Tenants have a number of ways they can end a tenancy lawfully. Learn the different ways a tenancy can end and the landlord and tenant rights and responsibilities in the process.
A tenant must give a landlord written notice to end their tenancy as required by Residential Tenancy Act: Section 45. Both parties should keep a copy.
Tenants can write their own notice letter, which must include:
If a tenant doesn’t serve proper notice or leaves a tenancy early, the landlord can apply for dispute resolution and the tenant may have to pay compensation.
A tenant must serve written notice to end the tenancy and make sure it’s received:
A fixed-term agreement is set for a specific period of time (a year, a month or a week). At the end of the period, the landlord and tenant can agree to another fixed term or continue the tenancy on a month-to-month basis. If the tenant wants to move out when the fixed term ends, the tenant must serve written notice to end the tenancy so it’s received:
A tenant may ask the landlord for written permission to sublet or assign the tenancy to someone else.
Tenancy rules in strata housing can be different than typical housing in B.C. For example, the owner, landlords, tenants and visitors must follow the bylaws and rules set by the strata.
A tenant in strata housing can end a tenancy without penalty. A strata corporation (managed by an elected strata council) can take the place of a landlord and end a tenancy if a tenant:
Learn more about strata bylaws and rules.
Make sure to consider all legal rights and responsibilities when a tenant moves out.
The tenant should give the landlord their new mailing address, in writing, where their damage deposit can be sent following the move-out condition inspection.