payment for investment properties β the insured mortgage rules that allow 5β10% down on owner-occupied properties don't apply to investment purchases. Budget for the 20% down payment, closing costs (land transfer tax, legal fees, home inspection, title insurance), and a cash reserve for initial repairs and vacancy periods.
Property selection should consider management intensity alongside purchase economics. A turnkey property that's move-in ready generates income immediately with minimal upfront investment. A value-add property with deferred maintenance or below-market rent may offer better total returns but requires more capital, management skill, and risk tolerance.
Protecting Landlord Rights
The Ontario Standard Lease, proper tenant screening, and RTA compliance are non-negotiable from day one. A first-time landlord who shortcuts these processes often learns expensive lessons within the first few months of ownership. Getting it right at lease signing prevents problems throughout the tenancy.
D&D Property Management supports first-time landlord clients with guidance through the acquisition process and provides professional management from day one. Many first-time investors find that partnering with an experienced manager from the start delivers better outcomes than learning through expensive trial and error.