Ontario · Fighting Delays, Building Faster Act, 2025, S.O. 2025, c. 14 was proclaimed in forceIn force September 21, 2026 · detected June 12, 2026

Ontario brings new residential tenancy rules into force under Fighting Delays, Building Faster Act

Fighting Delays, Building Faster Act, 2025, S.O. 2025, c. 14

Plain-language summary · AI-assisted · not legal advice

Specific provisions of Ontario's Fighting Delays, Building Faster Act, 2025 that amend the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 have now been officially proclaimed — meaning they become legally binding law on the stated commencement date. Proclamation is the formal step that activates legislation that was previously passed but not yet in effect. The activated sections (Schedule 12, sections 2, 4, and 14) change rules within the residential tenancies framework, affecting how landlords, tenants, and related parties must conduct themselves or assert rights under that statute. Landlords and tenants — as well as property managers and legal advisors who work with Ontario rental housing — should review the specific text of these sections to understand any new obligations or procedural changes that now apply. Those involved in residential tenancy disputes or lease administration should ensure their practices and documents reflect the updated rules.

Who this affects: residential landlords · residential tenants · property managers · legal counsel advising on tenancy matters

Source of truth: Fighting Delays, Building Faster Act, 2025, S.O. 2025, c. 14 on ontario.ca

Legislative text © King's Printer for Ontario. This page is not an official version of the law and is not legal advice. Verify against the official source before acting.

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