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Edmonton Rental Market Data 2025–2026 | Average Rent & Vacancy Rates

Updated

Edmonton rental market data

Edmonton offers one of the most affordable rental markets among major Canadian cities. Combined with Alberta’s high household incomes and no provincial sales tax, Edmonton provides the best rent-to-income ratio among Canada’s largest metros.

The Edmonton CMA vacancy rate held at 3.4% in October 2025, while rent growth slowed as landlords used incentives to absorb new supply. For national trends, see the Canada rental market overview.

Data source: CMHC Rental Market Survey (October 2025), published December 2025. This is the most recent CMHC rental data available — the survey is conducted once per year every October. Next update expected December 2026.
Metric October 2025 Year-over-year
Vacancy rate 3.4% Unchanged
Average 2-bedroom rent ~$1,500 Slowed growth
Turnover 2-bedroom rent Slight growth Minimal increase

CMHC noted that rent growth in Edmonton “slowed as landlords faced declining occupancy and used incentives to absorb excess supply.” Strong rental construction completions — well above historical trends — added significant new inventory.

Average rent by bedroom type

Bedroom Type Estimated Average
Studio ~$1,000
1 Bedroom ~$1,250
2 Bedroom ~$1,500
3 Bedroom+ ~$1,700

Edmonton 2-bedroom rents (~$1,500) are roughly 27% cheaper than Toronto (~$2,046) and 29% cheaper than Vancouver (~$2,100). Even compared to Calgary (~$1,750), Edmonton offers a meaningful discount.

Edmonton has historically maintained moderate vacancy rates, influenced by energy sector cycles:

Edmonton CMA Vacancy Rate — Purpose-Built Rentals (2015–2025)

The vacancy rate bottomed at 2.4% in 2022–2023 during the post-pandemic recovery and interprovincial migration boom, then stabilized at 3.4% as new supply came online.

Rent affordability in Edmonton

Edmonton’s combination of low rents and high incomes creates exceptional affordability:

Bedroom Type Monthly Rent (asking) Annual Cost Income Needed (30% rule) Edmonton Median HHI
1 Bedroom ~$1,400 $16,800 $56,000 $127,600
2 Bedroom ~$1,700 $20,400 $68,000 $127,600

A household earning the median income in Edmonton ($127,600) can afford a 2-bedroom apartment while spending only about 16% of gross income on rent — half the 30% affordability threshold. This makes Edmonton one of the most comfortable rental markets in the country for typical households.

Use our rent affordability calculator for a personalized estimate.

Alberta rent rules

Like Calgary, Edmonton benefits from Alberta’s free-market rental approach:

  • No rent control — Landlords can raise rent by any amount
  • 3 months notice required for periodic tenancies
  • Once per 12 months — Rent can only be increased annually
  • Market-responsive — Rents adjust freely to supply and demand

Key market drivers

Strong in-migration: Alberta’s population growth has supported rental demand, with many new residents arriving from Ontario and BC.

Above-trend construction: CMHC noted that Edmonton had rental completions well above historical trends, adding supply that kept the market balanced.

Landlord incentives: In a competitive market with new supply, landlords used incentives to attract tenants rather than raising rents.


Sources

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