Tenant Management Essentials
Tenant insurance — which covers a tenant's personal belongings, personal liability, and additional living expenses if displaced — is an important risk management tool for both tenants and landlords. But can Ontario landlords legally require it as a lease condition?
Ontario law does not explicitly prohibit landlords from requiring tenant insurance as a condition of the lease. Including a tenant insurance requirement in the lease agreement is legally permissible, and most Ontario residential tenancies include this clause in standard lease forms.
Screening and Placement
From a practical landlord perspective, the primary benefit of tenant insurance is the liability component. If a tenant's negligence causes a fire or water damage that spreads to other units or the building structure, their liability coverage responds first. Without it, the landlord's property insurance is the primary resource — which can affect claims history and premiums.
Tenant insurance also makes tenant-landlord disputes less contentious. When a tenant's belongings are damaged by an insured event, their insurance covers the loss rather than the tenant looking to the landlord for compensation. This removes a significant source of conflict.
Retaining Quality Tenants
Enforcing a tenant insurance requirement in Ontario is the challenge. You can include it in the lease and request proof of coverage at move-in, but you cannot evict a tenant for allowing coverage to lapse mid-tenancy under current RTA interpretations. Monitoring and follow-up is important.
D&D Property Management includes tenant insurance requirements in all lease agreements and verifies coverage at move-in as part of our tenant onboarding process. We also follow up with tenants to maintain current coverage documentation throughout the tenancy.