Mon-Fri: 9:00am - 6:00pm | Sat: 10:00am - 2:00pm ☎ (416) 555-0199

Aurora Rental Market 2026 — Data & Trends

Current rents, vacancy rates, and market outlook for Aurora landlords

Aurora's rental market in 2026 is characterized by high demand, limited supply, and some of the strongest rent growth in York Region. As one of the GTA's most desirable suburban communities — with top-ranked schools, extensive green spaces, and a charming downtown — Aurora attracts professional tenants who value quality of life and are willing to pay premium rents. The town's GO Transit station provides a direct commuter link to Union Station, and the planned Yonge North subway extension will further enhance connectivity.

For landlords in Aurora, understanding the local rental market is essential — not just for setting competitive rents, but for managing risk. When you know what properties are renting for, how tight the market is, and what is driving demand, you can make better decisions about tenant screening, lease terms, and when to escalate an eviction rather than absorb ongoing losses. This guide provides the data and context Aurora landlords need to operate profitably in 2026.

Aurora Average Rents by Unit Type — 2026

The following table shows current average monthly rents in Aurora by unit type, along with year-over-year changes. These figures are based on asking rents for units newly listed in Q1 2026 and may differ from rents being paid on existing leases, which are subject to Ontario's annual rent increase guideline of 2.5% for 2026.

Unit Type Average Rent (2026) Year-over-Year Change Vacancy Rate
Studio $1650 +5.2% 1.4%
Bachelor $1800 +5.2% 1.4%
1-Bedroom $1950 +5.2% 1.4%
2-Bedroom $2450 +5.2% 1.4%
3-Bedroom $3000 +5.2% 1.4%

It is important to note the distinction between asking rents (what landlords list new units for) and in-place rents (what existing tenants pay). Under the Residential Tenancies Act, landlords can only increase rent for existing tenants by the provincial guideline amount — 2.5% in 2026. This means that long-term tenants may be paying significantly below market rate, and the gap between in-place and asking rents continues to widen. For landlords considering an eviction for personal use (N12), the rent gap is often a motivating factor in the decision.

What Is Driving Aurora's Rental Market?

Aurora's rental demand in 2026 is shaped by several interconnected factors tied to the local economy. The city's key economic drivers — commuter suburb, technology, professional services — create a tenant base with distinct characteristics that landlords should understand when screening applicants and structuring lease agreements.

Population Growth and Housing Supply

With a population of approximately 62,000, Aurora continues to see steady growth driven by both natural increase and migration from higher-cost markets. However, new rental construction has not kept pace with demand. The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) reports that purpose-built rental starts in mid-sized Ontario cities remain well below the levels needed to achieve a balanced market. In Aurora, this supply-demand imbalance is reflected in the 1.4% vacancy rate — a level that gives landlords strong leverage in tenant selection but also means that when evictions do occur, the financial impact of lost rent during the LTB process is compounded by the opportunity cost of the unit sitting occupied by a non-paying tenant while market rents continue to climb.

The Rent Gap Problem for Aurora Landlords

One of the most significant financial challenges facing Aurora landlords in 2026 is the growing gap between in-place rents and market rents. Ontario's rent control provisions limit annual increases for existing tenants to the provincial guideline — 2.5% for 2026 — but market rents are rising at 5.2% year-over-year. Over time, this creates a situation where a long-term tenant may be paying hundreds of dollars per month below market rate. When that same tenant stops paying rent or causes significant damage, the landlord faces a painful calculation: the cost of a 7-9-month eviction process through the LTB, plus the lost rent during that period, can easily exceed $19600.

This is why proactive landlord education and professional eviction support are critical in the Aurora market. Understanding Aurora's rental laws and having a relationship with experienced eviction professionals before problems arise can save landlords thousands of dollars and months of frustration.

Vacancy Rate Trends in Aurora

The 1.4% vacancy rate in Aurora tells a story of tight supply and strong demand. For context, CMHC considers a vacancy rate between 3% and 5% to be balanced — below 3% favours landlords, and above 5% favours tenants. At 1.4%, Aurora's market clearly favours landlords in terms of pricing power and tenant selection.

However, a tight rental market creates its own risks for landlords. When vacancy is low, tenants who face eviction have fewer options for alternative housing, which can lead to longer disputes, more frequent use of section 83 relief at LTB hearings (where adjudicators delay evictions based on the tenant's difficulty finding new housing), and increased tenant resistance to eviction notices. Landlords in Aurora should factor these realities into their investment calculations and ensure they have professional support available when tenant issues arise.

What Aurora Landlords Should Watch in 2026

Several trends are shaping the Aurora rental market outlook for the remainder of 2026 and into 2027:

  • Interest rate environment: As the Bank of Canada adjusts its policy rate, mortgage costs for landlords will fluctuate. Higher carrying costs increase the financial pain of non-paying tenants and make timely evictions more critical to maintaining positive cash flow.
  • Provincial rent increase guideline: The 2026 guideline of 2.5% applies to most residential tenancies. Landlords with units first occupied after November 15, 2018 are exempt from rent control and can increase rents to market rate at lease renewal, but must still follow proper notice requirements.
  • LTB processing times: The Central-East region of the LTB, which covers Aurora, currently shows average wait times of 7-9 months for hearings. Any improvement — or deterioration — in these timelines directly impacts the cost of evictions for Aurora landlords.
  • Insurance market: Landlord insurance premiums continue to rise across Ontario, with insurers increasingly scrutinizing claims related to tenant damage and lost rent. Maintaining adequate coverage and documenting property condition is more important than ever.
  • Local economic developments: Aurora's economy, anchored by commuter suburb, technology, professional services, will continue to influence tenant demographics, employment stability, and rental demand throughout 2026.

How Eviction Timelines Affect Your Aurora Rental Returns

Understanding eviction timelines is not just a legal exercise — it is a financial one. At Aurora's current average two-bedroom rent of $2450 per month, every month spent in the LTB eviction process represents $2450 in lost revenue. A typical non-payment eviction through the Central-East region of the LTB takes 7-9 months from notice to enforcement, meaning a Aurora landlord can expect to lose between $17150 and $22050 in rent during the process — plus filing fees, Sheriff costs, and potential unit damage.

For a detailed breakdown of the eviction process specific to Aurora, see our guide to how to evict a tenant in Aurora. For information on LTB wait times in the Central-East region, see our Aurora LTB guide.

Protecting Your Aurora Rental Investment

The data is clear: Aurora's rental market offers strong returns for landlords who manage their properties effectively, but the Ontario eviction process can erode those returns quickly when problems arise. The best protection is a combination of thorough tenant screening, proper lease documentation, regular property inspections, and a relationship with experienced eviction professionals who can act quickly when issues develop.

Ontario Eviction Services works with landlords across Aurora and the surrounding region to protect their rental investments. From preparing and serving eviction notices to filing and representing at LTB hearings, we handle every step of the process so you can focus on your investment portfolio.

Need Help With a Aurora Rental Issue?

Whether you are dealing with non-payment of rent, property damage, or a lease violation in Aurora, Ontario Eviction Services can help. We handle the entire eviction process — from notice preparation to LTB representation to Sheriff enforcement.

View Aurora Eviction Services

Or call us now: (416) 555-0199