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Quebec property management laws — Deposit rules
Quebec Updated June 2026

Quebec Deposit Rules (2026)

Quebec PROHIBITS security and damage deposits. A landlord may not demand any deposit, post-dated cheques, or advance rent beyond the first rental period. This is the most landlord-restrictive deposit regime in Canada.

Governing law: Civil Code of Québec; Tribunal administratif du logement

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No deposit is legal

A landlord cannot require a security deposit, a damage deposit, a key deposit, or a deposit for any other purpose. Demanding one is illegal.

Only the first month in advance

The most a landlord may ask for up front is the first rental period's rent. You cannot require last month's rent or a lump sum of several months.

Post-dated cheques can't be forced

A landlord may not require post-dated cheques or any specific method of payment as a condition of the lease.

Recovering damage

Because no deposit exists, damage is recovered by applying to the TAL after the fact, proving the loss.

The mandatory lease form

Residential leases must use the TAL's official lease form, which must be available in French. The form spells out these deposit prohibitions.

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Stop tracking Quebec compliance in spreadsheets

Proprietio keeps your leases, deposits, rent increases, and notices province-aware — so you stay onside with the Quebec tribunal without memorizing the Act.

Not legal advice. Proprietio is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. The content on this page is informational and was researched from publicly available statutes and case law, but state and local landlord-tenant rules change frequently and vary by jurisdiction. For specific situations in Quebec, consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction. Read full disclaimer.