Setting the rental price is one of the most important decisions of the leasing process. A $50 to $100 monthly error means $600 to $1,200 per year — over 5 years, that's $3,000 to $6,000 in lost income (or empty unit). Yet many owners set this price by gut feel, with no method.
This article details the comparables method, the factors that adjust the reference price to your specific unit, the classic pitfalls of over- and underpricing, and the free tools available to validate your Montreal estimate.
Why the right price is critical
The cost of underpricing
A rent set $100 below market means $1,200 per year of foregone income. Over the tenant's tenure (often 2 to 5 years with TAL-regulated increases), that's $3,000 to $8,000 lost. And that low rent becomes the floor for future renewals — the loss compounds.
The cost of overpricing
A rent set $100 above market typically adds 4 to 8 weeks of extra vacancy to find a candidate willing to pay. One month vacant at $1,800 = $1,800 lost. Plus listing costs, multiple visits, personal time. The savings from $100/month surplus take 18 months to make up for that initial loss.
The comparables method — 4 steps
Step 1: Define the comparison perimeter
Find 5 to 10 similar units currently available or recently leased within 1 km of yours. These are your comparables. Similarity criteria: same number of bedrooms, surface ±15 %, similar floor (ground vs upper), and comparable inclusions (heating, hot water, appliances).
Step 2: Collect the rents
Reliable sources for Montreal comparables:
- Centris.ca — most complete database, with photos and history
- Kijiji and Marketplace — cover listings not on Centris
- Logis-Quebec — for the affordable segment
- CMHC statistics (Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation) — annual neighborhood data
Step 3: Compute median rent per square foot
For each comparable, divide monthly rent by surface in sq ft. You get a $/sq ft. Compute the median (not the mean — less sensitive to outliers) over your 5-10 comparables. Multiply by your unit's surface. That's your reference rent.
Step 4: Adjust for distinguishing factors
Your unit is never identical to comparables. Adjust the reference rent up or down based on the factors below.
Adjustment factors (table)
| Factor | Rent impact |
|---|---|
| Recently renovated (kitchen/bath) | +5 to +10 % |
| Floor with elevator (vs walk-up) | +3 to +5 % |
| Indoor parking | +$50 to +$150/month |
| Outdoor parking | +$30 to +$75/month |
| Balcony or private yard | +$25 to +$75/month |
| In-unit laundry | +$25 to +$50/month |
| Building laundry | +$10 to +$25/month |
| Heating and hot water included | +$50 to +$100/month |
| Electricity included (rare) | +$50 to +$120/month |
| Central air conditioning | +$25 to +$75/month |
| View and brightness (high floor, south exposure) | +3 to +7 % |
| High-demand neighborhood (Plateau, Mile End) | +5 to +10 % |
| Transitioning neighborhood (Hochelaga, Saint-Henri) | Reference |
| Metro proximity (≤ 5 min walk) | +5 to +10 % |
| Pets accepted | +$25 to +$75/month (broadens pool) |
| Furnished unit | +15 to +30 % (but higher turnover) |
Add the adjustments. If your $1,600 reference unit is recently renovated (+8 %), with outdoor parking (+$50) and heating included (+$75), the adjusted rent is: $1,600 × 1.08 + $50 + $75 = ~$1,853.
Neighborhood benchmarks — Montreal (2026)
Indicative median rents for a 2-bedroom (700-900 sq ft) in Montreal in 2026 — sources: CMHC, Centris, market observation. These are reference points, not absolutes:
| Neighborhood | Median 2-BR rent | Average time to lease |
|---|---|---|
| Plateau-Mont-Royal | $1,750 – $2,100 | 1 to 2 weeks |
| Mile End / Outremont | $1,800 – $2,200 | 1 to 2 weeks |
| Verdun (renovated) | $1,700 – $2,000 | 2 to 3 weeks |
| Rosemont–Petite-Patrie | $1,600 – $1,950 | 2 to 3 weeks |
| Villeray | $1,550 – $1,850 | 2 to 3 weeks |
| Notre-Dame-de-Grâce (NDG) | $1,600 – $2,000 | 3 to 4 weeks |
| Hochelaga-Maisonneuve | $1,350 – $1,700 | 3 to 4 weeks |
| Saint-Henri / Pointe-Saint-Charles | $1,500 – $1,900 | 2 to 4 weeks |
| Downtown (condo) | $1,900 – $2,600 | 2 to 4 weeks |
| Côte-des-Neiges | $1,400 – $1,750 | 3 to 5 weeks |
The 4 classic pitfalls to avoid
1. Basing on the previous tenant's rent
A 5-year-tenured tenant often pays $200 to $400 below current market (due to TAL-regulated annual increases). When they leave, you can readjust — but many owners reproduce the old rent by habit. That's leaving thousands of dollars on the table.
2. Testing the market high then lowering
Common but costly strategy. A listing that drops price after 2 weeks signals a problem ("something's wrong with the unit"). Better to set the right price from day one and adjust after 3-4 weeks if truly no serious candidate.
3. Ignoring seasonality
In Montreal, May-June are peak months (July 1 effect). December-February are slow. A January listing often needs to drop 5 to 10 % vs the summer peak to lease within similar timeframes.
4. Underestimating the value of inclusions
Many owners forget to add the real cost of inclusions (heating, electricity, internet, parking). Yet these inclusions have clear monetary value to the tenant — and justify a higher rent.
Free tools to estimate
- AA Location rent price estimator — based on neighborhood, type, surface
- Centris.ca — search by neighborhood and bedrooms for current comparables
- Annual CMHC rental market report — official statistics by sector
- TAL annual rent increase indexes — frame increases on existing leases